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Starmer gives Brown and Harman new roles as pressure grows over election mauling – UK politics live | Politics
Starmer appoints Brown as special envoy on global finance
Gordon Brown has been appointed as a special envoy on global finance.
Number 10 said:
The PM has committed to boosting the country’s security and resilience’
In this role, Gordon Brown will advise on how global finance cooperation can help to achieve this.

Key events
We have more from Downing Street on Brown’s appointment as special envoy on global finance.
He will be tasked with developing new international finance partnerships that can support defence and security-related investment, including measures that underpin the UK’s relationship with Europe.
As part of the role he will engage with international leaders and finance institutions as well as private finance partners to establish multilateral finance mechanisms.
The former prime minister, who steered the country through the 2008 financial crash and was also the longest serving chancellor of the modern era, has consistently thrown his support behind Starmer through various dramas (most recently the Peter Mandelson saga).
Starmer appoints Brown as special envoy on global finance
Gordon Brown has been appointed as a special envoy on global finance.
Number 10 said:
The PM has committed to boosting the country’s security and resilience’
In this role, Gordon Brown will advise on how global finance cooperation can help to achieve this.
Gordon Brown visits Starmer at No 10
Former prime minister Gordon Brown was seen meeting Keir Starmer at Downing Street.
He was pictured shaking hands with the prime minister outside No 10 this morning.
There are no details on what they discussed, but the visit comes as Starmer attempts to shore up support for his leadership amid calls for him to step down.
Starmer appoints Harriet Harman as adviser on women and girls
Keir Starmer has appointed former deputy leader Harriet Harman as his adviser on women and girls in his first post-election move.
Harman will work with ministers on work to tackle violence against women and girls, improving job prospects and increasing representation in parliament and public life, Downing Street said. She will report directly to the prime minister in the unpaid part-time role.
Earlier, Harman told Sky News that Starmer should continue as prime minister but that he needs to make changes. “More of the same is not acceptable,” she said.
Election results so far
Here are where things stand according to results data from the Press Association:
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After 129 of 136 English councils had declared full results, Labour had lost control of 32 authorities and suffered a net loss of 1,051 seats.
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Reform gained control of 13 councils and added 1,276 seats.
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The Conservatives suffered a net loss of eight councils and 427 councillors.
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The Liberal Democrats won three councils and gained a net 142 seats.
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The Green party gained control of four councils and put on 306 councillors.
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The SNP have 58 Holyrood seats, Labour 17, Reform 17, the Scottish Greens 15, the Conservatives 12 and the Liberal Democrats 10.
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In Wales, Plaid Cymru have 43 seats in the Senedd, with Reform on 34, Labour on nine, the Conservatives on seven, the Greens on two and the Liberal Democrats on one.
The SNP’s Stephen Gethins said Scottish independence should be a priority for the party, saying 73 MSPs out of 129 elected on Thursday supported the move, PA reports.
The SNP won 58 seats while the Scottish Greens, which has long supported independence, won a record 15.
“We’ve got the biggest pro-independence majority that the parliament has ever had, the people have spoken and the weekend after an election is a good time for us all to reflect on that just a little bit,” Gethins said.
Trump congratulates SNP’s Swinney
Donald Trump has congratulated the SNP’s John Swinney, who will return as first minister after a fifth Scottish election victory for the party.
Writing on his Truth Social app, the US president said:
Congratulations to John Swinney on winning his Re-Election for First Minister of Scotland. He is a good man, who worked very hard, along with the King and Queen of the United Kingdom, with respect to Tariff relief for Great Scottish Whiskey — and deserves this Big Electoral Victory!
Lucy Powell: ‘Timetable for leadership change is wrong conclusion’

Peter Walker
Lucy Powell, Labour’s deputy leader, said it was time to end “this incessant speculation” about Stamer’s position.
“What I would say to people is, thinking that setting out some kind of timetable would put to bed the issues of leadership, I think is actually the wrong conclusion here,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
“All that would do is fire the starting gun of a, quite honestly, very distracting and ongoing debate about leadership.”
She added: “I don’t want to hear about that any more. I wanted to get on with the job of turning this country around and delivering the big change, the big, bold Labour change that people voted for two years ago. The more we talk about leadership, the less we can do that.”
Powell confirmed that she would want Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, to be allowed to stand for parliament, but said this should not then involve Burnham then challenging Starmer.
“We don’t do hospital takeovers in the Labour party. It’s not what we’re about,” she said.
Growing number of Labour MPs join calls for Starmer to quit
A number of Labour MPs have come out demanding Keir Starmer resigns. A few of them aired their views on social media and on the media round this morning, here’s what they had to say:
Connor Naismith, MP for Crewe and Nantwich, hinted in a post on X that Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham could take the reigns.
