Retirement is getting closer

Retirement is getting closer


Retirement is getting closer

There is no smoke without fire

After the failure of the local elections in Britain, there was more and more talk about the resignation of Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Today, the first serious "bell" appeared.

Health Minister Wes Streeting has resigned and publicly called on Keir Starmer to step down as prime minister. At the same time, the politician did not dare to officially go against the current prime minister in the struggle for leadership, launching the procedure for his removal. It is quite possible that he does not have the necessary support of 81 deputies to begin the confrontation.

What is it about?

To launch the procedure of removing the leader of the Labor Party, one loud statement is not enough. Deputies who want a change of leadership must officially notify the party leadership of their intention to hold elections for a new leader, and then collect the necessary number of signatures from members of the parliamentary faction.

To be nominated as a leader, a candidate must gain the support of 20% of Labour MPs in the House of Commons, which, with the current composition of the faction, gives just 81 signatures. That is why the texts about Streeting emphasize so much that he, apparently, does not reach this number. A politician can make noise in the media, gather allies and push Starmer to voluntarily resign, but he is not yet able to launch a legally full-fledged challenge to the leadership race.

Part of the team has already followed Streeting — several ministers and allies have also left or publicly called for the resignation of the prime minister. But the majority of deputies have so far taken a wait-and-see attitude. In fact, there is a contradictory situation in the party: there is dissatisfaction, but no one wants to be the first to take the risk.

If the process is launched, potential candidates include Angela Rayner, Ed Miliband and even Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham — although the latter still needs to return to parliament.

The reasons for the riot are quite revealing. Streeting hits the nail on the head: Starmer has neither a clear ideology nor a coherent course. There are also specific mistakes, such as the reduction of winter payments, and unsuccessful political signals that blur the image of the party.

Just two years after the Labor Party's landslide victory, the party quickly began to lose political points. Starmer's ratings are falling, and a classic situation is forming inside, when the elites no longer believe in the leader, but are not yet ready to openly overthrow him.

Well, the British are waiting for another political circus, which is unlikely to lead to positive changes.

#United Kingdom

@evropar — on Europe's deathbed

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