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The 37 MPs calling on Keir Starmer to step down after election humiliation

Strain is mounting on the Prime Minister from all corners of his get together.

Strain is mounting on the PM to step apart (Picture: Getty)

Strain is mounting on Sir Keir Starmer to step down as Labour chief following this week’s disastrous native election outcomes. The Prime Minister has insisted that he won’t “stroll away” from his job, claiming it could “plunge the nation into chaos” if he give up.

Within the wake of the election decimation, dozens of Labour MPs have publicly known as for Starmer to step right down to stem electoral losses. The calls have come from a wide range of Labour factions, starting from key figures on the left, reminiscent of Rachael Maskell and Brian Leishman, to Blue Labour’s Connor Naismith on the suitable of the get together. Naismith, the MP for Crewe and Nantwich, posted on X: “Within the wake of those catastrophic native election outcomes, with remorse, it’s clear to me that we’d like new management.

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Starmer says that he takes duty for the outcomes (Picture: Getty)

“Management which is able to bringing collectively a broad coalition of voters to cease the Thatcherite politics of Reform UK.”

In an indication of the frustration inside the get together, former minister Catherine West mentioned she would launch an unlikely management problem on Monday in an try to power the Cupboard to behave to take away Sir Keir.

She instructed the BBC’s PM programme: “I’m placing folks on discover – if I don’t hear by Monday morning of some management hopefuls, I will probably be asking everyone within the Parliamentary Labour Get together to place a reputation in opposition to my title, as a result of we have to get this ball rolling.

“However my most popular choice is for the Cupboard to do a reshuffle inside itself, the place there’s loads of expertise and for Keir to be given a unique function, which he would possibly take pleasure in, maybe a global function, after which for others to come back to the fore, who can talk the message, who’re very in a position, so we will have minimal fuss.”

She claimed to have the backing of 10 MPs for her initiative, effectively wanting the 81 – 20% of Labour MPs wanted to mount a problem, however her transfer is meant to spur one of many potential Cupboard management hopefuls into motion.

Whereas a lot of Sir Keir’s critics have been these on the left of the get together who had been by no means his pure supporters, the dimensions of the defeats has prompted extra average voices to demand change.

Ms West was in Sir Keir’s Authorities, and Clive Betts, the get together’s joint longest-serving MP, additionally mentioned the Cupboard ought to make it clear to the Prime Minister he has to go “within the not too distant future”.

He instructed the As we speak programme: “I believe there’s now a duty on the Cupboard to speak to Keir and to recognise, as they clearly are selecting up on the doorstep, that this may’t keep on eternally.”

Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting are rumoured to be frontrunners to exchange the PM (Picture: Getty)

Labour MPs who’ve publicly known as for a change of chief

  1. Debbie Abrahams, Oldham East and Saddleworth
  2. Apsana Begum, Poplar and Limehouse
  3. David Baines, St Helens North
  4. Paula Barker, Liverpool Wavertree
  5. Clive Betts, Sheffield South East
  6. Olivia Blake, Sheffield Hallam
  7. Jonathan Brash, Hartlepool
  8. Richard Burgon, Leeds East
  9. Ian Byrne, Liverpool West Derby
  10. Beccy Cooper, Worthing West
  11. Neil Duncan-Jordan, Poole
  12. Barry Gardiner, Brent West
  13. Louise Haigh, Sheffield Heeley
  14. Chris Hinchliff, North East Hertfordshire
  15. Imran Hussain, Bradford East
  16. Terry Jermy, South West Norfolk
  17. Kim Johnson, Liverpool Riverside
  18. Ruth Jones, Newport West and Islwyn
  19. Peter Lamb, Crawley
  20. Ian Lavery, Blyth and Ashington
  21. Brian Leishman, Alloa and Grangemouth
  22. Clive Lewis, Norwich South
  23. Rachael Maskell, York Central
  24. Andy McDonald, Middlesborough and Thornaby East
  25. John McDonnell, Hayes and Harlington
  26. Anneliese Midgley, Knowlsley
  27. Abtisam Mohamed, Sheffield Central
  28. Connor Naismith, Crewe and Nantwich
  29. Kate Osborne, Jarrow and Gateshead East
  30. Dr Simon Opher, Stroud
  31. Sarah Owen, Luton North
  32. Euan Stainbank, Falkirk
  33. Graham Stringer, Blackley and Middleton South
  34. Jon Trickett, Normanton and Hemsworth
  35. Tony Vaughan, Folkestone and Hythe
  36. Catherine West, Hornsey and Friern Barnet
  37. Nadia Whittome, Nottingham East

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