Starmer won power on a deceptively moderate manifesto but paved the way for a full Left-wing takeover Daily Telegraph 13/05/26 Hurrah! Sir Keir Starmer is surely history, his catastrophic, incompetent premiership almost over, his catalogue of lies, obfuscations and untruths having finally caught up with him. There is still, it would seem, some justice in this world, some penalties for utter, abject failure. And if he does trigger a leadership contest this week as expected, I will commend Wes Streeting for calling time on the Prime Minister. The Health Secretary might well have grasped that this was his one chance to take the top job before Andy Burnham could make a return to Westminster, but in a Cabinet of cowards, charlatans and narcissists, he will still have displayed an unusual amount of courage. Yet I doubt Streeting, a social democrat, will end up in No 10; when Starmer eventually goes, we are far more likely to be left with a proper socialist like Angela Rayner, Ed Miliba...
His refusal to step down is an act of contempt for the public. Spiked 13/05/26 So this is how technocracy ends – not with a bang but with the whimpering of one of its chief proponents as he hunkers down, hiding from the judgement of the people. This is the vision we now have of Keir Starmer: alone, reviled, skulking in his bunker at Downing Street. He’s a dead man blathering, talking about staying the course even though the people and much of his party would rather he didn’t. He’s ‘resolute’, say his dwindling band of apologists, but to the rest of us it just looks like pathological vanity. These are extraordinary events. Following last week’s local and devolved elections – in which Labour lost vast swathes of territory to Reform UK and others – the heat has been on Sir Keir. As if it wasn’t humiliating enough to lose council seats across England, and control of the Senedd in Wales, and four seats in the Scottish parliament, polls now suggest 70 per cent of Brits view Starmer ‘unf...