Andy is the most popular Labour politician in the country. The suggestion that he wouldn’t be able to win in some of the seats Labour is currently struggling to win is just wrong.
Ironically, this is precisely why we need him back on the front line of national politics.
Clive Betts, MP for Sheffield South East, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme Starmer has to go “in the not too distant future”.
I think there are three scenarios: one is that Keir carries on until the next election and we lose, and we lose badly.
Secondly, that in the end, Keir decides to stick it out, and there is a move to get rid of him, an internal battle, and then the public don’t like parties that fight amongst themselves, so that could lead to an election defeat.
Or in the end, Keir recognises, for the good of the country and the Government, he has to step down at some point in the not too distant future.
Debbie Abrahams, MP for Oldham East and Saddleworth, also told BBC Radio 4’s Today that Starmer had a “matter of months” to make a decision about his future.
“I hope, as he has said, that he will always put the country first and we have to recognise the dangers that we are in now.
“But on this trajectory it doesn’t look good, not just for locals – I lost some really dear colleagues who worked so hard for their constituency – but it means the prospect of us not just losing an election, but who we would lose to and that makes me really fearful.”
Keir Starmer under pressure to agree exit plan after election mauling

Pippa Crerar
Keir Starmer is under pressure to set out a timeline for his departure after a crushing defeat in elections across Britain prompted senior Labour MPs to call for him to step down within a year.
In a disastrous set of results, Labour had lost control of more than 25 councils and more than 1,000 council seats in England by Friday night, many to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, which made large gains across the Midlands and the north as well as taking seats from the Tories in the south.
After more than a century of domination, Labour has faced near-wipeout in Wales, where the party’s first minister, Eluned Morgan, lost her seat. Labour could slump to third place in Scotland behind the SNP and Reform. In London, a Green surge meant Labour lost control of councils it had dominated, including Hackney and Waltham Forest.
While the prime minister appeared to have avoided an immediate coup, there was a furious response to the results among senior MPs and the unions, with some warning him to change course or risk electoral oblivion. By Friday evening, 10 more MPs had called for him to set out a timetable for departure from No 10.
Read more here:
Starmer under pressure as Labour MPs demand he stands down
In the wake of the local election results, Keir Starmer faced calls to stand down after voters handed a damning verdict on the Labour party.
Starmer took responsibility for defeat after Labour lost hundreds of councillors in England and suffered humiliation in Wales, but he made clear that he would not quit, saying “tough days like this don’t weaken my resolve”.
Some Labour MPs have come out demanding his resignation, but members of Starmer’s cabinet have rallied around the prime minister.
Health secretary Wes Streeting, who is widely seen as a likely candidate in a potential leadership race despite publicly denying such ambitions, said Starmer had his “support”.
“I’ll continue putting my shoulder to the wheel as the health and social care secretary, who’s getting the NHS back on its feet and making sure it’s fit for the future,” he said.
Home secretary Shabana Mahmood acknowledged “a devastating night” for Labour but said the prime minister “has rightly said we must do better”.
But several backbench MPs have called on Starmer to set out a timetable to resign. Clive Betts, MP for Sheffield South East, said Starmer has to go “in the not too distant future”, while Sarah Owen, MP for Luton North, said it’s “do or die for the Labour leadership”.
Labour suffered a historic loss in Wales, where the party’s 27 years in power has come to an end with Plaid Cymru winning the largest number of seats, though still short of a majority. In Scotland, the SNP is emerging as the victor.
The Conservative party also lost ground, but there has been no leadership speculation around Kemi Badenoch.
Arguably the biggest winner on Thursday was Reform UK, having gained more than 1,200 seats and control of 12 councils in England, according to the Press Association’s tally of the results. Reform leader Nigel Farage declared he had ushered in “a truly historic shift in British politics”.
The Liberal Democrats and Green party also made gains at the expense of Labour, with Greens leader Zack Polanski announcing the era of two-party politics “is not just dying, it is dead and it is buried”.
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Hantavirus testing of UK passengers well under way, health officials say
Passengers self-isolating in Merseyside remain “healthy and asymptomatic”, the UK’s health security agency has said.
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The car park that changed British art: Bold Tendencies at 20 | Art and design
It’s hard to imagine now, but there was a time when rooftop bars weren’t really a thing. A time before pop-ups and contemporary outdoor sculpture parks. A time even, if you can bear to think of it, before immersive art. Way back in 2007, there was none of that – the UK was an experiential art wasteland. And then Bold Tendencies showed up, chucked a whole load of sculptures in a multi-storey Peckham car park, painted a staircase bright pink, built a cocktail bar on the roof, and changed everything.
