Keir Starmer is facing the prospect of a nightmare by-election after a former Labour MP pleaded guilty to assault. Mike Amesbury could be jailed when he reappears for sentencing at Chester Magistrates Court on February 24.
Sir Keir Starmer is to ditch every Labour policy that damages growth as he scrambles to rescue Britain’s struggling economy...
As Labour settles into its first term in government in 14 years, cracks already seem to be appearing at the seams of its policy-making
Steve Coogan has said he "despairs" of Keir Starmer's method of governing, telling LBC that the Prime Minister "wants to be all things to all men".
John McDonnell's comments come six months after the Labour MPs had the whip suspended after rebelling against the government over the Tory-era two-child benefit limit
For Starmer, the Labour left has been an ever-present critical voice since he became the party’s leader almost five years ago. This group, many of whom are aligned with his predecessor, Jeremy Corbyn, has been unabashedly critical of the new Prime Minister since he took office.
Keir Starmer, a centrist who worked to fight antisemitism in his party, has become the United Kingdom’s prime minister following Labour’s landslide victory in British elections Thursday.
Downing Street said it is ‘entirely normal’ for Britain to be represented by outgoing ambassador Dame Karen Pierce
Keir Starmer has insisted that the economy is 'beginning to turn around', and that growth remains his government's number one priority at a meeting with senior executives this morning.
Sir Keir Starmer has promised to “hard wire growth into all decisions in the cabinet”, as he set out what he called a new approach to policymaking at a meeting with senior executives in the City of London.
In a damning report to mark the fifth anniversary of Britain’s departure from the European Union, UK in a Changing Europe said it appears that EU policy is ‘peripheral to Starmer’s government’
SIR Keir Starmer insists he has “the balls” to take an axe to Britain’s bloated benefits bill. After two weeks of market turbulence, economists and banks have doubted the Labour government’s