LONDON / EuroWire / – UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he will resign from office and oversee a transfer of power by September, opening a new leadership process inside the governing Labour Party less than two years after its general election victory. Starmer said nominations to succeed him will open on July 9. The announcement begins a formal search for a new party leader who can take office while Labour continues to hold a majority in Parliament.

Starmer said he would remain in place during the transition and allow the leadership process to run before stepping down. His statement makes him the latest UK prime minister to leave office before completing a full parliamentary term. The move also gives the Labour Party a fixed timetable to choose a successor while government departments continue their work under the current administration.
Andy Burnham, the former mayor of Greater Manchester and a former cabinet minister, has announced that he will run for the leadership. Burnham recently returned to Parliament as the member for Makerfield. His candidacy places a senior Labour figure with local and national government experience at the centre of the succession process.
Leadership timetable set
The leadership process will begin with nominations on July 9, according to the timetable cited after Starmer’s announcement. The process will determine who leads the Labour Party and who is expected to be appointed prime minister after the transition. The next leader will inherit a government with a large parliamentary majority and an agenda already shaped by Labour’s 2024 election win.
The announcement followed months of pressure on Starmer from within his party and public criticism over the government’s performance. Labour entered office in 2024 after ending 14 years of Conservative rule. Since then, the government has faced scrutiny over economic policy, public services, welfare changes, and local election results. Starmer’s resignation statement turns that pressure into a managed leadership change.
Burnham enters race
Burnham’s entry gives Labour members and lawmakers a declared candidate at the start of the contest. He served as a minister under previous Labour governments and later led Greater Manchester as mayor. His return to the House of Commons allows him to seek the party leadership from within Parliament. The Labour Party rules will guide nominations, candidate eligibility, and any vote required to complete the selection.
The leadership change comes at a significant point for UK politics. The country has seen repeated prime ministerial changes in recent years, while voters continue to focus on living costs, health services, immigration, public finances, and economic growth. Starmer’s decision sets a deadline for the end of his premiership and starts a new phase for the government, Parliament, and the Labour leadership.
