Keir Starmer will tender his resignation today as Prime Minister of Great Britain. American President Donald Trump confirmed as much on Sunday.
The only remaining question: Who will succeed Starmer? There’s quite a lot of speculation, mostly focusing on Andy Burnham, a Labour Party member of Parliament. Burnham just won re-election by a clean margin over his Reform Party opponent, taking roughly 55 percent of the vote in his northern district of Makerfield.
Burnham is even more of a leftist than Starmer. A politician who identifies as a Socialist, Burnham is an outspoken opponent to nationalism, calling it “an ugly brand of politics.”
Can the Right stop his new regime? That will require Nigel Farage’s Reform Party and Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain working together, rather than cutting each other off. Hard to say if that can happen. Here, analyst David Starkey discusses Burnham with Mark Littlewood. Their take? Burham will crash and burn, but the right is in danger as well.
Keir Starmer will resign his post as Prime Minister of Great Britain on Monday. This follows multiple setbacks for Starmer’s Labour Party in British elections, culminating in the massive report on rapes by illegal aliens against young white British women.
Reuters, reporting on the pending resignation, says, “Starmer had reached the conclusion that his position was no longer tenable after speaking to cabinet ministers, advisers, donors and trade union leaders.”
Here’s a report from Sky News, on 98 members of Parliament calling for Starmer to resign. Up next: Who will succeed him? Will definitely be a tight spot.
Peter Mandelson, the Prince of Darkness, berates fellow members of Keir Starmer’s Labour Party in Great Britain.
Mandelson is the former British ambassador to the United States. He lost his office owing to his involvement with Jeffrey Epstein, after it was shown Epstein paid the education fees of Mandelson’s gay husband Reinaldo Avila da Silva.
Here, Mandelson sings “That’s Life” in what’s billed as an uncut What’s App confession, from Join The Resistance.
Glenn Beck delivers an impassioned speech at the Unite The Kingdom rally in London over the weekend, celebrating free speech and opposing the advancement of sharia law designed to stonewall our freedoms and liberties.
Beck stands with the British people who have seen their streets torn apart by violence and cultural division, much of it caused by the Labour Party flinging open Great Britain’s borders to thousands of immigrants, mainly from Islamic nations. More than 100,000 took part in the rally.
British authorities warned Beck against speaking, saying to do so, he would not be allowed ever again into British territory. Those authorities need to read the Magna Carte and other foundations of British law.
An ex-Labour MP in Great Britain got a big surprise when he set up a “meeting” with a child, hoping to arrange sexual relations. The “underage boy” never showed up. Instead, the would-be predator got accosted by a group of activists, posing as the “bait.”
Now, the former Labour minister, Ivor Caplin, 66, who hails from the seaside resort of Hove, has been arrested on suspicion of “engaging in sexual communication with a child.” Here’s more from Paul Joseph Watson.