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UK Local Elections 2026
8JUL

Starmer quits as PM and Labour leader

2 min read
10:13UTC

Keir Starmer resigned as Labour leader and prime minister on 22 June, four days after Labour held Makerfield, accepting his MPs' private verdict that he could not fight the next election.

PoliticsAssessed
Key takeaway

Starmer goes as caretaker prime minister, leaving Labour to pick his successor on a compressed timetable.

Keir Starmer resigned as Labour leader and prime minister on 22 June, four days after Labour held Makerfield, telling the country he accepted the Parliamentary Labour Party's private verdict that he was no longer best placed to fight the next election 1. He remains prime minister until Labour chooses a successor.

The Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) is the body of Labour MPs at Westminster, and its confidence had been draining for weeks. Wes Streeting quit the Cabinet in May citing Starmer's inability to lead , eight junior ministers and aides walked out over two days , and the PLP split almost evenly, 96 against Starmer to 103 defending, when it last tested the question .

Starmer's decision to stay on as caretaker rather than trigger an immediate handover keeps a functioning government in place while the party runs its timetable. His resignation ends the leadership he won in 2020 and starts a succession that could be settled in under a month.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Keir Starmer had been Labour leader and prime minister since 2024. On 22 June he resigned both roles, saying he accepted that his own MPs no longer believed he was the right person to lead Labour into the next general election. Unlike some other parties, Labour has no formal process for MPs to vote a sitting leader out. Instead, the pressure built through private conversations between Starmer and his MPs, and through a string of resignations and warning signs, including Labour holding the Makerfield by-election just four days earlier by a narrower margin than the government would want. Starmer remains prime minister in a caretaker capacity until Labour chooses a new leader, which is expected within weeks.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Labour's rulebook, unlike the Conservatives', has no statutory mechanism for MPs to force a sitting leader from office through a confidence vote; a leader can only be removed by resigning or by a full leadership contest being triggered against them.

That gap means pressure builds informally, through cabinet resignations, private PLP soundings and by-election results read as referendums on the leader, until the leader concludes unassisted that the parliamentary party will not back them into the next general election.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A prime ministerial resignation without a general election hands the succession decision to Labour's internal rules rather than to voters, at least until the next scheduled election.

  • Precedent

    A leadership change resolved entirely through internal party process, with no confidence vote and no election, will be read as a test of whether the public accepts a change of prime minister they had no direct say in.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Farage to quit Clacton to force by-election

Al Jazeera· 8 Jul 2026
Read original
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