Translation result
Labour Suffers Local Election Rout…Loses 1,500+ Council Seats
Plans to Nationalize UK Steel, Seek New EU Youth Mobility Deal
Facing a wave of calls to resign after the ruling Labour Party’s rout in local elections, Prime Minister Keir Starmer rejected stepping down, saying, “I will prove the doubters wrong.”
The Guardian reported on the 11th (local time) that in his speech Starmer acknowledged, “I know the British public feel let down by the country and by politics, and I know some feel let down by me. I know some people doubt me,” and added, “I must prove they’re wrong. I will do that.”
He warned that Labour is confronting “very dangerous enemies,” framing the party as “the last line of defense” against the country drifting onto a “very dark path.”
Starmer made the remarks after Labour suffered a historic defeat in the local elections on the 7th. Labour finished third in Wales. Across England, the party lost more than 1,500 council seats, ceding traditional strongholds such as Sunderland and Barnsley to Reform UK and surrendering previously safe London constituencies such as Lambeth and Hackney to the Green Party.
With criticism surging both inside and outside the party, Starmer moved to defend his record. The next UK general election is due by summer 2029, but Labour MPs could replace their leader—and thus the prime minister—before then. More than 40 Labour MPs have already called for Starmer’s resignation.
The Guardian identified Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham as potential leadership contenders.
Starmer said he had tried to be candid about how bad things are but failed early on to persuade voters how their lives would improve. He laid out three immediate priorities: the formal nationalization of UK steel, a comprehensive new agreement with the European Union, and guaranteed jobs, training, and apprenticeships for young people.
He also said he will “set a new direction for Britain” at the EU summit in June, vowing that a Labour government would be defined by rebuilding ties with Europe and positioning the UK at the center of the continent.
Markets have reacted to doubts over Starmer’s leadership. The yield on 30‑year UK gilts rose to 5.643% that morning—up 0.07 percentage points from the previous day—and the pound fell 0.2% to $1.3602.
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