Keir Starmer has led tributes in the Commons to Diane Abbott, just weeks after she was at the centre of a row over whether she would stand for Labour at the election.
The veteran left-winger has become the mother of the House of Commons as the longest-serving female MP.
Advertisement
But just two months ago, it looked as though she would not even be a Labour candidate over a long-running feud with party bosses.
Abbott, who was first elected MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington in 1987, was stripped of the Labour whip in April last year over allegations of anti-Semitism.
She eventually had the whip restored at the end of May, but senior Labour sources said she would not be allowed to stand as an election candidate for the party.
However, after a furious backlash, Labour bosses finally relented and she was re-elected last week with a majority of 15,080.
Advertisement
As MPs returned to parliament today for the first time since the election, Starmer and Rishi Sunak both praised Abbott’s contribution to British politics.
Addressing the re-elected Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle, the prime minister said: “I hope you will not begrudge me for a slight departure from convention to also pay tribute to the new mother of the house, Diane Abbott, who has done so much in her career over so many years to fight for a parliament that truly represents modern Britain. We welcome her back to her place.”
Sunak said: “We have our differences on policy, but no one can deny the right honourable lady’s important role in this house and the inspiration for so many young women of colour that she has provided.
“The right honourable lady is truly, in every sense of the word, a trailblazer.”
Abbott said: “When I was a new member in 1987, there were only 40 female members of parliament. Today we have 264, and some of us are glad that we have lived to see this.
“And I can’t speak about the increased numbers of female members of parliament without referencing my predecessor, Baroness Harriet Harman, who did so much to work to have an equal and diverse house.”
Rishi Sunak has apologised to the hundreds of former Tory MPs who lost their seats in last week’s Labour landslide.
The former prime minister said “I am sorry” as he addressed the Commons for the first time as leader of the opposition.
Advertisement
Parliament returned just four days after Labour won a 174-seat majority as the Conservatives lost two-thirds of their MPs.
Keir Starmer, in his first Commons speech as prime minister, had earlier said it was time to “replace the politics of performance with a politics of service”.
Flanked by the 120 fellow Tory MPs who survived last week’s electoral massacre, Sunak said: “For those of us in my party, let me begin with a message for those who are no longer sitting behind me: I am sorry.
“We have lost too many diligent, community-spirited representatives whose wisdom and expertise will be missed in the debates the discussions ahead.
Advertisement
“It is important after 14 years in government that the Conservative Party rebuilds. So now we will take up the crucial role of His Majesty’s official opposition professionally, effectively and humbly.
“And restoring trust begins my remembering that being here is an opportunity to do what those we serve expect of us, and in our case that means holding the new government to account.”
For the first time in 14 years, Labour’s MPs are sitting on the government benches, even though there is not enough room for all 411 of them.
Speaking after Lindsay Hoyle was re-elected as Commons Speaker, Starmer said: “The need to restore trust should weigh heavily on every member here, new and returning alike. We all have a duty to show that politics can be a force for good.
“So whatever our political difference, it is now time to turn the page, unite in a common endeavour of national renewal, and make this new parliament a parliament of service.”
The former prime minister’s time behind the famous black door of No.10 came to an end in the wake of the Tories’ catastrophic defeat in last week’s general election.
A lorry from the Platimum Move removals firm was spotted parked in Downing Street this afternoon.
Removal men were also photographed carrying a chest of drawers, a sofa and a bed into it.
Starmer and his family are expected to formally move into their new grace-and-favour home in the coming days.
However, it is not known yet whether they will live in the flat above No.10 or in the larger property above No.11, which has been used by several prime ministers dating back to Tony Blair’s time in office.
Most of the cabinet is made up of top Labour MPs who covered the same portfolio while in Opposition, including a record eleven women.
Advertisement
But, the new PM has also introduced a few non-political ministers into the mix and brought back a few names from the New Labour era.
1. Patrick Vallance
Vallance became a well-known name during the Covid pandemic, as the UK’s then-chief scientific adviser.
He regularly appeared in briefings alongside then-PM Boris Johnson and the chief medical officer for England, Chris Whitty, although he left this role in April 2023 once his fixed five-year term was over.
He was knighted two years ago and will now receive a peerage so he can go to parliament.
He supported Labour’s flagship manifesto pledge to introduce a publicly owned energy company earlier this year.
Advertisement
Starmer has decided to appoint him as a science minister under science, innovation and technology secretary Peter Kyle.
2. Richard Hermer
A KC from Matrix chambers – which was co-founded by Tony Blair’s wife Cherie – Hermer has been appointed as the attorney general.
That means he will oversee the government’s legal department, serious fraud office and the crown prosecution service.
He will get a life peerage so he can sit in the cabinet.
Hermer was among many Jewish lawyers who warned that Israel’s retaliation to the October 7 attack from Hamas should be within the confines of international law.
Advertisement
He has also spoken at Labour conference and donated £5,000 to Starmer’s campaign.
His appointment means Emily Thornberry – who was shadow attorney general – has now lost out on a place in cabinet.
Smith held six roles in Blair’s government, and was promoted to be the first female home secretary under Gordon Brown.
