Starmer Fights Back: Inside Labour's Crisis Week and His Defiant Vow to Lead
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Keir Starmer stared down his biggest leadership crisis yet this week, defiantly vowing to never walk away from the country he loves after Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar called for his resignation amid the explosive Peter Mandelson scandal. On Tuesday morning, according to ITV News, he chaired a feisty cabinet meeting without civil servants, thanking ministers for their unanimous backing and declaring them strong and united, hours before his top team rallied publicly. In Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, the Prime Minister held a high-stakes public Q and A, per the official GOV.UK transcript and Indian Express coverage, sharing gritty tales from his working-class upbringing where bills often went unpaid, positioning easing the cost of living as his personal mission with wins like a 150 pound energy bill cut and April rail fare freeze.
Sky News reports Starmer doubled down to broadcasters, insisting hell lead Labour into the 2029 election despite the turmoil, joking its been a busy week as he slammed party infighting and Reform UKs grievance politics. Backed by Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and Welsh Labour leader Eluned Morgan, who called him an honourable man committed to public service on X, Starmer told a packed Parliamentary Labour Party meeting Monday evening according to the Independent, Ive won every fight Ive ever been in, earning warm applause that quelled immediate revolt. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband told BBC News MPs looked over the precipice but pulled back, admitting the government must be bolder as living standards lag.
Business-wise, hes reshaping Downing Street post-scandal, promoting aides Vidhya Alakeson and Jill Cuthbertson as joint acting chiefs of staff after Morgan McSweeneys exit, while communications chief Tim Allan resigned Monday and predecessor Mathew Doyle apologized for ties to a paedophile councillor. The Telegraph notes bond markets oddly prop him up, with 30-year gilt yields dipping to 5.32 percent on stability hopes, shielding him from worse fallout despite Polymarket odds of him lasting the year at just 25 percent. Opposition Tory Kemi Badenoch sneered MPs backed him out of job fear. No fresh social media mentions popped, but this survival amid Mandelson-Epstein whispers and looming Scottish polls could define his tenure long-termor hasten its end.
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