
Kier Starmer ‘doing the job for Britain' says Angela Rayner
The Deputy Prime Minister said "there's been a lot going on" in the 12 months since Sir Keir entered Downing Street
Sir Keir Starmer
(Image:)
Angela Rayner has defended Sir Keir Starmer as "doing the job for Britain" as he approaches his first year in office.
The Deputy Prime Minister said "there's been a lot going on" in the 12 months since Sir Keir entered Downing Street, and indicated that she is not interested in the job running the country.
Speaking to ITV's Lorraine programme on Wednesday, Ms Rayner was asked whether the Prime Minister is tired, and responded: "Even before I was in politics, I said that have you ever seen a prime minister after a year or two in government?
"And people always say to me, do you want to be Prime Minister? Not a chance. It'll age me by 10 years within six months."
She added: "It is a very challenging job, and there's been, to be fair for Keir Starmer, there's been a lot going on.
"He's been all around the world trying to repair the relationships in Europe. We've got the trade deals that the previous government wasn't able to do, tackling the things like the tariffs that the President in the US wanted to put onto the UK, which would have damaged our economy again.
Article continues below
"There's a lot going on, and the Prime Minister's been [...] here, there and everywhere, doing the job for Britain."
Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice has referred to Sir Keir's first year in office as "the worst start for any newly elected prime minister".
He told Times Radio that the Prime Minister was "never especially popular" and that "the public still don't know what he stands for."
Asked if she would be interested in being prime minister at some point, Ms Rayner told the ITV programme: "No".
She said that she is "passionate" about issues including workers' rights and council housing.
"I'm very interested in delivering for the people of this country, because ... to be elected as an MP from my background was incredible," she said.
Article continues below
"Having that opportunity to serve my community that have raised me, looked after me, given me opportunities, and I don't forget that. And to be Deputy Prime Minister of this country ... it's got to count for something."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Rhyl Journal
5 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
PM takes blame for welfare U-turn as he gives full backing to Chancellor
Speaking to the BBC in his first interview since a threatened backbench revolt forced him to strip out a major part of his welfare reform plan, he acknowledged the past few days had been 'tough'. He said: 'Labour MPs are absolutely vested in this. It matters to them to get things like this right, and we didn't get that process right. We didn't engage in the way that we should have done.' But he insisted his Government would 'come through it stronger' as he vowed to 'reflect' on what needed to be done 'to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again'. Sir Keir also gave his full support to Chancellor Rachel Reeves after she was seen crying during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday. Ms Reeves's visibly tearful appearance in the Commons came amid speculation that her job was at risk after the welfare U-turn put an almost £5 billion hole in her spending plans. But the Prime Minister insisted her appearance had 'nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what's happened this week' and was 'a personal matter'. Asked if she would remain in her post, he said: 'She will be Chancellor for a very long time to come, because this project that we've been working on to change the Labour Party, to win the election, change the country, that is a project which the Chancellor and I've been working on together.' On Thursday morning, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said Ms Reeves would 'bounce back' as he praised her 'leadership' on the economy. He also dismissed a suggestion that Sir Keir himself could be at risk, telling Sky News: 'Keir Starmer has been consistently underestimated. 'I wonder when people will learn. They said he couldn't win the Labour leadership, but he did. They said he couldn't change the Labour Party, but he did. They said he couldn't take the Labour Party from its worst defeat since the 1930s to election victory last year, and he did. 'And now the cynics say he can't change the country, but he will.' But Conservative shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said the scenes in the Commons over the past week had left bond markets 'twitchy' about the Government and 'their ability to actually grip things like spending going forward'. Appearing on BBC Breakfast, Sir Mel appeared to distance himself from Robert Jenrick, who had earlier posted a video on social media describing Ms Reeves's career as 'dead'. But he added that Mr Jenrick was making a 'valid' point that the Government had 'lost control of the economy', laying the blame with the Chancellor and Sir Keir and warning of tax rises to come.