Smith resigned in 2009 over a series of expenses scandals and in the 2010 general election her seat went to the Conservatives.
Advertisement
Starmer is now giving her a life peerage so that she can return to government as a higher education minister, reporting to education secretary Bridget Phillipson.
This is the same role Smith held under Blair, 25 years ago.
I am incredibly proud to be returning to @educationgovuk working with the enormously impressive @bphillipsonMP in a job which is crucial for ensuring opportunities for all and contributing to the government’s central mission to deliver growth. 😀 https://t.co/r0ppaXCqtG
Alexander held multiple ministerial roles in the New Labour years, including transport secretary and Scotland secretary under Blair, and international development secretary under Gordon Brown.
He was the shadow work and pensions secretary and shadow foreign secretary under Ed Miliband, too.
However, he has not been in parliament for the last nine years as he lost his seat in 2015 when the SNP swept through Scotland.
He was just elected in a new seat – Lothian East– last week and is now a business minister in Starmer’s government.
Advertisement
It is a huge privilege to be asked to serve and I’m really looking forward to getting down to work… https://t.co/uid9Fw5JZz
Rehabilitation campaigner and CEO of the Timpson Group – which regularly employs former prisoners – James Timpson is now the prisons minister.
Starmer praised the businessman in his news conference on Saturday, saying he had invested “a huge amount over many years” into rehabilitating offenders and that he was “very pleased” to appoint him as a minister.
Timpson is also chair of the Prison Reform Trust charity which looks to reduce imprisonment and improve conditions for inmates and families.
The shadow culture secretary Thangam Debbonaire also lost her seat to the Greens in Bristol Central, meaning Starmer was on the hunt to replace her.
Political pundits were keenly watching to see who would take on these two roles – and wondering if Starmer would have any shock appointments up his sleeve…
Here’s what the UK’s new cabinet looks like so far.
1. Angela Rayner
The deputy party leader since Starmer was elected in 2020, Rayner was the first to find out her new role today – she was appointed as the deputy PM.
She also became the levelling up, housing and communities secretary – a job she previously held in the shadow cabinet.
Advertisement
2. Rachel Reeves
Having been shadow chancellor since 2021, Reeves has just become the first woman to officially head up the Treasury as the chancellor in its 803-year history.
3. Pat McFadden
McFadden is now the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, having held the same role in opposition.
4. David Lammy
Lammy has become the new foreign secretary, despite brief speculation he could be moved away from the brief.
5. Yvette Cooper
Now the home secretary, she has retained her brief after serving as the shadow home secretary before the election.
6. John Healey
After four years acting as the shadow counterpart, Healey has now officially become the defence secretary.
7. Shabana Mahmood
Mahmood now holds the same role she had in the shadow cabinet – the Lord chancellor and Justice secretary.
Labour won by a landslide while the Tories had some of their worst ever results – but this election also painted a very complex picture for Westminster.
Five independents were elected, while the rise of the Liberal Democrats, Reform UK and the Green Party show that last night was not just a tale of two parties.
Advertisement
Here’s a look at all the main stories from overnight.
1. Huge Labour victory
With a couple more seats still to be counted, the party took a whopping 412 seats, only six fewer than it did when Tony Blair was the helm in his famous landslide of 1997.
That works out to a gain of at least 211 seats compared to the 2019 general election.
It means a comfortable majority is ahead for Keir Starmer, as Labour were the largest party in England, Scotland and Wales.
The so-called “red wall” in the North of England was completely restored, too.
However, it’s not all plain sailing – Starmer comes to office on the smallest share of the vote of any winning party in UK history as the votes were widespread across many constituencies but not particularly high in number in any seats.
Only 33.7% of voters backed the supposedly reformed Labour, just 1.6% higher than his predecessor Jeremy Corbyn secured in 2019 when he famously lost.
Advertisement
That seems to reflect the general sentiment that support for Labour was more of an anti-Tory tactic rather than an endorsement of Starmer and his party.
2. Drop in Muslim support for Labour
The party’s flip-flopping over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza has had a profound effect on its Muslim supporters.
In constituencies with a large Muslim demographic, support declined by around 23 points to 39%.
But this gave way to the rise of the independents, like ousted Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn who was re-elected into his constituency of Islington North.
In fact five pro-Gaza independent candidates were elected in total, outnumbering the total Reform UK candidates.
Advertisement
3. Worst Tory defeat in history
Rishi Sunak may have comfortably held onto his seat in North Yorkshire, but he was easily the biggest loser of the night.
He led the Conservative Party into its worst electoral defeat ever seen, losing 250 seats.
The Tories secured just 121 constituencies as the party’s vote share fell by 19.9 percentage points to 23.7%.
For comparison, John Major’s Conservatives won 30% of the vote share when they endured a huge defeat in 1997.
They will now have zero seats in Wales, and only one in the North East of England and one in the North West.
Many previously “safe” Tory seats were lost overnight, including four of the five constituencies were the last five Conservative leaders were elected.
The share of the vote particularly fell in areas where high numbers backed leaving the EU.
The dramatic night means there’s likely to be a brutal battle to shape the party now, as Tories struggle to decide whether to pull it further right or into the centre.
