British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is fighting for his political survival, defiantly telling his cabinet on Tuesday that he intends to continue governing despite growing pressure from within his own party to step down.
Standing firm before his top team, Starmer challenged any leadership hopefuls to formally trigger the party’s challenge process — noting that no one had yet done so. “The country expects us to get on with governing. That is what I am doing and what we must do as a cabinet,” he declared, on what has become the most defining day of his nearly two-year premiership.
The defiance, however, has done little to stem the tide. At least 80 of Labour’s 403 Members of Parliament have now called on Starmer to resign immediately or set a clear timetable for his departure.
Two junior ministers have already walked. Miatta Fahnbulleh became the first to quit, urging Starmer to “do the right thing for the country and the party.” Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips followed, telling the Prime Minister in a resignation letter that she was not seeing the change “I, and the country, expect.”
Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood became the most senior figure to openly advise Starmer to reconsider his position. Reports also indicate that Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper have held private conversations with him about his future.
The storm erupted following catastrophic local election results last week, in which Labour lost hundreds of councillors to the hard-right Reform UK party and left-wing populist Greens. The party also surrendered its century-old dominance in Wales and suffered a heavy defeat to the Scottish National Party in Edinburgh.
With resignations mounting and party unity fracturing, the question is no longer whether Starmer faces a crisis — but how long he can withstand it.

