
Keir Starmer has announced he will stand down as prime minister after days of intense pressure from Labour MPs, including cabinet ministers, following Andy Burnham’s victory in Makerfield. Lucy Hough speaks to senior political correspondent Peter Walker
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Lucy Hoff
This is the Guardian.
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Peter Walker
There was a world in which you could have clung on with a whole series of rolling cabinet resignations. You know, the kind of Boris Johnson way. But that's quite damaging for the party. That's quite damaging for the country.
Keir Starmer
Walking up this street two years ago was the proudest moment of my life.
Peter Walker
That was the kind of subtext he wanted to get across. You lot are getting rid of me only two years after we won this massive general election win. One advantage for Berman is he's likely to take over just as the Commons recess kicks off. I think he's going to be starting with a lot of goodwill from the parliamentary party, or at worst, people willing to give him a chance. But to be fair, that was the position Keir Starmer was in a couple of years ago.
Lucy Hoff
From the Guardians today in Focus, this is the latest. With me, Lucy Hoff. Well, the moment has finally happened after so much speculation. Keir Starmer. The lectern was out early doors this morning outside Downing street, and Keir Starmer announced his reign resignation. Meaning we are now looking at the seventh prime minister in 10 years. Peter Walker. You're the Guardian's senior political correspondent and you were at Downing street early doors this morning because we weren't sure when it was going to happen, but it did seem likely it was going to happen today. What was the atmosphere like?
Peter Walker
I went down to Downing street and it was already packed. I mean, it's a usual thing. You have the stills photographers with all their stepladders, then you have the TV crew, so people broadcasting in Japanese, in French, in Chinese, the Chinese state News agency was next to me. There was not quite so many kind of print reporters like me. There were people who wanted to be there and basically see the color, because on the TV screen you can't really tell quite what's going on.
SoFi Advertiser
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Lucy Hoff
And so what was that colour? Because there was a lot of number 10 staffers behind him, his wife Vic, and a kind of uncharacteristically, very emotional crack of the voice at the end of his speech.
Keir Starmer
I shall spend more time on the most important job being the best husband I can to my fantastic wife Vic, who has been a rock by my side through good times and bad, and being the best dad I can to my beautiful children, who are my pride and my joy.
Lucy Hoff
But what else did he say about his decision?
Peter Walker
It was a very brief speech. It lasted about four or five minutes. And when you have the transcript is only 750 words. He packed quite a lot into it. I think it was interesting. The first thing he said was he said the proudest moment of his life was walking down number 10, walking towards number 10, only two years earlier. And I think that was the kind of subtext he wanted to get across. You know, you lot are getting rid of me. Only two years after he won this massive general election win, and that's very much the feeling that he and his allies still feel very keenly that, that they think that Labour MPs, and particularly Burnham's team have acted quite hastily. But then he went on to basically say, look, you know, I accept that. It's not just what I've done, It's, do my MPs have confidence for me to lead them into the next general election? And the answer very much was no. And he again stated the point that whatever he wanted to do, he thought the country's best interests were the most important thing. And I think that was crucial too, because there was a world in which he could have clung on. He could have eked it out another few months with a whole series of rolling cabinet resignations, you know, the kind of Boris Johnson way. But that's quite damaging for the party, that's quite damaging for the country. And he spent the weekend at Chequers with Victoria and probably one or two other very, very close people to him working out what to do. And, you know, we knew that by Saturday. The decision has been made, the text, the speech was being drafted by Saturday. Yeah.
Lucy Hoff
And if there was any doubt, then we had a post from Trump on Truth Social yesterday saying that Starmer was going to resign. Obviously, you can't rely on anything being true that Trump posts on, but it suggested perhaps he'd been speaking to people or there had been some information from Downing Street.
Peter Walker
I think they'd just been reading the media. There was no signs Downing street said they hadn't talked. So I like to think that amongst his normal scrolling, he sometimes looks at the Guardian website and goes, oh, okay.
Lucy Hoff
One can only hope, Peter. And as early as or as recently as Friday, Keir Starmer was saying he really planned to Klingon and that he would fight in any leadership contest. You mentioned that he was at Chequers with his wife Fierke and various senior advisors, but also on the phone to lots of people in the parliamentary party, people who are traditionally close to him. And it feels that those conversations made it clear to him that things were very untenable.
Peter Walker
I get the sense that by the time he'd gone to Chequers, he kind of knew the game was up, their preparations were there, the writing was very, very clearly on the wall. I mean, it was interesting that after the makefield by election result, when Andy Burnham won by so much, that the kind of metric that people in number 10 have kind of mentally set was, well, you know, he does better than reform and restore Britain, you know, combined, and he's done okay, but he ended up getting over 50% of the vote. So that was a stomping win. And Keir Starmer went straight out on Friday morning and did a housing related visit where he said, no, I'm going to fight on, I'm going to keep going on. Even then we doubted it. But it was notable that I was working yesterday that as late as Sunday afternoon, The official number 10 line was, no, we refer you back to his Friday words. He's still going to fight on. Even though by that point we'd had a story saying he was stepping down on Monday on the very front of the website for about eight hours. And normally Downing street press team, you know, if you get even one word in a quote wrong, they're straight on the phone saying, no, no, you have to change that. And we hadn't heard a peep from them. So it was very, very obvious that, I mean, we, our sources were very good, we knew it's the case, but that cemented it, the fact that there was no pushback whatsoever. It was just, you know, this moment of calm you always get before a big change like this, where everyone hunkers down and decides in this case, not if it's going to be done, but how it's going to be done.
