It's official: Wes Streeting of the Labour Party wants to be Britain's next prime minister. The former health secretary announced on Saturday his intention to oust Prime Minister Keir Starmer, becoming the first MP to challenge Starmer in what is expected to be a bruising internal contest for the reins of the Labour Party.
Streeting's ambition to head the British government was one of the worst-kept secrets in UK politics. But if anyone was unaware, it is now official. He is the first member of Parliament to declare he will take on Starmer, whose government has seen its fortunes fall in the two years since its historic landslide victory swept out the Conservatives after 14 years in power.
Streeting is likely to face other challengers, including Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, if the latter can win a special election for a seat in the House of Commons. Starmer has vowed to fight on despite being widely unpopular after a series of setbacks, policy U-turns, and questions over his judgment for appointing a friend of the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as US ambassador. The government faces weeks of chaos after he rejected calls to resign following the party’s disastrous results in the May 7 local and regional UK elections, in which Nigel Farage's anti-immigrant Reform UK made huge gains.
From Working-Class Roots to a Prestigious University
The boyish-looking Streeting, 43, is widely regarded as one of the party's best communicators and has been an outspoken voice on issues including the war in Gaza. His rise in the Labour Party from roots in London’s working-class East End, where he grew up in public housing, is charted in his memoir, “One Boy, Two Bills and a Fry Up: A Memoir of Growing Up and Getting On.” The title refers to two grandfathers both named Bill: one associated with gangsters and prison time for armed robbery, the other credited with leading him on the path to Cambridge University.
Streeting entered politics at a young age, leading the Cambridge student union and becoming president of the National Union of Students. He later worked for Stonewall, an LGBTQ+ group, and has spoken of his struggle coming out as gay and reconciling his sexuality with his Anglican faith. He served as a councillor in local government and later deputy leader of the council in the east London borough of Redbridge before being elected to Parliament in 2015. He was a backbench lawmaker under Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, whose time in charge saw the party lose two elections and face allegations of antisemitism. Streeting, long critical of Corbyn, was promoted after Starmer took over as leader in 2020.
A Cabinet Minister with a Personal Mission to Save Public Health Care
Streeting’s Cabinet position became a personal mission to fix an ailing National Health Service because of his own battle with kidney cancer. “The NHS saved my life,” he said when he was named health secretary. “Today, I can begin to repay that debt by saving our NHS.” Even as Streeting was said to have an eye on higher office, he stood by Starmer and denied having designs on replacing him. But with Starmer on the ropes, maintaining that line became difficult last week. On Wednesday, as King Charles III delivered the government’s blueprint for the next couple of years during the ceremonial opening of Parliament, talk of a coup dominated headlines.
“Streeting to ignite Labour day of anarchy,” the Daily Mail blared in all caps. “Finally, a move to bring down ‘Zombie’ Keir?” asked the Daily Express. Streeting quit the Cabinet the following day — becoming the first to do so — saying he had lost confidence in Starmer and sharply criticized him for lacking vision and direction. But he didn’t immediately announce an anticipated showdown with Starmer. He resigned on the same day he touted that waiting lines for medical appointments — one of his signature priorities — fell for the fifth straight month.
Streeting Distances Himself from a Party Figure with Ties to Epstein
Generally regarded as being in the moderate wing of the left-leaning party, Streeting was friendly with Peter Mandelson, the once-influential Labour figure now in disgrace over his friendship with Epstein. Starmer appointed — and later sacked — Mandelson as US ambassador, a decision that continues to haunt him. As controversy over the appointment was reignited earlier this year, Streeting preemptively released a clutch of email exchanges he’d had with Mandelson in an attempt to show they were not close friends.
“Contrary to what has been widely reported, I was not a close friend of Peter Mandelson, but I am not going to wash my hands of my actual association with him either,” he wrote in The Guardian. In one of the emails, he was critical of Starmer’s leadership, writing that “there isn’t a clear answer to the question: why Labour?” Streeting will begin to lay out his answer to that question in the coming weeks.



