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Starmer: No plans to resign if Labour loses Batley and Spen by-election

The Labour leader’s spokesman insisted he is on a four-year path to lead his party back to power.

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Sir Keir Starmer will not resign if Labour loses the Batley and Spen by-election, his spokesman has said on the eve of the vote that could prompt a period of turmoil for his leadership.

The Labour leader’s spokesman insisted on Wednesday that he is on a “four-year path” to lead the party back into power and would not be standing down if he oversaw another electoral defeat.

The West Yorkshire constituency has voted Labour since 1997, but there are real concerns within the party that it could be seized by Boris Johnson’s Conservatives on Thursday.

New polling has suggested that as many as four in 10 Labour members would want Sir Keir to stand down and make way for new leadership in the wake of a loss there.

The Labour leader and Kim Leadbeater
Sir Keir and Labour candidate Kim Leadbeater (Danny Lawson/PA)

“Keir is not going to resign,” he responded when asked by journalists at a Westminster briefing.

He added: “Keir has been absolutely clear that this is a four-year path to get back into power and he is determined to lead the party into the next general election and to take us back into Government.”

His comments came after 41% of members in the YouGov poll for Sky News said they would want him to stand down and make way for fresh leadership if Batley and Spen is lost.

But 48% would back Sir Keir to remain in place regardless, according to the survey of 871 members conducted over the past week, which had the remaining 11% as undecided over his fate.

The research also suggested that 69% of Labour members would prefer Andy Burnham as leader, despite the Greater Manchester mayor no longer being an MP and therefore being unable to immediately challenge Sir Keir in any contest.

Mayor of West Yorkshire Tracy Brabin (Danny Lawson/PA)
Mayor of West Yorkshire Tracy Brabin (Danny Lawson/PA)

Some 35% of members said she would be their first preference, with shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy on 13% and deputy leader Angela Rayner on 12%.

There is a prospect of a backbench revolt if Batley and Spen is lost but it is unclear if any challenger would be able to secure the support of the 40 Labour MPs needed to trigger a leadership contest.

Labour officials are pessimistic about the chances of defending the former seat of Jo Cox, who was murdered in the constituency in 2016.

A Survation poll published last week put the Tories on 47%, up 11% from the 2019 general election, while Labour was on 43%.

The Batley and Spen by-election was triggered after Tracy Brabin, who won the seat for Labour in 2019 with a 3,525 majority over the Conservatives, was elected as the mayor of West Yorkshire in May.

Labour lost Hartlepool in its traditional heartlands to the Conservatives last month and it also polled poorly in the Chesham and Amersham by-election.

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