POLITICS — June 22, 2026

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to Resign

The announcement follows pressure from over 100 Labour MPs after local election losses and Andy Burnham's by-election win in Mirfield, though one cabinet member maintains that Starmer's tenure is not ending.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV2 min read

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to Resign
Image courtesy Amu TV

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer will resign from his post today. The move is planned to be announced after a weekend spent at the Chequers residence, where Starmer discussed the matter with his family members.

Pressure on Starmer has built up over recent months. More than 100 members of parliament from the Labour Party have demanded that he resign. This demand arose after the party suffered a poor performance in local elections. It was further fueled by Andy Burnham's win in the by-election held in Mirfield.

If the resignation proceeds as expected, power will be transferred gradually to Andy Burnham over the coming summer months. Burnham would then serve as the seventh prime minister in just ten years. The country has experienced a series of scandals and policy changes during this time that contributed to the current leadership crisis.

Despite the reports pointing to an imminent resignation, there are conflicting indications. One member of the cabinet has stated that Keir Starmer's time in power is not over yet. This statement suggests that the prime minister may continue in his role for the time being.

The situation reflects the challenges facing the Labour government and the dynamics within the party. Observers are watching closely to see how the leadership question is resolved in the coming days.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Multiple independent major outlets (CBS, CNBC, POLITICO, NYT, CNN, Al Jazeera) confirm Starmer announced his resignation on June 22, 2026, matching the story's core event, date, and context of party pressure with Burnham mentioned as challenger in related coverage.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Amu TV: "scandals", "decisive victory", "historic defeat", "landslide victory" – these phrases frame Starmer's tenure with negative emotional loading on his failures while positively amplifying Burnham's success, mixing reporting with opinionated judgment.

Independent web corroboration

A separate web search returned 8 matching reports. A selection:

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

PoliticsKeir Starmer, Andy Burnham, UK Labour Party, Downing Street

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