
NHSWorker #TeamStarmer (Previously TizBroken)
1.9K posts

NHSWorker #TeamStarmer (Previously TizBroken)
@NHSWorker17
Retired NHS nurse, 50’s born woman, Labrador Mum to Sienna, SKS supporter.


No ambiguity from me. I want Starmer to remain in post. If needed I want Starmer to stand. No coronation. I want to know who 350,000 Members want to lead them. I want process followed. I vote Starmer. I want my voice heard. I am a Member. Cut/paste/repost if agree



@PolitlcsUK @kateferguson4 I just can't understand their argument that because one quarter of the PLP - a quarter split between two candidates - expresses their view that Keir should go, that means that Keir should not even stand to defend his position. It's undemocratic and not what Andy promised the NEC.

If @Keir_Starmer resigns on Monday, I resign my long term membership. End of. @UKLabour



Substantial numbers within the Labour Party membership want Keir Starmer to stand if there is a challenge. They want the opportunity to decide for themselves who should lead their party. That is precisely why the current campaign to pressure Starmer into resigning is causing so much anger among members. If Andy Burnham's support among Labour members is as overwhelming as some MPs, ministers and commentators claim, there would be no need to force Starmer from office before a contest takes place. The membership would simply deliver its verdict. The obvious question is this: if Burnham's victory is so certain, why are so many people working so hard to avoid putting that certainty to the test? Many members have reached their own conclusion. The moment a leadership election takes place, control passes from Westminster to the membership. Anonymous briefings, media narratives and parliamentary manoeuvring cease to matter. The decision rests with Labour members alone. That is why the democratic process matters. A resignation without a contest creates the impression that the Labour Party has united behind Andy Burnham and that the question has already been settled. Yet many members do not recognise that picture at all. Indeed, some suspect that the reason for avoiding a contest is the fear that it may reveal something very different: that support for Burnham is neither as universal nor as overwhelming as the current campaign would have people believe. That possibility alone makes a contest essential. If there is to be a change of leader, it should happen openly, democratically and with the consent of the membership. Let Keir Starmer stand. Let Andy Burnham stand. Let the arguments be tested. Let approximately 350,000 Labour members decide. Anything else risks looking less like a democratic transition and more like a coronation. And if there truly is overwhelming support for Andy Burnham, then his supporters should have absolutely nothing to fear from putting that claim before the membership and allowing it to be tested. Most importantly, Labour Party members now need to recognise what is at stake. This is no longer a matter of simply disagreeing with what is taking place or expressing frustration on social media. If members believe the current approach is wrong, then they need to make their voices heard through every legitimate avenue available to them within the party. The rules of the Labour Party give members rights and a voice in choosing their leader. If that process is bypassed through pressure, manoeuvring and a campaign to force a resignation before a proper contest can take place, then members risk surrendering control over one of the most important decisions they are entitled to make. If members want a contest, they should say so. If members want Keir Starmer to stand, they should say so. If members believe the leadership should be decided through due process rather than political pressure, they should say so. Because once such rights are surrendered, they are often far harder to reclaim. The membership should not be a spectator in this process. It should be its final arbiter.



Starmer isn’t a career politician. Starmer was DPP during the phone hacking scandal. Starmer stood up to Musk. Starmer’s statesmanship makes Farage look like a testicle. Starmer took the long term difficult decisions to course correct Broken Britain rather than easy wins.





