Starmer's Defiant Vow: Clinging to Power Amid Whispers of Revolt
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Keir Starmer kicked off 2026 with a defiant vow to cling to power, telling BBCs Laura Kuenssberg in his first interview of the year that hell still be Prime Minister this time next year, slamming leadership churn as chaos not in the national interest, per The Independent and The Telegraph. Amid whispers of plots to oust himby May, insiders paint him as a proud fighter whod rather hurl whisky than quit, according to The Observers columnists. His New Year message struck a hopeful note, promising voters will feel positive change in bills, communities, and the NHS through frozen fares, more police, and higher wages, as TalkTV and CPA reported, though he admitted slow progress after a bruising 2025 of dismal polls and economic drag. On January 3, Starmer issued a sharp government statement backing Venezuelas power shift, calling Maduro illegitimate and pledging talks with the US for a peaceful handover respecting international law, straight from gov.uk. Gossip swirls over backbench revolts and low approval ratings around 16 percent, with TalkTV hinting his winter fuel cuts might prove fatal, yet hes doubling down on a five-year mandate to crush Reform and deliver renewal. No fresh public appearances or social media buzz popped up, but The Observer floats tech as his growth jackpot amid capitalist shifts, while The Lead eyes 2026s big tests like passion and policy wins. All verified from these outlets; no unconfirmed plots beyond chatter. Starmer stays the course, eyes on 2027.
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