Angela Rayner today dramatically launched her own bid to be Labour leader by taking to TV to accuse Keir Starmer of making mistakes and admitting he must ‘reflect’ on his position.
With her party plunged into civil war, Ms Rayner has also claimed that she will not run with her friend Andy Burnham, declaring: ‘I am not doing deals’.
With Manchester Mayor Mr Burnham without a seat, Angela paved the way for her own Labour leadership bid by revealing she has finally handed £40,000 to HMRC for underpaying stamp duty on a seaside flat – but insisted she had not been ‘tax dodging’.
It comes as Health Secretary Wes Streeting prepares to resign and launch his own bid for leadership today with Ed Miliband also rumoured to be running.
Ms Rayner has she wants to ‘play my part’ in a potential future contest to lead the Labour party, indicating that she may put herself forward for the top job if Sir Keir Starmer does face a leadership contest.
‘I’ve made it clear that I wasn’t going to trigger the Prime Minister – and that I want to see change. I want to see actions, not just words’, she said.
‘We’re not delivering the change that people voted for and I feel like we’ve made some mistakes that need to be corrected.
‘I’ve said to Keir this is a really significant moment for our party and the country. The pace of change hasn’t been enough for voters to see, and also mistakes have really blown us off course and made voters doubt us.’
Asked if Keir Starmer should now resign she said: ‘Keir will have to reflect on that.’
Angela Rayner has paid £40,000 to HMRC after she underpaid stamp duty. She insists she has been cleared of deliberate wrongdoing – paving the way for a leadership bid
Andy Burnham is expected to signal his own ambition to succeed Sir Keir today. Ms Rayner says she has not made a deal with Manchester mayor
Former deputy Labour leader Ms Rayner today admitted she has settled the £40,000 she owed in unpaid stamp duty on her seaside home in East Sussex.
But she insists that HMRC cleared her of ‘deliberate wrongdoing or carelessness over her tax affairs’.
She was forced to resign as Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary last September after a sleaze watchdog found she broke the Ministerial Code when she underpaid about £40,000 of stamp duty on an £800,000 seaside apartment in Hove, East Sussex.
In an interview with ITV the former deputy Labour leader said ‘people felt that I was tax dodging’ but ‘HMRC have concluded that there wasn’t any wrongdoing on my behalf’.
She told The Guardian: ‘I’ll play my part in doing everything we possibly can to deliver the change, because it’s not a personal ambition, I know the difference it makes.
‘Whatever role I can play, I will keep pushing and pushing hard because I want the people out there at the moment who are really struggling… to know that I’m putting all my energy into fighting for them.’
However the MP, seen to be a favourite of the Left of the Labour Party, suggested she would not fire the starting pistol on a leadership race herself.
When asked whether she had struck a deal with Manchester mayor and leadership hopeful Andy Burnham, she said: ‘No, I’ve said I would not trigger [a coup against] the Prime Minister.’
Meanwhile, Mr Burnham has pulled out of his BBC Radio Manchester slot this morning.
A spokesperson said he had to ‘prioritise discussions arising from last week’s elections’.
Wes Streeting will plunge Labour into civil war today by quitting the Cabinet to mount a leadership challenge against Keir Starmer.
The Health Secretary is ready to fire the starting gun this morning following yesterday’s face-to-face showdown with the Prime Minister which lasted just 16 minutes.
His plans triggered panic in Downing Street and fury on the Labour Left, where MPs are even considering Ed Miliband as they scramble to unite behind a candidate of their own.
Sir Keir was reduced to pleading with his MPs to step back from the brink of a leadership contest, which he warned would cause ‘chaos’ and ‘paralyse’ the Government for months.
During a series of private meetings in the Commons, he told them: ‘We can’t let a leadership contest plunge us into chaos and a challenge would 100 per cent do that.’
Allies of the PM insist he will stand and fight for his job in what is likely to become a three or even four-way contest for the keys to No10.
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is expected to signal his own ambition to succeed Sir Keir today. But it remains unclear whether he can find a route back to Parliament in time.
One union leader accused Mr Streeting of attempting a ‘coup’ by launching a leadership bid before Mr Burnham is able to stand.
Wes Streeting pictured at the King’s Speech on Wednesday. The Health Secretary will plunge Labour into civil war today by quitting the Cabinet to mount a leadership challenge
Sir Keir Starmer, pictured on Wednesday, was reduced to pleading with his MPs to step back from the brink of a leadership contest, which he warned would cause ‘chaos’
MPs on the Left of the party were last night debating whether to back Angela Rayner or Mr Miliband if Mr Burnham is locked out of the race.
Mr Miliband was emerging as favourite despite being rejected by the public at the 2015 election, although his wife Justine Thornton is thought to be against the idea of him running for the leadership again.
Other potential candidates include deputy leader Lucy Powell and Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy.
Cabinet Office minister Darren Jones is being encouraged to run as a ‘continuity Starmer’ candidate if the PM falls by the wayside. Former Special Forces officer Al Carns is also considering entering the race.
The extraordinary events unfolded on the day of the State Opening of Parliament, with the King reading out the legislative agenda of a Prime Minister whose downfall was being plotted by his own MPs. Kemi Badenoch said Sir Keir was ‘in office, but not in power’.
