Analysis: Unhappy Labour MPs aren't ready to oust Starmer yet
To put the tin lid on it, the prime minister has been on the back foot over his appointment of Lord Mandelson to the job of ambassador to the US, and the subsequent sacking of senior civil servant, Sir Olly Robbins, in a row over security vetting. So the question being asked around Westminster is not 'should there be a Labour leadership contest?' – but 'why is such a contest not expected on 8 May', the day after the expected electoral drubbing? One Labour MP, Jonathan Brash, has called for Sir Keir to resign, and to set a timetable for his departure. Some others have agreed with this privately.
One long-standing Labour MP has his take: "Keir Starmer is basically dead, isn't he?
And because people think it is inevitable that he won't lead us into the next election, there isn't the rush. " While there are some noises about having a so-called caretaker leader, many MPs would be reluctant to do this. As one of them put it: "We have to be sure that when there is a contest we can have a candidate who can lead us in to the next election. " They added that it would be disastrous for trust if the party 'chopped and changed', and trying to find that candidate who can re-inspire the party, never mind the voters, is proving elusive.
We don't have an option in Wes [Streeting] because of the Mandelson thing - despite his data dump of the text messages with him.
Meanwhile, a minister drew a lesson from Labour's Scottish leader Anas Sarwar's call for Sir Keir's resignation in February: it could have fired the starting gun on a leadership contest, but culminated in declarations of loyalty from ministers. "What it proved was neither Wes nor Angie were ready for it. I was waiting for a call (from Steeting's team) and it never came," they said. And a Labour figure whose career can be traced back to the Blair era said that after days of damaging headlines about Lord Mandelson, people were angry. "We will tank in the elections. But we are back where we were a week ago. There is no easy mechanism (to remove a leader) and there is no obvious candidate. " However, one potential candidate is still being spoken about by MPs. As one former frontbencher put it: "The problem is that the solution isn't in Westminster. " They were, of course, talking about Andy Burnham, who was blocked from standing as a candidate for Westminster in the Gorton and Denton by-election earlier this year. Another potential Burnham supporter was more downbeat. He recognised that the Greater Manchester mayor would need to stand in a "very safe seat" given Labour's polling, and that a supportive MP would have to stand down. Burnham would also need the approval of Labour's ruling body, the National Executive – the composition of which could move in his favour this summer. But one MP's analysis would have convinced Sir Keir that he was right – from the point of view of political survival – to have vetoed the mayor's candidacy. Some MPs are more fatalistic. A minister told us: "Starmer is seriously unpopular. I think we are going to lose the next election. The only way we win is if people feel better off and I have not heard a serious argument from any possible candidate about how they could achieve that in such a short space of time. " Some are looking to those closest to Sir Keir to conduct the defenestration, just as Conservative PM Margaret Thatcher was told to leave, more than three decades ago. One MP told us: "Lots of cabinet ministers seem to know that he is not going to lead us in to the next election - the question is whether they want to force something to happen soon or to wait until it's too late. " But some MPs believe that ministers are taking an 'everyone for themselves' approach. One minister's assessment was that "they are on manoeuvres". It has not gone unnoticed that Energy Secretary Ed Miliband distanced himself from the decision to appoint Lord Mandelson to the Washington job; and that Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden both criticised attempts by No 10 to sound out an ambassadorial role for Matthew (now Lord) Doyle - the departing head of communications in 2025. One influential Labour figure interpreted this as a sign of fraying loyalties, and said "serious cabinet ministers are not prepared to defend [the PM] or sully themselves". Another MP said: "They are looking for life rafts. They are thinking six months ahead, and they are saying that they would still very much like to be in the cabinet.
There had been talk of the PM regaining the initiative after the May elections not just with a programme of new legislation in the King's Speech, but by having a reshuffle. He is undertaking a round of meetings with regional groups of MPs and internal campaign groups. On Wednesday, he met the Red Wall group, whose members are largely in Reform-facing seats, to discuss how the party's industrial strategy can extend to small and medium sized towns.
Some believe the emotional impact of electoral defeats could be too much to bear. "People think they are ready for it but there is a real chance of things going crazy that weekend. Everything could collapse very fast," one MP says. Another put it like this: "The PLP is like a tinderbox – it might just ignite in May. " But one MP recounted the fears of a colleague loyal to the PM: "They said to me, 'I do hope the PLP doesn't do anything rash'. "I said 'there's no chance of the PLP ever doing anything rash'
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