Reports suggest the Health Secretary was backing down from launching an immediate leadership bid.

The Prime Minister will meet Health Secretary Wes Streeting, one of his key rivals for the Labour leadership, after a tumultuous few days in which four ministers resigned and at least 80 MPs called for him to quit.

Sir Keir Starmer managed to cling on to power in Number 10 and see off an immediate threat to his leadership, with reports suggesting the front runners to succeed him lack the numbers to launch a challenge.

On Wednesday, he will meet Mr Streeting, seen as one of the key challengers to his leadership from the right of the party, ahead of the King’s Speech.

According to The Guardian, the Health Secretary was backing down from launching an immediate leadership bid.

Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, a leading figure from the soft-left of the party, has not unveiled a path back into Parliament. He needs an MP willing to stand aside so he could fight a by-election.

Sources close to Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, another potential soft-left challenger, have denied reports that he is preparing to run if Mr Streeting triggers a contest.

The Prime Minister has sought to push on, already having replaced four ministers – including prominent MP Jess Phillips and health minister Zubir Ahmed, an ally of Mr Streeting – who quit the Government and called for Sir Keir to stand down.

In Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting, the Prime Minister vowed to fight on, and was publicly backed by several ministers at the top of Government, including his deputy David Lammy, who urged colleagues to “step back and take a breath”.

Sir Keir told his Cabinet the country “expects us to get on with governing” and “that is what I am doing”, but avoided being directly challenged as he declined to discuss his leadership during the gathering or meet critics individually afterwards, the Press Association understands.

He said he would only speak to ministers one-to-one about his fate, but did not do so once Cabinet concluded, according to sources.

While Mr Streeting is not expected to say anything after Wednesday’s meeting that could distract from the King’s Speech, Politico reported that Buckingham Palace had privately told Number 10 they do not want the King to be dragged into the conversation.

The importance of protecting Charles from the impression that he is being used for political ends was stressed to Sir Keir’s officials, a person familiar with the matter told the political news outlet.

It is understood there has been no suggestion that the opening of Parliament would not go ahead.

More from Perspective

Get a free copy of our print edition

News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.
You need to agree with the terms to proceed

Your email address will not be published. The views expressed in the comments below are not those of Perspective. We encourage healthy debate, but racist, misogynistic, homophobic and other types of hateful comments will not be published.