* Election losses cause crisis for Starmer's leadership
* Thurrock backed Labour in 2024 but Reform now dominant
* Voters and Labour lawmaker say change needed
GRAYS, England, May 14 (Reuters) - For disillusioned voters in the east of England, Prime Minister Keir Starmer's mistakes since his Labour Party's landslide election victory in July 2024 started early, were repeated often, and now mean he cannot carry on in the job. Many cited the decision to scrap fuel support payments for elderly people, which was made after less than a month in power, as an encapsulation of the missteps of the Starmer government. That decision, and the subsequent reversal in the face of its unpopularity nearly a year later, is seen as symptomatic of a Starmer government that has seen support drain away in areas like Thurrock, to the east of London, to Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK party in local council votes last week. The political crisis has seen some of Starmer's own lawmakers call for him to quit and he faces a potential leadership challenge. "It feels like he can't make a decision," June Bayford, 76, a retired children's home and mental hospital worker who voted for Reform UK, said in Grays, the biggest town in Thurrock.
"People are fed up with all that's going on and they feel we need a complete change."
STARMER'S LACK OF CLEAR VISION DENTS CONFIDENCE OF VOTERS Thurrock voted Labour for the first time in nearly 20 years in the 2024 parliamentary election, but at local council elections last week, Labour lost all but two of its seats in the borough, while Reform UK won 45 seats.
Labour's disastrous election performance has fomented a crisis in Starmer's government. He has acknowledged frustration with his government but voters said that he had lost the trust of the public.
"There have been so many U-turns since they've come into power, and I think that's harmed the public's confidence," said Mike Fitzpatrick, 72, a Labour voter.
"He's a good man, but he's not the right person for the leadership."
Thurrock lawmaker Jen Craft is among those who have called for Starmer to stand aside, acknowledging her constituents' frustrations and calling for a "clear, strategic vision and direction" for both Labour and the country. Starmer's lack of clear ideology helped him unite the party before the election but has contributed to a sense of drift after it. He has at times sought to appeal to Reform's voters by shifting right, but also warned of the threat that Farage poses in a bid to appeal to progressive voters.
Anurag Sharma, 32, a property manager who voted Labour in 2024, said that Starmer's efforts to please Reform voters had driven him to vote for the left-wing Green Party instead, adding the elections last week were a clear sign Starmer should go.
"Either people are shifting to Reform from Labour or the Greens. He must be doing something wrong," he said.
"If he was at my job and that was happening, I'd be fired. Why can't he be fired?"
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