It is almost a certainty that the Labour Prime Minister will step down in the coming hours and that Andy Burnham will take the reins of the country
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The President of the United States, Donald Trump, asserted this Sunday that the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, the leftist Keir Starmer, will leave his position and vacate number 10 Downing Street after suffering another severe electoral setback this week.
"Keir Starmer will resign as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. He has failed miserably on two very important issues: IMMIGRATION AND ENERGY (OPEN THE NORTH SEA OIL!). I wish him the best!", was the farewell message Trump left for the Labour leader.
In London, they also consider it a fact that Starmer will submit his resignation this Monday. However, some reports from the British press indicate that the leader remains firm in his stance of not stepping aside, even acknowledging that the Labour Party has lost hundreds of seats in last month's local elections, and that Nigel Farage's right is continuing to gain ground and is positioning itself to govern the country in 2029.
Starmer will resign in the coming hours
Burnham, the last bullet of the British left
These electoral setbacks forced Labour to seek alternatives, and all eyes are now on Andy Burnham, a political protégé of former Prime Minister Tony Blair. The Mayor of Greater Manchester since 2017 was recently elected as a Member of Parliament, where he is positioned ideally to challenge Starmer's leadership.
Burnham will take his seat in the House of Commons in the coming hours, which could give Starmer the necessary time margin to coordinate an orderly exit before his own allies force his removal for fear of losing everything in the coming months.
Starmer's management of immigration has been disastrous. Although the leader has repeatedly acknowledged the crisis caused by illegal immigration in the United Kingdom, each of his decisions has been conditioned by the fear of losing the support of the Muslim faction of the electorate, a sector whose political influence is constantly increasing and dominates Labour politics.