Lucy Hoff
Yeah. And those very carefully. Ch, you know, 700 words, more or less, that you mentioned as part of that very short address. He gave a clear sense of the timetable that there would be a contest opening next month. But crucially, Wes Streeting, the person who was likely to challenge Andy Burnham, has said he will support Burnham. So what does that contest, if it happens at all, look like next month?
Peter Walker
The chances are very much there will not be a contest. It'll be Andy Burnham only who goes for it. It's always possible you might have a minister who just fancies their chances, but it would be quite a controversial and a divisive thing to do because they would be pretty certain that Andy Burnham would win the contest. If there's more than one person who gets the necessary support from Labour MPs, and it goes to a vote of Labour members. But that takes weeks and weeks. So Kirstan was setting out that if there was a contest, you would not get a Prime Minister before probably September, by the time the Commons comes back from its summer break. But now it seems very, very likely. I mean, it's still a quite leisurely timetable, that nominations don't even open till early next month. And it means that we are unlikely to get Ante Burnham, assuming it is him, in number 10, before mid July. So it means Keir Starmer gets to go to the NATO summit in Turkey earlier in the month and he kind of gets three or four weeks to do whatever legacy project you want to do. And it's this quite fascinating period that Prime Ministers, when they've announced they've got to. They're going to go. It focuses in mind. You had. Theresa May in particular, had a period of about six weeks where she told the party she was going to go. And I was talking to one of her former staffers a couple of weeks ago who was pointing out that she spent a lot of it making sure that the landmark bill which made the UK the first major economy to set net zero targets, went through. And she got it through about two weeks before she left. So who knows? Starmer might have stuff he still wants to get done.
Lucy Hoff
Yeah, but Andy Burnham, it's a hugely high stakes time for him, isn't it? Because he's.
Peter Walker
I don't want to be Andy Burnham now.
Lucy Hoff
Yeah, because you've got three weeks newly voted as an MP of Makerfield, and you really cannot make any missteps, can you, in the next few weeks in a way that might ire Starmer loyalists who feel that this has all been dubbed done too hastily.
Peter Walker
I think he's going to be starting with a lot of goodwill from the parliamentary party or at worst, people willing to give him a chance. Yeah, but to be fair, that was a position Keir Starmer was in, you know, a couple of years ago, with the added credit that he'd won a general election win that a few years earlier, after the 2019 election most people in Labour thought could never be done. One advantage for Burnham is he's likely to take over just as the Commons recess kicks off. So he'll have this period of about six weeks where he can make speeches, he can go on visits. Yeah, he can do all that kind of Prime Ministerial stuff without having these quite awkward set piece Commons debates and statements. He's not been an MP since 2017. You know, he's been a Cabinet Minister for. He knows how it works, but he's going to have to get himself back into it. And I think the most important thing is that he has to set a sense of movement, of things happening at pace. But also this difficult balancing act of saying, look, I'm different, I'm not like the old lot. Whilst certainly before a general election, not having actually that much policy leeway. When he gave his speech in Makerfield, which was the start of the by election campaign, I watched him do a whole series of clips and interviews with broadcasters and with us, and he kept on saying, look, the manifesto is the manifesto, we're elected on this. So if I AM in number 10, I can't go much beyond that. So it's going to be a tricky balancing act.
Lucy Hoff
It definitely will be. But crucially, the role of Chancellor seems up for grabs and there's been lots of discussion over the weekend, hasn't there, about speculation on that. I mean, Rachel Reeves, it's been reported, was very keen to hang on to her job and has kept a relatively low profile in recent weeks. Her absence outside number 10 was very notable this morning, given that there were other people like David Lammy, the Deputy Prime Minister, and Darren Jones, Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister, outside, you know, key allies of his, as Rees has been for so long. But it seems unlikely that Burnham, should he win this, keep Reeves in position. And there are a number of names being floated, aren't there, with Chancellor?
Peter Walker
I mean, Rachel Reeves wasn't there, to be honest, there were a lot of Cabinet ministers who were not there. There's been various names floated. Ed Miliband has been, you know, his allies have been keen to position him that might get some pushback, particularly unions.
