Summary

  • Cabinet minister Peter Kyle says Keir Starmer is reflecting on the "political realities" amid speculation over the prime minister's future

  • Downing Street says the PM is "getting on with the job" and that his position of being "determined to fight for his job" has not changed

  • US President Donald Trump weighs in, asserting Starmer "will resign"

  • It's not clear whether this is Trump joining the dots or if he knows something definitive, Chris Mason writes, but No 10 would be alive to the risk of sharing anything with the US before a public announcement

  • The PM faces growing pressure from within his own party to set a timetable for his departure - how did we get here?

  • Signs are growing that tomorrow could see the PM set out a plan to stand down, our political correspondents write

  • Shadow chancellor Mel Stride says Andy Burnham - who is seen as a challenger to Starmer's leadership - is a man who "flip flops" and the country needs "stability"

  1. Trump weighs in on Starmer's future, but No 10 would be alive to risk of sharing plans with himpublished at 15:42 BST

    Chris Mason
    Political editor

    As we've just reported, Trump has posted on social media that Starmer "will resign" as prime minister.

    What we don’t know as we digest that post is the extent to which this is the president joining the dots or if he knows something definitive.

    Given the capacity of Trump to pick up his smart phone and tap out a message on social media I think No 10 would have been alive to sharing anything with the US before saying anything publicly.

    Even if this is Trump joining the dots, frankly, this weekend the dots are there to be joined.

    It is not ludicrous for anybody to look at the political facts and see it is likely the prime minister will be setting out his resignation timetable pretty soon.

  2. Trump says Starmer will resign having 'failed badly' on immigration and energypublished at 15:10 BST

    US President Donald Trump pictured earlier this monthImage source, EPA

    US President Donald Trump has weighed in on growing speculation about the PM's future.

    He writes on Truth Social: "Keir Starmer will resign as Prime Minister of The United Kingdom. He failed badly on two very important subjects- IMMIGRATION AND ENERGY (OPEN NORTH SEA OIL!). I wish him well!"

    The line from No 10 this morning was that the PM's position hasn't changed from Friday, when he vowed to fight on. Cabinet minister Peter Kyle said this morning Starmer has been spending part of the weekend reflecting on the "political realities".

  3. No leadership challenge yet - but how would one work?published at 15:03 BST

    Media caption,

    Matt Chorley explains how a leadership contest could work

  4. Analysis

    Burnham's victory in Makerfield has shown he can beat Reformpublished at 14:28 BST

    Nick Eardley and Henry Zeffman
    Political correspondent and chief political correspondent

    Andy Burnham in a white polo and black jeans addresses supporters at a victory rally in Ashton-in-Makerfield. Behind him, to the left, is his wife in a white shirt with black polka dots over a black dress. Next to her are several supporters holding red Andy for Us signsImage source, EPA

    Labour MPs argue the problem isn't necessarily the party, it's the man at the top. They believe the prime minister is personally unpopular - and that it is Sir Keir Starmer who is holding his party back.

    The result of the Makerfield by-election looks set to be the straw that breaks the camel's back.

    Andy Burnham's victory wasn't even close - he beat Reform comfortably. For Labour MPs despairing about how they take the fight to Nigel Farage's party, they now have a leadership contender who can argue he has a track record of doing exactly that.

    Dozens of MPs had already said Starmer should quit. That list has grown since Thursday, with senior cabinet ministers adding their voices privately.

    The fact that it is known that ministers including Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander have told the prime minister to go and yet they remain in their jobs speaks volumes about how Starmer's authority has collapsed.

    Burnham is now the overwhelming favourite to be the UK's next prime minister.

    If Starmer does resign in the coming days, the next question is whether there is any contest at all.

    Wes Streeting, the former health secretary, always said he would stand. But his allies are now saying there should be conversations between candidates for No 10 about what the future looks like.

    There are some hints a deal could be struck (even if Team Streeting are saying for now that their position hasn't changed).

  5. Greens name Trafford councillor as Greater Manchester mayor candidatepublished at 14:04 BST

    Geraldine Coggins smiles in a headshot picture. She is wearing a floral scarf and a grey jacket in front of a green nature backdrop.Image source, Trafford Council

    While Andy Burnham's victory in the Makerfield by-election on Thursday has opened up a path for him to challenge Keir Starmer as Labour leader, it has also left a vacuum in his former role as Greater Manchester mayor.

    The Green Party has named Trafford councillor Geraldine Coggins as their candidate for the contest, looking to build on their success in the Gorton and Denton by-election earlier this year.

