David Lammy: No timetable for Keir Starmer's departure as Labour leader
Quick Look
Justice Secretary David Lammy has dismissed speculation about Keir Starmer's leadership, stating there is "no timetable for departure." Lammy urged Labour to unite ahead of the Makerfield by-election, where Andy Burnham is expected to run.
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Why It Matters
Speculation about Keir Starmer's leadership has intensified following recent local election results. Andy Burnham, the current Mayor of Greater Manchester, is reportedly considering a return to Westminster via the Makerfield by-election.
David Lammy, one of the prime ministerās closest cabinet allies, has said Keir Starmer is not about to set a timetable for his departure from Downing Street, calling on Labour to get beyond the āspectacular own goalā of repeated leadership speculation.
While allies of Starmer have suggested he is potentially willing to step aside if Andy Burnham wins next monthās Makerfield byelection and no other challenger emerges, Lammy insisted this was not being considered.
āThere will be no timetable for departure,ā Lammy, who is justice secretary and deputy prime minister, told Sky News.
āLet me be really clear ā Keir Starmer remains the most resilient person I know in my life. I spoke to him twice yesterday. He has a strength of character, a fighting experience. There will be no timetables.
āWhat there is, is getting on with the business of government, [he is] really crystal clear about that. At the moment, there is no contest. What there is, is his determination to deliver for the people.ā
Burnham is expected to be selected for the Makerfield contest after the sitting Labour MP, Josh Simons, stepped down specifically so the Greater Manchester mayor could try to return to Westminster. If he wins against an expected strong challenger from Reform UK, he is likely to challenge for the leadership.
Lammy said Burnham would ābe a great addition to parliamentā, and that he would go to the constituency, on the edge of Wigan in Greater Manchester, to campaign for him.
But he lamented the week of internal wrangling in which Simons stepped down and another potential challenger to Starmer, Wes Streeting, resigned as health secretary after seemingly failing to gather enough support from MPs to make a direct leadership bid.
āIām not going to sugarcoat this, I thought that the Labour party over the last 10 days had a spectacular own goal after those local election results,ā Lammy said.
āWe now need to unite and pull together. We have a byelection to fight. We need to remember our responsibilities as a government. We are not in opposition. We have the levers of power.ā
Reform UK are expected to campaign heavily on Makerfield over speculation that Labour might consider reversing Brexit, after Streeting used a speech on Saturday to say Britainās long-term future lay in rejoining the union, something that was dismissed as āoddā by the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy.
Asked about the debate, Lammy said he was proud that when he had served as foreign secretary, he had resumed closer collaboration with EU nations, removed many trade barriers on food and agriculture products, and brought the UK back into the Erasmus student exchange scheme.
Asked about Streetingās comments, Lammy said the governmentās red lines, on not putting the UK back into the EUās customs union or single market, let alone full membership, remained in place, adding: āIām not going to make a commitment about the next election.ā
What to Watch
AI outlook ā possibilities, not facts
Andy Burnham will run for the Makerfield by-election.
Very likely Ā· Within days
Andy Burnham will challenge for the Labour leadership if he wins the Makerfield by-election.
Likely Ā· Within weeks
Open Questions
- Will Andy Burnham run for the Makerfield by-election?
- Will Andy Burnham challenge for the Labour leadership if he wins the by-election?
- What is the true level of support for Wes Streeting's leadership ambitions?
- What is the Labour Party's definitive stance on rejoining the EU or its associated markets?






