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Starmer, aiming for leadership reset, names former UK PM Gordon Brown as adviser

Sat, 09th May 2026 12:33

* Brown brought in as special envoy on global finance

* Harriet Harman brought in ​as adviser on ⁠women and girls

* Local election losses put Starmer under pressure

* Growing ​number of lawmakers call for him to go

* Immediate leadership challenge unlikely (Adds Starmer comment in paragraph 4, background on Brown in paragraphs 5-6, lawmaker comments in paragraphs 12-15)

LONDON, ‌May 9 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Keir Starmer named former premier Gordon Brown as his envoy on global finance on Saturday, turning to a man credited with shoring ⁠up banks during the global financial crisis to help bolster his own support after a ⁠crushing local elections defeat. Starmer is on the back ​foot after his Labour Party recorded the worst losses of a governing party in municipal polls since 1995, prompting a growing number of his own lawmakers to call on him to quit.

Aiming to reset his leadership and win back party support, Starmer's office announced the appointment of two Labour grandees to his ​team as advisers.

Brown, ‌75, will join as an adviser on global finance and cooperation, while former Labour deputy leader Harriet Harman, 75, was appointed to the role of the Prime Minister's adviser on women and girls.

"As Britain’s longest-serving Chancellor, Gordon is well placed to work with our international allies to build a stronger Britain and boost our country’s security and resilience," Starmer said on X.

As Tony Blair's finance minister, Brown was a key architect of the New ​Labour project which won the party three consecutive general elections from 1997.

Serving as prime minister himself from 2007 to 2010, Brown was instrumental in nationalising ‌major banks and stabilising the financial system during the global financial crisis.

LABOUR LOSSES

Starmer vowed to stay on as leader on Friday as the scale of his party's defeat started to emerge.

Labour losses stood at ‌1,417 seats as the final votes were counted on Saturday, a bigger defeat than the 1,330 seats lost by former Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative Party in 2019. May quit three weeks after that result. While an immediate challenge to Starmer's leadership does not look likely and ministerial allies have ​signalled their support for him, there are growing calls for him to resign. More than 20 lawmakers publicly and privately have already called on him to consider his position and ‌set out a timetable for his departure, with former minister Catherine West joining the fray on Saturday. "His approach is not cutting through, and the results over the past 48 hours are nothing short of disastrous," West said of Starmer on X.

"I know I speak for more Labour people than just ⁠myself in wanting him ⁠to step aside as our Leader."

Another Labour lawmaker, Clive Betts, told BBC Radio on Saturday that ‌he wanted Starmer to step down "in the not too distant future".

STARMER CONCEDES 'UNNECESSARY MISTAKES' MADE

Just under two years after leading Labour to a landslide national election victory, voters have quickly turned ​against Starmer.

Against the backdrop of a cost-of-living ​crisis compounded by conflicts in Ukraine and Iran, his government has been beset by policy U-turns, a ‌rotating cast of advisers and scandal over the appointment of another Blair-era veteran, Peter Mandelson, as Britain's ambassador to the United States.

Starmer, writing in the Guardian newspaper on Saturday, said that while his government had made "unnecessary mistakes" he was focused on "building a stronger and fairer country" as he promised to respond to the message from voters. (Reporting by Sarah Young and Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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