    Coggins told supporters at a launch event in Manchester it was a straight contest between the Greens and Nigel Farage's Reform UK as she pledged to improve transport, housing and choose "people and planet over profits".

    The mayoral election is scheduled to take place on 30 July, with Labour set to announce its candidate on Friday.

  6. Andy Burnham's by-election victory in numberspublished at 13:36 BST

    Throughout our coverage, we have been referring to Andy Burnham's win in the Makerfield by-election, where he took 24,927 votes.

    Here is a reminder of how the victory went down, in numbers:

    • More than 45,500 votes were cast in the Makerfield by-election
    • That equates to 58.8% of the constituency. It's the first time since 1982 that a by-election turnout was greater than that of the previous general election (52.5% in 2024)
    • Burnham secured 55% of the vote overall - and increased Labour's vote share by 10 percentage points
    • 15,696 votes - or 35% - went to Reform UK, bumping the party's vote share by three percentage points
    • Newcomers Restore Britain received 3,111 votes - or 7%
    • 997 votes went to the Conservatives, 308 to the Greens and 163 to the Lib Dems

    A graph showing Makerfield by-election results and Labour beating Reform UK by over 9,000 votes
  7. Starmer weighing the 'political realities': How did we get here?published at 13:11 BST

    As the day dawned to an Andy Burnham victory in Makerfield on Friday, Prime Minister Starmer congratulated the man who has set his sights on No 10 while later asserting he would fight any challenge to his leadership.

    Today, the mood at the top of government has changed. Here's how we got here:

    • Andy Burnham wins Makerfield just after 03:00 BST on Friday by a significant margin and declares "this is a final chance to change" in a message to Labour
    • At approximately 06:00, Starmer congratulates Burnham. Later he warns a leadership race would plunge the country into "chaos", repeating he would contest any race. He also urges Labour to "pull together as a party and a movement"
    • Allies of Burnham and Wes Streeting, another leadership contender, tell the BBC neither will make public appearances over the weekend, in an apparent bid to give the PM room to decide his future
    • In a conversation with the PM, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander suggests he set out a timetable to leave office, the BBC is told. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper is also understood to be urging him to set out a plan to resign
    • On Sunday morning, No 10 responds to reports suggesting Starmer could resign as soon as Monday, saying he's "getting on with the job"
    • Business Secretary Peter Kyle tells the BBC Starmer is making time this weekend to reflect on the "political realities", saying he had a "thoughtful conversation" with the PM on Friday - though he did not say Starmer would resign
  8. Signs grow that Starmer will set out his timetable to resignpublished at 12:40 BST

    Nick Eardley and Henry Zeffman
    Political correspondent and chief political correspondent

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer stands behind a wooden lectern bearing the symbol of the UK. He's wearing a black suit, with a white shirt and black tie, behind him in the blurred background, are two Union flagsImage source, No 10 Downing Street

    The signs are growing that tomorrow could see the prime minister set out a plan to stand down.

    Sir Keir Starmer has always insisted he will not walk away and will fight any leadership challenge. But the mood in government has shifted in the past 48 hours.

    Several government insiders now think that the prime minister could announce a timetable to quit - as soon as Monday.

    The signs were clear that things are moving quickly in what Business Secretary Peter Kyle told the BBC this morning.

    The prime minister, he said, would do "what is in the best interests of the country".

    Starmer, he added, was reflecting on the challenges he faces and political realities.

    The challenges for the prime minister have been steadily growing for some time.

  9. Cabinet ministers express doubts about Starmer's leadershippublished at 12:20 BST

    Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander departs Number 10 Downing Street while holding a red folder.Image source, EPA/Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    Heidi Alexander held a conversation with the prime minister on Friday following the Makerfield by-election

    The result of Thursday's Makerfield by-election has led to a growing number of MPs within the Labour Party calling on Keir Starmer to resign, including figures within his own cabinet.

    Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander held a conversation with the prime minister on Friday following Andy Burnham's victory, with the BBC being told she suggested Starmer set out a timetable to leave office.

    It is also understood that Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the Labour leader to draft exit plans, while Business Secretary Peter Kyle told BBC's Laura Kuenssberg that there is clear "political uncertainty" and Burnham "could be one of those people" with the talent to lead Labour.

    The latest set of comments from Starmer's frontbenchers came after ministers such as Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband urged the PM to set out a resignation timetable following Labour's poor performance in the May elections.

    Starmer's senior ministers are scheduled to meet for the weekly cabinet meeting on Tuesday, though some believe the leader's departure could come as soon as Monday.

  10. Possible leadership challenge - key questions answeredpublished at 11:55 BST

    Has a leadership challenge been triggered?