In a blistering performance in the Commons, the Conservative leader warned that Britain will be ‘subjected to months of peacocking by leadership candidates while the country is not being governed’.
She added: ‘In the past 48 hours, nearly 100 Labour MPs have called for the Prime Minister to resign. Four ministers have quit.
‘It is clear that his authority has gone and that he will not be able to deliver what little there is in this King’s Speech. This is a Government less than two years in office who have already run out of ideas and run out of road.’
Pressure has been mounting on Sir Keir since last week’s disastrous local elections, which saw Labour lose 1,500 council seats in England and trail in third place in Scotland and Wales.
Downing Street had thought it had seen off the threat from Mr Streeting after he failed to mount an immediate challenge. Government sources were even goading him yesterday morning, suggesting he had ‘bottled it’.
The PM faced another body blow when Labour-supporting trade unions told him to set out a timetable for his departure, saying it was ‘clear that the Prime Minister will not lead Labour into the next election’.
In a joint statement, the 11 unions said ‘Labour cannot continue on its current path’ and needs ‘a fundamental change of direction’ to ‘re-orient Labour back to working people’.
Mr Streeting is ready to fire the starting gun this morning following yesterday’s face-to-face showdown with the Prime Minister which lasted just 16 minutes
Minutes later, Mr Streeting strode into No10 for what Downing Street described as a ‘coffee’ to ‘discuss his concerns’ about last week’s election results and the direction of the party.
He emerged stony-faced 16 minutes later and stalked off without speaking to waiting reporters. Labour’s warring factions had agreed a tentative 24-hour truce to avoid the potential embarrassment to the monarch by launching a leadership challenge on the day of the King’s Speech.
But as Charles was making his way to Westminster, allies of Mr Streeting confirmed he is planning to resign today.
Downing Street insisted the PM had ‘full confidence’ in the Health Secretary. But privately, there was fury at his decision to challenge for the top job.
One ally of Sir Keir said: ‘This will open up a Pandora’s Box from which Labour will never recover. If it ends up with Ed in No10 then it is all over.’
Mr Streeting is on the Right of the party and is viewed with deep suspicion by many on the Left.
In the Commons, Cabinet ministers snubbed Mr Streeting, with Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson ignoring his attempt to strike up conversation.
Sir Keir’s remaining Cabinet supporters were working with the whips last night to try to pick off Mr Streeting’s supporters. To launch a formal challenge, he will need the support of at least 81 Labour MPs. Some MPs close to Sir Keir believe he could struggle to reach the threshold.
Under Labour’s rules, other challengers could then enter the contest if they can also reach the threshold of support. Sir Keir’s name would be entered automatically.
Mr Streeting’s allies are believed to have contacted MPs asking for their support, it was reported last night. They are said to have suggested the politicians could transfer their vote to another candidate after a contest is triggered.
The Health Secretary’s plans triggered panic in Downing Street and fury on the Labour Left, where MPs are even considering Ed Miliband as they scramble to unite behind a candidate
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is expected to signal his own ambition to succeed Sir Keir today
Supporters of Mr Burnham are lobbying Labour’s ruling National Executive Committee to agree an extended timetable for the leadership contest to give him time to fight a by-election.
But any delay to accommodate Mr Burnham could leave Britain with a lame-duck Prime Minister for months. And it remains unclear whether Mr Burnham would win a by-election.
Labour peer Lord Hutton warned that any new leader proposing a radical change of direction would have to call an election to get their own mandate.
The former Cabinet minister told LBC: ‘With the bond markets in the state that they are in, I think there is a huge risk that things get really worse if we choose the wrong leader.’
It comes as Health Secretary Wes Streeting is expected to plunge Labour into civil war today by quitting the Cabinet to mount a leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer if he has the backing of the 81 Labour MPs required for him to trigger a contest.
He is ready to launch a bid this morning following yesterday’s face-to-face showdown with the Prime Minister which lasted just 16 minutes.
His plans triggered panic in Downing Street and fury on the Labour Left, where MPs are even considering Ed Miliband as they scramble to unite behind a candidate of their own.
Sir Keir was reduced to pleading with his MPs to step back from the brink of a leadership contest, which he warned would cause ‘chaos’ and ‘paralyse’ the Government for months.
During a series of private meetings in the Commons, he told them: ‘We can’t let a leadership contest plunge us into chaos and a challenge would 100 per cent do that.’
Health Secretary Wes Streeting is expected to plunge Labour into civil war today by quitting the Cabinet to mount a leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer
Allies of the PM insist he will stand and fight for his job in what is likely to become a three or even four-way contest for the keys to No10.
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is expected to signal his own ambition to succeed Sir Keir today. But it remains unclear whether he can find a route back to Parliament in time.
One union leader accused Mr Streeting of attempting a ‘coup’ by launching a leadership bid before Mr Burnham is able to stand.
MPs on the Left of the party were last night debating whether to back Angela Rayner or Mr Miliband if Mr Burnham is locked out of the race.
It has also been reported that Energy Secretary Ed Miliband could launch his own bid.
