KEIR STARMER: Prime Minister resigns — Welsh reaction as Labour leadership race begins
Sir Keir Starmer has announced he is to resign as Prime Minister and leader of the Labour Party.
In a statement outside 10 Downing Street on Monday morning, he said he had “heard the answer” of his party on whether he was the right person to lead it into the next general election, and would step aside.
He said every decision he had taken in office had been about “putting the country I love first”.
Sir Keir will remain as Prime Minister until a new Labour leader is chosen. He said nominations would open on 9 July and close by the time Parliament breaks for its summer recess on 16 July, meaning a successor should be in place before MPs return on 1 September.
The move follows months of pressure that intensified after Labour’s heavy losses in May’s elections, and after Andy Burnham’s by-election victory in Makerfield last week.
Burnham, the former mayor of Greater Manchester, has confirmed he will put himself forward to replace Sir Keir, and is widely seen as the frontrunner — though the contest has not formally begun and others may yet stand.
In a statement, Burnham thanked Sir Keir for “huge service to our country” and said the priority now must be “stability, seriousness and a continued focus on the issues that matter most”. He said the transition should be “orderly and responsible” and “a positive process of renewal” for the party and the country.
The most significant Welsh response came from First Minister Rhun ap Iorwerth, the Plaid Cymru leader who took office after May’s Senedd election.
He said he was “disappointed that the Welsh Government’s ability to engage with the UK Prime Minister on issues that matter to the people of Wales is being hampered by the turmoil in Westminster”.
Wishing Sir Keir well, he said he wanted his successor to recognise that “Wales needs a new relationship with Westminster, with a focus on greater powers, fair funding and respect for the democratic mandate delivered by the people of Wales”.
The First Minister said he would seek “a constructive relationship with whoever is in Number 10”, but added: “We have clear expectations that the respect agenda must work both ways.”
Wales saw its own dramatic reverse for Labour in May, when the party lost power in the Senedd for the first time since devolution.
Welsh Labour’s interim leader, Ken Skates, led his party’s tribute to the outgoing Prime Minister.
Skates said Sir Keir had brought the party “back from oblivion” and delivered “one of the greatest victories the Labour Party has seen”.
He pointed to the rise in the minimum wage, the boost to the state pension and stronger employment rights under Sir Keir’s leadership, as well as what he called a “record devolution settlement” for Wales and “generational” plans for £14bn of rail investment.
“He has led the country through exceptionally tough times with dignity and authenticity, and I want to put on record my deepest thanks to him,” Skates said.
Skates, who became interim Welsh Labour leader in May after the party’s Senedd election defeat, said Labour now owed it to Sir Keir and the country to “come together” and keep “delivering for people right across Wales, and the UK”.
Other opposition voices used the moment to call for a change in approach.
David Chadwick, the Welsh Liberal Democrat MP for Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe and the party’s Wales spokesperson, said changing the person at the top would not change much “unless Labour finally confronts the structural problems that continue to hold Wales back”.
He said the next Prime Minister must pursue a closer relationship with the EU and a fairer funding formula for Wales, adding: “Wales needs more than a new Prime Minister. We need a Westminster government that finally takes Wales seriously.”
The resignation also drew sharp responses from opposition leaders at Westminster.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said the public was “sick of being let down by an endless merry-go-round of prime ministers while nothing really changes”, arguing the moment had to be about “changing our broken politics”, not just who occupies Number 10.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called for an immediate general election, describing Sir Keir as the “most incompetent” prime minister the country had had, and claiming a Burnham-led government would simply continue his predecessor’s approach.
A change of Prime Minister raises questions for Wales, with major commitments — among them rail funding and the wider devolution settlement — now resting on the priorities of whoever succeeds Sir Keir.
Several of the Swansea Bay area’s representatives served in or alongside Sir Keir’s government, and further reaction is expected through the day.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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