    No - and the timing of any possible challenge is still unclear.

    Will the prime minister stand?

    Party leaders are automatically on the ballot paper unless they resign. On Friday, Keir Starmer said he "will stand" in any contest.

    Who are the possible contenders?

    Much of the talk has focused on Andy Burnham and former Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

    Angela Rayner is favoured by some on the left of the party, while former armed forces minister Al Carns has hinted he could also enter a leadership race.

    Flow chart showing how labour leadership election would work, with each candidate needing to secure the backing of 20% of MPs. A vote then takes place with candidates needing 50% to win.
  11. Keir a 'decent man' but voters want change - Welsh Labour MPpublished at 11:30 BST

    BBC Wales News

    Welsh Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi

    By Nick Bourne

    Welsh Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi told BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement that voters "want to see change".

    "Let's be honest, Keir is a very, very decent man but the country, and Wales especially, is crying out for change," she said earlier.

    The Gower MP said a "divide" had been created in the Senedd following May's Welsh Parliament elections, which saw Labour - which had been in power since 1999 - beaten into third place behind Plaid Cymru and Reform.

    "I'm not pro-Burnham, pro-Wes, pro-anybody. I just need the change. We need the change," Antoniazzi said.

    "I would like to see a leader that takes us up to the next general election and gives us a good foundation in which to win and be in power for another five years and, sadly, that person isn't Keir."

  12. 'Thinking about my dad' - Starmer posts Father's Day message as he reflects 'political realities'published at 11:13 BST

    Keir Starmer in a suit and tie and looking pensive.Image source, PA Media

    Cabinet minister Peter Kyle told Laura Kuenssberg earlier the prime minister is making time this weekend to reflect on "political rallies" ahead of an expected challenge to his job.

    Being Father's Day today, Keir Starmer has made clear on X this morning he's also making time think about another important topic.

    "Being a dad is my greatest joy. Today, I’m thinking about my dad, and the father I am to my children because of him. Happy Father’s Day," he says.

    Starmer told BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs in 2020 that he didn't often talk about his father, Rod, who died in 2018.

    At the time he spoke of his regret at not being close to his late father, who he described as a "difficult" and "complicated" man.

  13. Starmer 'at end of the road', or government 'not doing so bad'? Labour MPs split on PM's futurepublished at 10:54 BST

    Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg set and she is talking to three Labour MPS on her panel, with a picture of Andy Burnham in the tower behind

    Throughout Laura Kuenssberg's show, her panel of Labour MPs - Jess Phillips, Toby Perkins and Luke Charters - gave their insights on the potential leadership contest Starmer could be facing in the coming weeks.

    Phillips said it feels like we've come to "the end of the road" for Starmer. She added that if Andy Burnham were to launch a leadership competition, he would have to prove he is the "unifier" his supporters say he is, beyond Makerfield and Greater Manchester.

    • As a reminder, Burnham was elected MP for Makerfield this week - meaning he could, with enough support, launch a leadership contest. He would need 81 MPs backing him

    Charters said he believes Burnham would follow Labour's manifesto from the 2024 General Election - adding that the Makerfield by-election was almost like a "referendum" on the future of the Labour Party.

    And Perkins called for "calm heads", insisting that the government "isn't actually doing so bad" as he pointed to shorter NHS waiting times, net migration and the asylum backlog.

  14. A change of tone for the government as Starmer takes time to reflectpublished at 10:32 BST

    Business Secretary Peter Kyle sits wearing a dark suit and a red tie. There is a graphic of Number 10 Downing Street behind him
    Image caption,

    Peter Kyle said Andy Burnham "could" have the talent to lead the Labour Party

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer is taking time this weekend to reflect on the "political realities" of today, Business Secretary Peter Kyle tells Laura Kuenssberg, adding that there is clearly "political uncertainty" at the moment.

    The comments represent a change in tone from Government, our political correspondent Nick Eardley says, after Starmer insisted on Friday he would stay on and contest a leadership election.

    Kyle also says Andy Burnham "could be one of those people" with the talent to lead Labour. However, he adds that he doesn't know "for a fact" what is going to happen over the next few days.

    Shadow chancellor Mel Stride doubts Burnham's ability to change the "fundamental nature" of the Labour Party in Parliament, saying the country needs "stability" at all times in our political system.

    As pressure continues to grow on the PM to set a timetable for his departure, his former adviser Paul Ovenden says Starmer has earned the respect to make whatever decision he will make "in his own way and his own time".

