
Westminster is in meltdown. Downing Street just launched a savage attack on Health Secretary Wes Streeting, and the fallout has both Labour and the Government scrambling. But why now?
The truth: Keir Starmerâs premiership has been limping along since June. Backbenchers turned on him, rejecting the welfare reforms that were supposed to be the crown jewel of his administration. Translation? âThanks for the election win⊠now, do one.â đ„
Yet the cracks were there long before. From Sue Gray debacle, endless globe-trotting, Suitgate, the infamous âisland of strangersâ speech, to the car crash that is the Governmentâs economic strategy â Starmerâs leadership has been increasingly rudderless and erratic.
đŠ The Tweet That Sparked a Political Storm
The drama exploded last week with a single Twitter post from Streeting:
âInspirational campaign and victory for Zohran Mamdani in NYC. Lessons for progressives the world over.â
Harmless? Not for Starmerâs team. A subtle dig at the PMâs lacklustre performance â and a wink to Labourâs activist base â triggered a merciless public slap-down from Starmerâs chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney.
Journalists were briefed: any challenge to Starmer = chaos. Markets? Could wobble. Political stability? On thin ice.
⥠Westminster in Shock
Everyoneâs talking. MPs are outraged at the attack on Streeting, even though many had spent the summer quietly expressing disdain for Starmer and Downing Street. But hereâs the kicker: McSweeney knows exactly what heâs doing. Heâs playing the long game, because the Budget in two weeks is expected to be a disaster. And when the truth hits about tax pledges, the political bloodletting will be unstoppable.
đ The Coming Leadership Scramble
Hereâs whatâs next:
- McSweeney falls â a sacrificial lamb to save Starmerâs skin.
- Streeting rises serenely, pledging loyalty but quietly staking his ground.
- Other contenders start making moves: Andy Burnham, Angela Rayner, Shabana Mahmood, Ed Miliband â all slowly positioning for the post-Starmer era.
đŁ Public policy? Take a backseat. Everything now is about Labour leadership succession, not the country. The British people? Almost irrelevant.
đȘ Starmerâs Final Act?
The PM looks increasingly lost and disengaged, even as the Government struggles with crises at home. From COP-30 in Brazil to domestic chaos, insiders say:
âItâs like heâs given up. Focus on domestic agenda? Forget it.â
The chatter is growing: if the Budget backlash is severe, Starmer could be forced out before Christmas.
Streetingâs allies are pushing for a fast contest to block Burnham from getting the seat he needs, but realistically? Expect a cycle of relaunches, stumbles, and drama. Starmer will falter, the pack will circle, heâll falter again â until the pack finally strikes.
âł Six Months of Political Turmoil Ahead
Next yearâs local elections will be the moment of reckoning, but until then, Britain is effectively hostage to Labourâs fratricidal MPs. Everyone knows the ending: Starmerâs days are numbered, and the best thing for him â and the country â is to get it over with.