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
PM shoulders blame for welfare fiasco and says No 10 ‘didn't get process right'
Keir Starmer has admitted No 10 'didn't get the process right' in handling the government's controversial welfare bill this week and says he shoulders the blame. Looking to repair some of the damage done by Labour's 11th hour climbdown on the central plank of its welfare changes, Starmer said the government would reflect on its mistakes. 'We didn't get the process right. Labour MPs are absolutely vested in this,' Starmer told the BBC's podcast Political Thinking with Nick Robinson. 'It matters to them to get things like this right, and we didn't get that process right.' He added: 'We didn't engage in the way that we should have done.' Starmer said he took responsibility for the chapter and repeated his support for his besieged chancellor after recriminations over the government's U-turn appeared to have left Rachel Reeves in tears at prime minister's questions in the Commons on Wednesday. He said Reeves would be in post for the next election and 'many years after'. An already under-pressure Reeves has been criticised for her political misjudgment in trying to force through cuts in the face of deep backbench unhappiness. As a result of the U-turn, she now has to fill a £5bn shortfall in planned public savings with tax rises or cuts elsewhere. Starmer said Reeves's tears in the Commons were 'nothing to do with politics' and she would be chancellor for a 'very long time to come'. The prime minister denied suggestions the chancellor was upset by the fallout over the government's welfare bill and insisted he and his chancellor remained 'in lockstep'. He said: 'That's absolutely wrong, it's got nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what's happened this week. It was a personal matter for her. I'm not going to intrude on her privacy by talking to you about that. It is a personal matter.' He insisted that the £5bn gap in public finances would not result in an increase in income tax, national insurance or VAT for working people. 'That was a manifesto commitment,' he said. 'The one thing we didn't do in the last budget was we didn't breach that manifesto commitment. We're not going to breach that manifesto.' Acknowledging a 'tough' few days, Starmer said his party would 'come through it stronger'. 'I'm not going to pretend the last few days have been easy, they've been tough. I'm the sort of person that then wants to reflect on that, to ask myself what do we need to ensure we don't get into a situation like that again, and we will go through that process,' he said. 'But I also know what we will do and that's we will come through it stronger.' On Thursday, the health secretary, Wes Streeting, said people showing kindness to Reeves 'is really appreciated', and told BBC Breakfast she was 'here to stay as our chancellor'. He added that Reeeves was 'tough', had the 'courage, strength and judgment' to make tough decisions in the interests of the country and would 'bounce back'. The bill passed its second reading with a majority of 75 on Tuesday, after a climbdown from the government in which it shelved plans for deep cuts to personal independence payments (Pip). But the fierce row exposed tensions between No 10 and Labour backbenchers and created a huge headache for Reeves. Ministers said there would be long-lasting implications for the government's spending priorities after it was forced to abandon the central plank of its welfare changes to prevent a damaging defeat by rebel MPs. The chaos briefly caused turmoil in financial markets, but by Thursday, Starmer's insistence that he would stand by his chancellor appeared to have calmed the waters, with overnight rates back to were they were at PMQs, and seemingly unmoved by the U-turn. Asked by Robinson if he had 'lost the dressing room' and the support of his own MPs, Starmer replied: 'Absolutely not'. 'As soon as we go through the long list of things that we've achieved this year, the Labour dressing room, the PLP, is proud as hell of what we've done,' he said. 'Their frustration, my frustration, is that sometimes the other stuff, welfare, being an example, can obscure us being able to get that out there.' Starmer said the government was 'only just starting', adding: 'This, in a sense, is the toughest year.'


Telegraph
10 minutes ago
- Telegraph
My listeners prove it: this is the most unpopular Government ever
I am sure there have been more unhappy political anniversaries in recent years. But for the life of me I can't think of one as joyless as this. As Keir Starmer prepares for the commemoration of his election win one year ago he must be wondering where it all went wrong. After 14 years of the Tories the electorate were ready to try something else. No more infighting, no more personality politics, no more indecision. It was time for change and the country was ready. But the loveless landslide, for that is what it was, has proved to be much less than it was cracked up to be. As a triumphant Starmer spoke on July 5 last year on the steps of Downing Street he was filled with a new hope, an obvious zeal and a determination to bring change to Britain. He announced with his customary stiff upper lip that there was much work to be done 'and that work begins now'. Just 363 days later Starmer was humiliated in Parliament as his severely watered down Welfare Bill limped through thanks to a rebellion in the ranks. Concessions to rebels were being made by the Prime Minister right up to the wire but he still managed to suffer his biggest humiliation yet – 49 individual Labour MPs who marked their card against him. Back in July 2024 the country might not have been thrilled with the idea of a Labour government. But there was a hope that at least it might just have been different. Anything but the Tories was the message. A full twelve months later Two-tier Keir has brought Britain misery, pessimism and disappointment – and that's just to his own side. For the rest of us it has been a litany of scandal, policy u-turns, failed appointments and mis-steps on the public stage. Listeners and viewers at Talk had had enough of the Conservatives by the time Rishi Sunak called the election. Many of them had already defected to Reform feeling that neither of the main parties served them honestly or well. Few expected the new shiny Labour Party to provide any surprises. But thousands of them now get in touch every week telling me how they believe this to be the worst government ever in their lifetimes. The truth is that Starmer has never really looked the part. His awkward manner, stilted speech and lack of spontaneity quickly indicated this would be a wooden administration – unlikely to inspire. But I think what has really shocked my viewers and listeners has been the complete incompetence that has been on show since day one. And the lies. Always the lies. First it was the Lord Ali scandal. The Prime Minister who promised a government of service was no different after all. In fact his hypocrisy possibly made him worse than his predecessors, with free suits, dresses and glasses for him and his family, plus a free penthouse in Covent Garden, free trips to New York for Angela Rayner and more free tickets to concerts and sports events than you could shake a hockey stick at. Then there came the exposure at the heart of individual Cabinet members' personal stories. There was Chancellor Rachel Reeves and the funny CV, Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds who never was the solicitor he had claimed to be for a decade. Transport Minister Louise Haigh had to step down after it was revealed she had a criminal conviction for fraud. His friend Tulip Siddiq had to go when Bangladeshi authorities named her in a multi-million pound corruption probe into her aunt, the former leader of the country. That was before they took the winter fuel allowance off pensioners, threatened farmers with extinction over the inheritance tax and poo-pooed the need for a national enquiry into the grooming gangs. Now that his flagship Welfare Bill has passed without any of its initial savings, without any of its proposed reforms and without any of its aims intact, Starmer has universally lost the argument, lost authority and lost the goodwill of his party. The first year of this Starmer government has been about as disastrous as it could have been. No one could have predicted it. Chancellor Rachel Reeves is holed below the waterline and cannot possibly survive given that none of the £5 billion projected savings will come to pass. It will be almost impossible for her to avoid breaking her own fiscal rules In the next few weeks. In Downing Street tonight there will be panic setting in. Starmer's advisors will be wondering how they can rescue the next year of government. But many of them won't survive. If I was a betting man, I'd wager that Starmer won't survive either.