  15. Leadership change could cost UK 'influence on world stage', says former civil servantpublished at 10:14 BST

    Former Cabinet Secretary Simon Case sitting down in front of a set of wooden bookcases filled with books

    During the programme, former Cabinet Secretary Lord Case said that leadership uncertainty "costs us opportunities".

    He points to issues around defence spending, which he says is a "huge issue" with enormous national and international significance, and also "political significance" - pointing to the resignation of former Defence Secretary John Healey.

    • For context: Healey stepped down last week citing concerns a yet-to-be-published defence investment plan failed to deliver on the UK's defence needs "at this dangerous time"

    Case also says that a further change in leadership is likely to generate "a high degree of eye-rolling", costing the UK "influence on the world stage".

  16. Stride questions Burnham's record as he says Tories growing 'increasingly competitive'published at 10:01 BST

    Shadow chancellor Mel Stride in dark suit, white shirt and dark tie

    Also in the Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg hot seat is shadow chancellor Mel Stride, who says he doesn't think the Conservatives are responsible for the current political system of successive changes in PMs.

    He adds that we need "stability" at all times in our political system as well as the right policies.

    Stride says there's no evidence Andy Burnham is in the position to change the "fundamental nature" of the Labour Party in Parliament - claiming that Burnham "flip flops" and "doesn't seem to know what the fiscal rules are".

    He notes the Tories' success in the Aberdeen South by-election this week, saying it was based on the party's policies on energy and North Sea oil and gas.

    The shadow chancellor also says his party is becoming "increasingly competitive", adding that Reform lost the Makerfield by-election despite throwing the "kitchen sink" at it and describes Nigel Farage's party as "fantasy economists".

    • The programme has now concluded but stay with us as we bring you more on the latest political developments and analysis.
  17. PM earned respect to decide what happens 'in his own way and his own time' - former adviserpublished at 09:51 BST

    Former Starmer adviser Paul Ovenden in dark suit, mid-speech

    Kuenssberg next sits down with former Keir Starmer adviser Paul Ovenden, asking how the PM is likely to be feeling right now.

    Ovenden says that Starmer's way of thinking was always: "Put the country first, the Labour Party second, and probably his own ambitions or well-being third." He says this is what will "guide his way of thinking" now.

    Reflecting on Starmer's leadership in the 2024 General Election, he says the PM has earned the respect to make whatever decision he will make "in his own way and his own time".

    Kuenssberg turns to Andy Burnham, who Ovenden says has "fantastic charisma" and is able to connect with voters.

    He says as long as the 2024 manifesto is "honoured in spirit", there shouldn't be a problem in someone elected in a by-election potentially taking on the party leadership.

  18. What will Burnham do with power, if he gets it?published at 09:41 BST

    Nick Eardley
    Political correspondent

    The firm - perhaps overwhelming - favourite to be the next prime minister is Andy Burnham.

    But what will he do with power, if he gets it?

    On Laura Kuenssberg's panel, Labour MP Toby Perkins asks: "We do need to know if we've got a change of direction, are we basically still supporting the manifesto we were all elected on?"

    Luke Charters, another Labour MP supporting Andy Burnham, insists the answer is yes - but the current leadership has been too timid.

  19. Panel weighs in on Peter Kyle interviewpublished at 09:40 BST

    From left to right: Labour MPs Toby Perkins, Jess Philips and Luke Charters

    Kuenssberg turns to her panel to discuss the interviews with her guests.

    Starmer supporter Toby Perkins says the government is delivering on the main things that it said it would do, and that we could do with "calm heads".

    Asked whether it was "serious" for some of Labour to be trying to get rid of an PM in office, Burnham backer Luke Charters says the country is in a "vastly different" now than it was when Labour won the 2024 General Election in a landslide victory.

    Jess Phillips weighs in, saying Andy Burnham will have to "prove that is that unifier" that Charters claims he is, beyond Makerfield and Greater Manchester.

    She says it looks like a "slow resignation" is taking place after Peter Kyle's interview.

  20. Analysis

    Kyle made it clear Starmer is weighing up his futurepublished at 09:38 BST

    Nick Eardley
    Political correspondent

    The signs the prime minister is considering resigning are clear from what we've heard this morning.

    The business secretary said he did not know for sure what was about to happen.

    But he was also clear Keir Starmer is weighing up his future - reflecting on political reality and the challenges he faces.

    The prime minister, Peter Kyle said, will do "what is in the best interests of the country".

    A growing number of figures in government believe the prime minister is preparing to set out plans for his departure as soon as Monday.

    Number Ten continues to point to the PM's words on Friday, when he said he intended to fight and leadership challenge.