Rayner warns Starmer’s Labour running out of time to win back voters
Angela Rayner has issued her clearest challenge to Sir Keir Starmer yet, warning that Labour is “running out of time” to deliver change and cannot “go through the motions in the face of decline”.
In a speech at an event by left-wing campaign group Mainstream, the former deputy prime minister said the party had come to be seen to represent “the Establishment, not working people” and called for a change of course.
Angela Rayner has issued her clearest challenge to Sir Keir Starmer yet, warning that Labour is “running out of time” to deliver change and cannot “go through the motions in the face of decline”.
In a speech at an event by left-wing campaign group Mainstream, the former deputy prime minister said the party had come to be seen to represent “the Establishment, not working people” and called for a change of course.
For anyone hoping for some slight improvement in the UK political outlook in 2026, current leadership betting extracted via Copilot AI merely reminds us that we are all running out of time -
Political betting markets currently indicate Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting as the front-runners to replace Keir Starmer, with 2026 being the most likely year for a leadership change.
The latest betting markets show a strong consensus that Keir Starmer may step down as Prime Minister during 2026. William Hill lists 2026 as the favourite exit year at odds of 1/5 , while other bookmakers place the probability of his departure by September 2026 at around 58%–80% .
In terms of potential successors:
- Angela Rayner: Former Deputy Prime Minister and prominent figure on Labour's left, consistently leads the betting. Odds across multiple bookmakers range from 11/4 to 14/5, implying a 26-27% probability .
- Wes Streeting: Health Secretary and a noted reformist, is closely behind Rayner. He is listed at odds around 9/2 to 11/2, translating to roughly an 18% chance in current betting markets .
- Ed Miliband: Former Labour leader, maintains a notable chance with odds of 6/1 to 7/1 .
- Andy Burnham: Popular in the North West and former mayor, features at longer odds of 12/1 to 3/1 in different reports .
- Other candidates: Include Shabana Mahmood, Nigel Farage (in disruption scenarios), Yvette Cooper, and Kemi Badenoch, with odds ranging higher, reflecting lower market expectations .
These betting odds reflect public and political sentiment as perceived by punters, and are subject to change based on events such as elections, media developments, and internal party dynamics. They do not guarantee actual leadership outcomes.
Overall, Rayner and Streeting are the primary focus in 2026 succession markets, while Starmer’s position remains under intense debate, making this a highly monitored political landscape.
"Deliver change"
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't even mean anything, does it. They are currently delivering change, and it's all for the worse
Not one Labour crook is fit to even be in parliament.
ReplyDeletePerhaps we should hope that Starmer stumbles on as the best(!) of a bad bunch.
ReplyDeleteAnd also hope (rather less certain) for an early General Election.
Are they all in the pocket of the CCP or are some of them determined to destroy western civilisation, British branch, entirely from unbribed malice?
ReplyDeleteBucko - that's it, it doesn't even mean anything.
ReplyDeleteJames - I agree, the whole party should be a shameful memory.
DJ - yes, that's the disturbing aspect of being rid of him, he could be the best of a very bad bunch indeed.
dearieme - it comes across as unbribed malice. Unfortunately that does fit well with that we see. Bridget Phillipson for example, doesn't even hide it.