In a seismic shift rocking Downing Street, Health Secretary Wes Streeting has resigned, explicitly calling for a leadership contest to replace Prime Minister Keir Starmer, according to reports from TheSun and major outlets.
This marks the first senior cabinet departure in a brewing Labour mutiny, triggered by stinging local election defeats last week.
Streeting’s move shatters the facade of unity Starmer desperately clung to after over 80 MPs urged his exit.
In his resignation letter to the Prime Minister, Streeting cited waning confidence in Starmer’s direction, deeming it “dishonourable and unprincipled” to stay despite proud NHS gains like reduced waiting lists.
He wrote,
“It is now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election,” pushing for a “broad” contest of ideas over factionalism.
Beyond the palace intrigue, this upheaval spotlights the NHS’s precarious recovery under Streeting’s watch.
His reforms, including threats to dismantle failing trusts, had sparked hope amid low satisfaction surveys.
Now, with turmoil distracting from the King’s Speech, patient backlogs risk stalling, eroding public faith in Labour’s core promise.
Strategic ripples extend to voter trust and policy delivery. Streeting, a rising star blending centrist appeal with reform zeal, positions himself as a frontrunner needing 81 MPs’ backing to trigger a vote.
Allies signal his intent to “go for it,” potentially reshaping Labour’s path before 2027 polls.
As Starmer vows to fight on, Streeting’s principled stand could redefine British politics or fracture the government further. Stay tuned for developments in this unfolding crisis.
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