Item 1 of 4 British Prime Minister Keir Starmer leaves 10 Downing Street in London, Britain, November 12, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble
LONDON, Nov 12 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer distanced himself on Wednesday from a briefing by unnamed allies that he would fight any leadership bid, throwing his support behind his health minister Wes Streeting who had been named as a challenger.
After the briefing to selected media outlets late on Tuesday raised questions about the prime minister’s authority, Starmer, whose poll ratings have sunk since an election win in July 2024, took to parliament to try to set the record straight, saying he “never authorised attacks” on his ministers.
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He was referring to a briefing by “his allies” in which they said the prime minister would fight any challenge to his leadership, with Streeting and interior minister Shabana Mahmood named as possible candidates to replace him.
STARMER SAYS ANY ATTACK ON MINISTERS IS ‘UNACCEPTABLE’
“Any attack on any member of my cabinet is completely unacceptable,” he told parliament during the weekly prime minister’s questions session.
“I’ve never authorised attacks on cabinet members. I appointed them to their posts because they’re the best people to carry out their jobs … This is a united team and we are delivering together,” he said.
He also defended his chief adviser, Morgan McSweeney, who the leader of the opposition Conservatives, Kemi Badenoch, named when describing Starmer’s Downing Street operation as “toxic”.
His political spokesperson described the briefing and resulting reports as “frustrating distractions from the work that the government is doing”.
“That briefing is categorically untrue,” Streeting told BBC Radio.
“I’m not going to demand the prime minister’s resignation,” he told Sky News. “I support the prime minister. I have done since he was elected leader of the Labour Party.”
British government bond prices fell early on Wednesday and underperformed against U.S. and German bonds, possibly hinting at investor unease over Starmer’s prospects. The pound fell by around a third of a cent against the U.S. dollar.
Market strategists said investors were concerned that if Starmer was no longer prime minister it could potentially lead to a left-leaning candidate taking over and raising government borrowing.
CHALLENGE FROM NIGEL FARAGE’S PARTY
Much of Labour’s unpopularity has stemmed from tax rises and failed attempts at cutting welfare spending, showing the potential for the budget to be the next flashpoint.
Two Labour lawmakers expressed exasperation at the briefing, saying it underlined what they said was a poorly functioning team around Starmer in Downing Street. One said on condition of anonymity that it felt “very end of days”.
But it is particularly difficult to oust a Labour leader because any challenge would need the backing of 20% of the party’s lawmakers in parliament, which roughly means around 80 of them agreeing on an alternative candidate.
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Reporting by Sam Tabahriti and by Elizabeth Piper; additional reporting by Alistair Smout, Editing by Alison Williams
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