Lucy Hoff
Yeah, there's been some quite major pushback already over the weekend, hasn't there? The head of Unite said that this would be a noose around the neck of job creat should Miliband be appointed
Peter Walker
Chancellor, which a lot of people in Labour wouldn't agree with necessarily, but it would kind of ire the right wing press, which he might not want to do. Wes Streeting, one of the reasons that he's obviously decided not to run is to try and catapult himself into an even bigger job than the one he had in the past. There's been a lot of talk. It's basically again, mainly men, it's mainly the boys. There's been talk of like a reassuring kind of undertaker type like Pat McFadden, John Healy, people like that that we basically don't know because the Burnham camp is very, very tight. And this is the decision they're going to have to do. They're going to have to see who seems like they're on the side. And it's a balancing act. You can take risk with some areas and not in others. And with every cabin, it has to be a cohesive picture. And I mean, that's going to be the big choice that they need to make. It's going to be one of the biggest choices facing Burnham in the coming weeks.
Lucy Hoff
Yeah, change, but not too much change that. It's.
Peter Walker
You don't want to spook people, you don't want to spook the markets. And I think the thing they live in fear of is the bond markets going, you know, slightly crazy.
Lucy Hoff
And so what does that mean for Keir Starmer in particular? Because his voice broke as he spoke of his desire now to just focus on being a husband to Vic and a father to his two very beloved children. That's when his voice broke. But he didn't specify whether he intends to continue as an MP or indeed if he's looking for a Cabinet position. What do we know just lastly about that, Peter?
Peter Walker
I mean, it's worth pointing out that when his voice did break, I could sense this emotion going around all the reporters. I mean, we're human beings and it was a very human thing. And his wife, who was standing just off camera, was looking, you know, very, very emotional at that time in terms of what he does next. He did say he would support the government in any way necessary. I don't think that means being in an anti burner cabinet. We don't get the sense he wants to do that. I doubt very much he's decided whether he wants to be an MP anymore. He probably would. There would be an argument for him standing down in the next general election, not least as the Greens really fancy his seat. It's a Camden seat in this sort of area where they're strong. I think he might see it as a bit undignified to step down now and just think, basically, sod politics. I've tried it, I've done a big job and I'm off. So I think he'll be a low level, quiet, almost Theresa May like Backbencher for the next few years. But I mean, who knows? There's a lot going on. He could easily change his mind.
Lucy Hoff
You never know. Peter, thank you so much for your time.
Peter Walker
Thank you very much.
Lucy Hoff
That's it for today. My huge thanks again to Peter Walker, the Guardian's senior political correspondent. You can keep up with all his reporting and our wider lobby team over@theguardian.com where we also have a live blog of this story. And don't miss today's episode of Politics Weekly, our sister podcast with Pippa Queera and Kieran Stacey. Thanks for listening to this episode of the latest Today in Focus. We'll be back in your feeds as usual tomorrow morning with a look of where it all went wrong for Keir Starmer. The latest will be back tomorrow night. This episode was presented by me, Lucy Half. It was produced by Annie Levesper and Bryony Moore. The senior producer was Ryan Ramgona. This is the Guardian
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Episode: Starmer resigns as UK prime minister
Date: June 22, 2026
Host: Lucy Hoff (The Guardian)
Guest: Peter Walker (Guardian Senior Political Correspondent)
This special edition of The Guardian’s evening podcast, "The Latest," covers the dramatic resignation of Keir Starmer as the UK Prime Minister—just two years after Labour’s landslide general election victory. Host Lucy Hoff and political correspondent Peter Walker break down the moments that led to Starmer's departure, the emotional atmosphere on Downing Street, and what’s next for both Starmer and the Labour party, as Andy Burnham positions himself as the likely next prime minister.
[02:17–02:56]
[02:56–05:04]
"I shall spend more time on the most important job — being the best husband I can to my fantastic wife Vic … and being the best dad I can to my beautiful children, who are my pride and my joy." – Keir Starmer [02:56]
[05:04–07:11]
[07:11–09:11]
[09:11–11:02]
[11:02–12:59]
"The head of Unite said that this would be a noose around the neck of job creation should Miliband be appointed Chancellor." – Lucy Hoff [11:56]
[13:09–14:31]
"Walking up this street two years ago was the proudest moment of my life."
— Keir Starmer [01:17, echoed in [02:56]]
"There was a world in which you could have clung on with a whole series of rolling cabinet resignations. … But that's quite damaging for the party. That's quite damaging for the country."
— Peter Walker [01:06, repeated for emphasis [03:20]]
"He packed quite a lot into it. … He could have eked it out another few months … but that's quite damaging for the party, that's quite damaging for the country."
— Peter Walker [03:20]
"One advantage for Burnham is he's likely to take over just as the Commons recess kicks off."
— Peter Walker [01:22, 09:32]
"It's going to be a tricky balancing act. You don't want to spook people, you don't want to spook the markets. … The thing they live in fear of is the bond markets going, you know, slightly crazy."
— Peter Walker [13:02]
Starmer’s resignation marks another rapid turnover at 10 Downing Street, signaling both volatility and fatigue in British politics—now staring at its seventh prime minister in a decade. The episode offers a nuanced look at the pressures that toppled Starmer, the complex choreography of leadership transitions, and the high-wire expectations facing Andy Burnham, Labour’s likely new leader. Starmer’s emotionally charged exit and Burnham's incoming "honeymoon" suggest a period of both change and caution for the party and the country.