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UK Local Elections 2026
14MAY

Eight resign in two days on Starmer

3 min read
20:05UTC

Four parliamentary private secretaries walked on Monday 11 May; four junior ministers followed on Tuesday. Jess Phillips called Starmer's continuation 'wholly untenable'.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Eight resignations in 48 hours stripped Starmer's payroll vote before Streeting walked.

Four parliamentary private secretaries (Tom Rutland, Joe Morris, Melanie Ward, Naushabah Khan) resigned on Monday 11 May. Four junior ministers followed on Tuesday 12 May: Alex Davies-Jones at Victims, Zubir Ahmed at Health, Miatta Fahnbulleh at Devolution, and Jess Phillips at Safeguarding. Phillips wrote that Keir Starmer's continuation in office was "wholly untenable"; Fahnbulleh said Starmer had "lost the trust and confidence of the public." 1

This is the wave that preceded the Streeting Cabinet break, and the staircase that made it operative. The payroll vote, the bloc of ministers and PPSs paid to back the government in any division, gives the Prime Minister a mechanical floor on the Commons benches. Removing eight names from that floor inside 48 hours shrinks the whip's working room before any formal contest paperwork lands. Starmer's vote-count cushion since the 7 May results has thinned.

Zubir Ahmed resigned the junior Health brief on Tuesday; Wes Streeting resigned the Cabinet Health brief two days later. By Thursday evening the Department of Health and Social Care had lost its top two ministers inside one parliamentary week. Replacement-by-promotion runs into the same arithmetic that triggered the resignations: the candidates with standing to take Cabinet seats are mostly already public on one side of the 96-versus-103 split (event 3, .

Phillips and Fahnbulleh have put a date and a portfolio against the verdict, which makes the dissent harder to retract than the anonymous backbench letters Starmer absorbed in April 2026. If Starmer survives, he survives with eight ex-ministers on the backbenches actively organising. If he does not, the contest opens with the resignation letters already in print.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

PPSs (parliamentary private secretaries) are MPs who work as unpaid helpers to senior ministers. Junior ministers sit one level up from PPSs in government. Both are paid or supported by the government and are expected to vote with it in the Commons. Between Monday 11 May and Tuesday 12 May, eight of them handed in their resignations. Two of the most prominent were Jess Phillips at safeguarding and Miatta Fahnbulleh at devolution, who both published statements saying Starmer had lost public trust and that his staying on was untenable. This mattered because it came before Health Secretary Wes Streeting's departure on Thursday. The eight lower-level resignations established that ministers were willing to break ranks publicly, which made the bigger Cabinet departure possible.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 2024 Labour intake was unusually large (400-plus MPs) and unusually inexperienced, with a significant cohort elected on individual voters' desire for change rather than Labour affinity. The LabourList tracker's 96 public critics include a disproportionate number of first-term MPs whose 2026 local-election results removed their insulation from accountability.

PPS and junior minister departure waves of this kind historically require a common organising point. The 11-12 May sequence crossed party-level portfolios (Victims, Health, Devolution, Safeguarding) and seniority tiers (PPSs and junior ministers) simultaneously, suggesting coordination above the level of individual offices. The Collins review rules (2014) were designed to make leadership challenges hard to organise; the wave is evidence the organisation preceded the paperwork.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Vacancies at Victims, junior Health, Devolution, and Safeguarding forced a reshuffle while Starmer simultaneously faced the Streeting crisis, draining political bandwidth from both problems.

  • Risk

    Eight ex-ministers now sitting on the backbenches as active organisers extends the leadership campaign infrastructure into the parliamentary party, complicating any future whipping operation regardless of who leads.

First Reported In

Update #8 · Mutiny in week one

Left Foot Forward· 14 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Eight resign in two days on Starmer
The pre-Cabinet wave is what makes the Streeting resignation operative; eight named MPs leaving the payroll inside 48 hours is the institutional precondition for a credible challenge.
Different Perspectives
Russell Findlay (Scottish Conservatives)
Russell Findlay (Scottish Conservatives)
Findlay refused to resign as Scottish Conservative leader after the party fell to 12 Holyrood seats and lost all five constituency MSPs. He declined Swinney's post-election talks invitation, the only major-party leader to do so.
John Swinney (SNP)
John Swinney (SNP)
Swinney committed on 14 May to a Holyrood Section 30 vote within a week despite winning seven seats fewer than his own trigger threshold, relying on a SNP-Green majority of 73. He tabled a meeting with Starmer; Downing Street disputed that any referendum discussion was agreed.
Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru)
Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru)
Ap Iorwerth was sworn in as First Minister of Wales on 12 May, the first non-Labour head of the Welsh Government since 1999. He governs as a minority without a written Green confidence-and-supply agreement, his cabinet entirely Plaid.
Richard Tice (Reform UK)
Richard Tice (Reform UK)
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Wes Streeting
Wes Streeting
Streeting resigned as Health Secretary on 14 May, writing that Starmer would not lead Labour at the next election. He had not formally filed leadership nominations as of Thursday evening, making his departure a public verdict on the incumbent rather than a candidacy.
Green Party
Green Party
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