Now going into its 20th summer season, Bold Tendencies is celebrating two decades of sometimes sun-drenched, often windswept and drizzly arts programming. In that time, it has welcomed more than 3 million visitors into its concrete edifice behind Peckhamplex cinema, commissioned dozens of new artworks, hosted countless recitals and performances, built an auditorium and a concert hall, and drawn the roadmap for countless art experiences that have come in its wake.
And the art’s not been too bad, either. Anthea Hamilton built a doorway to heaven through a man’s splayed legs in 2010. Jess Flood-Paddock parked Del Boy’s three-wheeled van on the roof in 2011. James Bridle flew a black balloon filled with wifi routers from the roof in 2014. Adam Farah-Saad installed a decorative retro water fountain in 2024. There have been piles of raw pigment, fluttering flags, wobbly walkways, heads on spikes. Almost all newly commissioned, and all free to see.
“Part of our responsibility in doing a project like this is to offer up the joy of feeling welcome to as many people as possible,” says Hannah Barry, the driving force behind Bold Tendencies and owner of Peckham’s longstanding Hannah Barry Gallery. “People come here for all sorts of different reasons and they may stay for a short time or stay for a long time. What matters is that they’re curious enough to come.”
You can’t overstate just how different, not only Peckham was in 2007, but the whole cultural landscape of the country. This was years before the likes of The Vinyl Factory or Frameless, and long before the Hayward and Tate were racing to the bottom to find the most TikTok-ready, Instagram-friendly exhibitions possible.
The only large-scale sculptural commissions around back then were the fourth plinth and the Tate’s annual Turbine Hall and Duveen projects. There wasn’t really anywhere else to see new sculptural work by young artists.
There also wasn’t a lot going on in Peckham at the time. But what the area did have was a handful of project spaces, a single dive bar called Bar Story, seriously cheap rents and – thanks to being squeezed between Camberwell College of Arts and Goldsmiths – a lot of artists. Combined with a relative sense of isolation in the days before the London Overground, it boasted a fairly unique set of circumstances. “I found it to be a place of great possibility,” says Barry. “And it still feels like that.”
Barry had been putting on exhibitions in a semi-derelict house on nearby Lyndhurst Way, and struck up a relationship with the people responsible for property in Southwark council. The council realised that artists could act as caretakers of empty, derelict buildings awaiting redevelopment, and Barry figured that those buildings could be used for art exhibitions. It’s a model still followed today by other cultural charities, one that some consider the forward battalion in a wave of gentrification that has engulfed the city ever since.
“We looked at a lot of really interesting buildings, but none of them were really usable. Then one wintry afternoon, we went up to the top of the car park and I saw how long and how tall the building was,” says Barry. “It’s so simplistic, but it was a really good expanse of space with a very spectacular and particular context. And you got all sorts of different challenges: changing light conditions, changing weather conditions, the outdoors, the surrounding life of the city – all of that was pretty exciting.”
There are two permanent installations at the heart of Bold Tendencies: a rooftop bar called Frank’s Cafe, and Simon Whybray’s now iconic pink staircase. Frank’s was a simple solution to the question of how you get Londoners to hang around a cold, windy sculpture park in Peckham. You serve them cocktails on the roof, obviously. But it was also about providing an opportunity that didn’t really exist at the time. “Why were there no big public projects in the cultural realm going to early career architects?” Barry asks. “And why was it that if you designed a building, you couldn’t also build it? Frank’s was about trying create an opportunity.”
Whybray’s bubble-gum pink staircase, titled hi boo i love you, was also well ahead of the curve. Countless galleries these days try to crowbar “Instagram moments” into their programmes, but Whybray’s work was among the first properly viral, everyone-has-to-take-a-selfie-here art installations in London. The public reaction, which Whybray describes as “utterly overwhelming”, was huge. “No other large institution has been brave enough to commission me,” he says. “Bold Tendencies is a powerful reminder that transcendent experiences are possible in non-traditional spaces.”
Possible, but not necessarily easy. “The honest truth is it has been hard since the beginning and it remains hard,” says Barry. “Starting at the beginning every year is difficult. Wanting to make it better is difficult. The logistical challenges are difficult.”
One of the main challenges, clearly, is financial. Does Barry see Bold Tendencies continuing for another 20 years? “The sensible answer is that if I had the reserves for at least five years of operational running and programme costs, then yes, of course there’s five years, and another five years, and another five. But we don’t have any reserves.” She takes a long, pained pause. “There are lots of considerations and lots of difficulties. But what supersedes those difficulties is the joy of doing it. And I’ve kept doing it because I felt every year it could always get better. And when there is the possibility of progress ahead, I find it very difficult to not want to get there.”
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Former UUP leader to be deselected by party
He is expected to be deselected when his Upper Bann constituency association meets in June.
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