Darren Jones says Starmer ‘listening to colleagues’, and does not rule out PM announcing resignation timetable
Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the PM, is the minister doing the broadcast interview round this morning.
Yesterday Peter Kyle, the business secretary, was the government spokesperson speaking in this slot. He was bullish in support of Keir Starmer.
This morning Jones has been a lot more equivocal. On Times Radio, asked if Starmer was considering setting out a timetable for his departure, Jones said:
He’s listening to colleagues and he’s talking to colleagues. I can’t get get ahead of any decision he might take.
In an interview with Sky News, he took the same line. Asked by Sophy Ridge if he had spoken to the PM, Jones replied:
I spoke to the prime minister last night, as you would expect, and he is talking to colleagues who have raised issues yesterday. But he was also very clear, as I’m sure all of my colleagues are, that coming into the office this morning, as we all are doing, we’re absolutely focussed on our jobs, on delivering the things that we’ve promised to deliver for the public.
Jones was asked if he expected the PM to lead the party into the next election. Until today, cabinet ministers asked this question have almost always said yes. But today Jones replied:
I’m not going to get ahead of any decision that the prime minister may or may not take.
Asked if Starmer was considering setting out a timetable for his resignation, Jones said:
Obviously colleagues are asking the prime minister to consider different options in the future. And, as I say, he rightfully is listening to them. It’d be wrong if he wasn’t listening to them.
Jones also repeated his line about how he did not want to “get ahead of any decision the prime minister may or may not take in the future”.
Ridge told Jones that she was surprised by the tone of his replies. She said, listening to him, that she felt it was “all coming to an end”.
Jones did not accept that. But he accepted that he was “sad that we’re in this situation in the first place” and sad about the election results.
Asked about reports that Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, has asked Starmer to set out a timetable for his resignation, Jones said he would not discuss private conversations. But he stressed that politics was a team activity.
Asked if he knew what Starmer had decided to do, Jones said he would not discuss private conversations. But he went on:
[Starmer’s] got an important job to do as prime minister of our country … He’s got an important job as leader of the Labour party. and if the prime minister, decides to say anything further to his speech yesterday, I’m sure he’ll come and do that on on Sky news very shortly.

Key events
Beth Rigby, political editor at Sky News, says in a summary of Keir Starmer’s predicament this morning that some Labour figures think pressure for him to go is unstoppable.
– Crunch cabinet this morning. Will be first time Streeting will see PM.
– leading soft left figures been trying to ‘stop people losing their heads so we can have a less fraught response’ but one admitted late last night ‘it feels like it’s unstoppable now though’
– Cabinet minister last night: “I think the Lab party is about to put itself out of power for a serious period of time by repeating mistakes of the Tories”
Chris Mason, the BBC’s political editor, presented a similar view in his early morning upsum on the Today programme. He said he had spoken to a cabinet minister last night who supported the PM but who took the view that “the reality of where we were is that it all points in one direction”.
There will be huge interest in what happens to UK government borrowing costs today. Graeme Wearden is covering this on his business live blog.
Yesterday gilt yields (the cost of borrowing for the Treasury) edged up, in a move attributed to the political uncertainty at Westminster.
On the Today programme this morning, the BBC’s chief political correspondent Henry Zeffman said some Wes Streeting supporters were arguing that, if yields shoot up today and if Starmer announces his resignation, they will say this shows Labour needs to stage a leadership contest quickly to end any uncertainty.
(Obviously, a quick contest would suit Streeting if it meant there was not time for Andy Burnham to win a byelection so he could be a candidate.)
Darren Jones says Starmer ‘listening to colleagues’, and does not rule out PM announcing resignation timetable
Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the PM, is the minister doing the broadcast interview round this morning.
Yesterday Peter Kyle, the business secretary, was the government spokesperson speaking in this slot. He was bullish in support of Keir Starmer.
This morning Jones has been a lot more equivocal. On Times Radio, asked if Starmer was considering setting out a timetable for his departure, Jones said:
He’s listening to colleagues and he’s talking to colleagues. I can’t get get ahead of any decision he might take.
In an interview with Sky News, he took the same line. Asked by Sophy Ridge if he had spoken to the PM, Jones replied:
I spoke to the prime minister last night, as you would expect, and he is talking to colleagues who have raised issues yesterday. But he was also very clear, as I’m sure all of my colleagues are, that coming into the office this morning, as we all are doing, we’re absolutely focussed on our jobs, on delivering the things that we’ve promised to deliver for the public.
Jones was asked if he expected the PM to lead the party into the next election. Until today, cabinet ministers asked this question have almost always said yes. But today Jones replied:
I’m not going to get ahead of any decision that the prime minister may or may not take.
Asked if Starmer was considering setting out a timetable for his resignation, Jones said:
Obviously colleagues are asking the prime minister to consider different options in the future. And, as I say, he rightfully is listening to them. It’d be wrong if he wasn’t listening to them.
Jones also repeated his line about how he did not want to “get ahead of any decision the prime minister may or may not take in the future”.
Ridge told Jones that she was surprised by the tone of his replies. She said, listening to him, that she felt it was “all coming to an end”.
Jones did not accept that. But he accepted that he was “sad that we’re in this situation in the first place” and sad about the election results.
Asked about reports that Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, has asked Starmer to set out a timetable for his resignation, Jones said he would not discuss private conversations. But he stressed that politics was a team activity.
Asked if he knew what Starmer had decided to do, Jones said he would not discuss private conversations. But he went on:
[Starmer’s] got an important job to do as prime minister of our country … He’s got an important job as leader of the Labour party. and if the prime minister, decides to say anything further to his speech yesterday, I’m sure he’ll come and do that on on Sky news very shortly.
Keir Starmer to face crucial cabinet meeting as ministers and MPs urge him to resign
Good morning. “Stories beat spreadsheets,” Keir Starmer declared in his speech yesterday. But yesterday was a day when the spreadsheets had the upper hand. Most news organisations were using them to keep a track of Labour MPs who were coming out and calling for Starmer’s resignation and, after his speech in the morning, the numbers started to escalate. Here is the LabourList one; by the end of last night they were on 77.
The sort of names on the spreadsheets changed too. Initially it was mostly leftwingers calling for the PM to go, with the Andy Burnham supporters stressing the need for a timetable for an orderly transition (ie – a slow process, allowing Burnham to win a byelection before a leadership contest). But in the afternoon government loyalists, and some prominent Wes Streeting supporters, started speaking out. And by early evening parliamentary private secretaries (technically, people on the government “payroll”) were joining in too.
And now some cabinet ministers are starting to tell Starmer, privately, that he needs to go. Here is our overnight story by Pippa Crerar and Jessica Elgot.
And here is an extract.
The Guardian understands that two senior cabinet ministers – Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, and Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary – told the prime minister he should oversee an orderly transition of power after crushing election defeats risked ringing the death knell on his premiership.
At least two others – believed to be John Healey and David Lammy – discussed with Starmer how they should take a “responsible, dignified, orderly” approach to what might follow. Several others – including Richard Hermer and Steve Reed – were defiant, urging him to fight on.
The cabinet is meeting this morning, at 9am or soon after. Starmer said yesterday he would fight any bid to force him out, and some of his allies are urging him to stay. But his position looks perilous; it is possible that before the end of the day he may have announced a plan to stand down.
We will be focusing on this throughout the day, although some other politics may get a mention.
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