UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer Resigns Less Than Two Years After Landslide Win
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned on 22 June 2026, under two years after a landslide win, amid public discontent and a Labour revolt. Andy Burnham is expected to succeed him as the far-right Reform UK emerges as a major political force.
Keir Starmer, who became United Kingdom Prime Minister in July 2024 with a landslide election victory ending 14 years of Conservative rule, has resigned on 22 June 2026 — less than two years into office — amid mounting public discontent and a revolt within the Labour party.
Starmer had won on an anti-Conservative wave and promised to rebuild trust between the public and the political elite. But his technocratic, centrist style struggled against rapid political change, including the rise of far-right and populist parties across Europe. His position weakened after controversy over his choice of ambassador to Washington and after Labour lost local elections in England and polls in Wales and Scotland. The byelection win of Andy Burnham, a senior Labour figure, sealed his fate.
During Starmer's tenure, the UK economy grew faster than its G-7 peers, inflation stayed broadly under control, workers' rights laws were strengthened and minimum wages were raised. Yet these modest gains failed to satisfy voters who had given Labour a strong mandate, especially working-class communities facing economic anxiety and the cultural grievances amplified by Reform UK. Andy Burnham, of Labour's soft-left, is expected to become the new party leader and Prime Minister.
For aspirants, this is an important International Relations and polity-comparison topic — the instability of UK governments since Brexit, the rise of Reform UK as a major right-wing pole, and the challenges facing centrist politics in Western democracies.
Key Points to Remember
- UK PM Keir Starmer resigned on 22 June 2026, under two years after his July 2024 landslide
- He won by ending 14 years of Conservative rule but lost public support quickly
- Labour losses in local, Welsh and Scottish polls and a byelection sealed his fate
- The UK economy grew faster than G-7 peers under him, but gains were seen as insufficient
- Andy Burnham (Labour soft-left) is expected to be the next leader and PM
- The far-right Reform UK has emerged as a major pole in British politics
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC (International Relations — UK politics, Western democracies) and General Awareness across exams.
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