Wes Streeting resigned as Health Secretary on Thursday 14 May, telling Keir Starmer in his letter: "Where we need vision, we have a vacuum. Where we need direction, we have drift." 1 He went further. "It is now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election," he wrote. LBC published the letter within minutes of its delivery to Downing Street.
Streeting is the first Cabinet-level departure since polling night and the sixth ministerial resignation in four days. Eight junior ministers and parliamentary private secretaries had already walked between Monday 11 May and Tuesday 12 May. The Cabinet-rank threshold matters under collective responsibility: PPSs and junior ministers leaving the payroll counts as internal management; a Secretary of State quitting and naming the Prime Minister as the problem amounts to a constitutional break.
The NHS brief Streeting held was the political crown jewel of the 2024 Labour manifesto. Waiting lists, GP access, and the autumn workforce settlement were the policy ground Labour had reserved as its survival argument. Whoever replaces him inherits the brief mid-cycle, with no settled funding line, and with Survation polling on the leadership , showing Streeting himself losing to the incumbent. The resignation, in short, is not a leadership bid; it states that the incumbent is finished.
"Vision, vacuum, direction, drift" became the standfirst of every front page on Friday morning, and the line a successor will inherit whether they want it or not.
