Keir Starmer announces his resignation as UK prime minister and Labour leader
Starmer will stay on as caretaker while Labour opens nominations on July 9, after Burnham’s by-election win strengthened calls for a leadership change.
- On Monday, June 22, 2026, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his resignation outside 10 Downing Street, stating he will remain caretaker prime minister until Labour selects a successor.
- Starmer's position became untenable following Friday's Makerfield by-election, when Former Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham secured 54.8% of the vote and returned to Parliament as a focal point for leadership change.
- Nominations to replace Starmer open July 9 and close by mid-July, with the party targeting a new leader in place before Parliament returns on September 1; if Burnham runs unopposed, the transition could conclude earlier.
- Pledging an "orderly handover of power," Starmer promised his full support to his successor, while Former Health Secretary Wes Streeting confirmed he will back Burnham, boosting prospects for an uncontested transition.
- Britain now prepares for its seventh prime minister in a decade, a turnover rate analysts note is the highest in nearly two centuries and reflects systemic instability in the nation's governance.
1011 Articles
1011 Articles
DC Edit | Brutal Politics Unseats Britain’s Keir Starmer
The fall of a sixth PM in the 10 years since a referendum led to Brexit may be a clear enough indication that Britain had suffered economically from the isolation it thrust upon itself; ironical since tearing away from the European Union did not bring much relief from the influx of illegal migration
Why is the UK now changing prime minister every few years?
This is not the UK’s first leadership transition in government, and it is unlikely to be the last. These events have, however, been rare until recently. In the 80 years since the end of the second world war, there have only been 18 prime ministers. The nineteenth, likely to be Andy Burnham, will become the seventh premier since 2010. So that makes 12 prime ministers over 65 years – and then seven in the last 16 years. This is a problem, one that…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium











































