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UK's Starmer defies 'destabilising' calls to quit

UK PM Keir Starmer defies calls to quit after election loss, vows to continue governing amid Labour Party turmoil

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Editorial Team
May 13, 2026
2 min read
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has defied calls to resign, telling ministers he will "get on ‌with governing" despite a "destabilising" 48 hours of growing calls to set out a timetable for his departure after an election drubbing. At a meeting of his cabinet team of ministers, Starmer, in the top job for less than two years, repeated that while he took responsibility for one of ‌his Labour Party's ‌worst election defeats, ⁠there had been no official move to trigger a leadership contest. "The ​past 48 hours have been destabilising for government and that has a real economic cost for our country and for families," Starmer told ministers on Tuesday, according to his Downing Street office. "The country expects us to get on with governing. That is what I am doing and what we must do ⁠as a cabinet." Ministers arrived at Downing Street for a meeting where Keir Starmer said he was staying put. British government bonds rallied weakly ‌on ​Starmer's comments, but remained firmly in the red for the day. His defiance was in marked contrast ​to the ‌feelings of many in his Labour Party. On Tuesday, a junior minister resigned after a handful ​of ministerial aides also left the government. More than 80 Labour lawmakers have publicly called for him to set a resignation date so the party could install a ​new ​leader in an orderly manner. Starmer had ​sought to shore up his position on Monday ‌when he promised to act more boldly and with more urgency to tackle Britain's many problems. He had said the country would never forgive the centre-left Labour Party if it embarked on a leadership challenge, just two years after its huge parliamentary majority was supposed to bring an end ​to the political chaos that had gripped the country since Britain voted to leave ​the European Union 10 ⁠years ago.

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