Advertisement
UK

Starmer to stay on as MP after stepping down as PM, says Downing Street

Keir Starmer will remain MP for Holborn and St Pancras after resigning as PM, and says he will not seek a cabinet role under successor Andy Burnham.

UK

Starmer to stay on as MP after stepping down as PM, says Downing Street

Keir Starmer will remain the MP for Holborn and St Pancras after standing down as prime minister, Downing Street has confirmed. The announcement came as Starmer told the Commons during PMQs: “We picked up our party, we turned it around.”

Starmer’s spokesperson said he was not expecting to take a role in Andy Burnham’s cabinet if offered one, though some MPs have suggested Burnham could make Starmer foreign secretary. The spokesperson said Starmer had told his cabinet: “This is the end of my journey, but this is not the end of yours.”

Keir Starmer will remain MP for Holborn and St Pancras after resigning as PM, and says he will not seek a cabinet role under successor Andy Burnham.

If Burnham is unopposed as a candidate to succeed Starmer, he is expected to enter Downing Street on 17 July. Starmer will attend next month’s Nato summit in Ankara as one of his last acts as prime minister, and will deliver the defence investment plan.

Advertisement

Starmer met Burnham on Tuesday for the first time since the Makerfield byelection in what aides called a “frosty” meeting. The talks were held away from No 10 and lasted around an hour. One source said: “Keir has shown time and again that he will put the interests of the country first but it is fair to say the meeting wasn’t the warmest.”

Starmer has agreed that his likely successor can have access talks with the civil service, including the cabinet secretary, Antonia Romeo, before he enters Downing Street — a process normally reserved for the leader of the opposition before a general election. The outgoing PM also agreed there would be “no new major policy or spending commitments” before he stood down that could tie his successor’s hands.

Speaking during PMQs on Wednesday, Starmer said he would miss the weekly sessions and continued: “I’m very proud of every one of our MPs who’ve had a landslide Labour victory, coming from all different backgrounds, from all different places across the country. We inflicted the biggest loss on the Tory party opposite in the history of their party.”

Advertisement

Starmer has an 11,000 majority in his central London seat, though it would be a significant target for the Greens if he were to vacate it. The spokesperson said Starmer would serve out the remainder of his term in the Commons and he was “going to remain” a Labour MP.

Burnham’s triumph in the Makerfield byelection was attributed by observers to his local popularity and easy going, affable manner, as well as a coalition combining urban progressives alongside soft-Conservative and Reform types — voters who had turned away from Labour because of its rejection of progressive social and economic policies and its new identity as the party of the “lanyard class”.

Advertisement
Advertisement