4. Best Lib Dem result since 1923
The party has secured 71 seats – a whopping increase compared to the 2019 election, where they had only eight, and beating their 2005 record of 62.
Advertisement
They’ve won both new seats and old constituencies back – and ousted four cabinet ministers – albeit on just 12% of the vote share.
The Lib Dems also secured constituencies once held by former PMs David Cameron and Theresa May in their campaign where they targeted Tory areas.
It’s a far cry from the 2019 result when the party leader Jo Swinson unexpectedly lost her seat.
5. SNP in chaos
The Nationalists, who have completely dominated Scottish politics since 2014, secured just nine seats in a major blow to the project for independence.
That’s a drop of 38 representatives in Westminster, with many of their seats going to Labour and a handful going to both the Lib Dems and the Tories.
Advertisement
The SNP’s share of the vote has therefore fallen by 15 points – while Labour’s has increased by 17 in Scotland.
But it’s not a complete wipeout, considering the party still commanding a minority government in the Scottish parliament in Holyrood.
Yet, those seats could soon be at risk in the 2026 devolved election, depending on how Labour’s first few years in parliament goes.
Labour will also have to grapple with the increase of independence supporters among their voters.
6. Reform get a foothold in the Commons
The populist party took votes from the collapse of the Conservative support in many places, secured its first four elected MPs ever.
Party leader Nigel Farage won a seat for the first time (after seven failed attempts over the years) and Tory defector Lee Anderson – the party’s first ever representative in the Commons – was re-elected.
Advertisement
Reform chair Richard Tice and Rupert Lowe were elected, too.
Considering how quickly Reform has managed to gather support – Farage only entered the race two weeks after the election was called – the populists claim they will be able to put serious pressure on Labour in the next five years.
Farage has previously said he wants his party to be the main opposition to Keir Starmer’s party by the time of the next election, and last night said: “We’re coming for Labour, be in no doubt about that.”
7. Green Party get most MPs ever
With four MPs in Bristol Central, Waveney Valley, North Herefordshire and Brighton Pavilion, the Greens had their best set of results ever.
Until now, the party has only ever held the East Sussex constituency of Brighton Pavilion, giving them just one seat in parliament.
But last night, the party’s co-leader Carla Denyer overturned Labour’s shadow culture secretary Thangam Debbonaire with a 10,000 majority.
Advertisement
The other co-leader Adrian Ramsay defeated a 22,000 Tory majority in Waveney Valley, with a swing to the Greens of 32.1%.
Overall, it is expected to take 7% of the overall vote share – more than double what it secured in the 2019 election.
8. Sinn Fein hold on
The Republican party held onto its seven seats in Westminster, although it does not take them in protest to Northern Ireland being part of the UK.
It means most of the NI seats in Westminster will remain empty.
Sinn Fein is already the largest in local government and in the devolved government of Stormont.
And while the Democratic Unionist Party lost three of its eight seats, with supporters moving to other unionist parties, there was not a noteworthy shift in the vote share between Unionists and Nationalists.
Advertisement
9. Fall in overall voter turnout
This was the second lowest turnout ever recorded with only 60% of the electorate turning up, rivalled only by the 59% seen in 2001.
That suggests apathy and frustration may be more prevalent among the electorate than politicians realise.
He made the unusual announcement during a Radio 5Live phone-in this morning.
Asked by presenter Nicky Campbell is he will stand down should the Tories secure a fifth term in office, Starmer replied: “Yes.”
Usually, leaders dodge that question during election campaigns as it effectively puts their own personal future on the ballot paper.
However, the fact that Starmer was willing to say he will resign demonstrates that he is confident of victory.
Despite expectations that Labour’s commanding lead in the opinion polls would narrow during the campaign, the party remains around 20 points ahead with less than a week to go until election day.
Labour is on course for a 250-seat Commons majority, according to yet another poll predicting wipeout for the Tories.
The Focaldata survey forecast that the Conservatives are set to lose a staggering 262 seats on July 4, leaving the party with just 110 MPs.
Advertisement
Labour, meanwhile, will gain 250 to leave them on 450 seats.
The Lib Dems will also see their number of MPs almost treble to 50, according to the poll, while the SNP would slump to just 16 MPs, down from the 48 they won in 2019.
The poll was conducted using the so-called “MRP” method, which uses a bigger than normal sample.
It also uses demographic data to calculate what the result would be on a seat-by-seat basis.
The Focaldata poll echoes a number of such surveys carried out by other pollsters since the campaign started, all of which pointed to huge Labour victories.
However, Focaldata’s chief research officer, James Kanagasooriam, said the final result could be even worse for the Tories as many of the seats they are forecast to win could end up falling another way.
Keir Starmer declared Labour is now “a party of power” as he unveiled his election manifesto.
The Labour leader had to slap down a heckler who accused him of following “Tory policies”.
“We gave up being a party of protest five years ago,” Starmer said. “We want to be a party of power. That’s not in the script but that is part of the change.”
As expected, the 133-page manifesto contained no new policies as the Labour tries to protect its huge poll lead over the Conservatives with just three weeks to go until polling day on July 4.
Advertisement
Are heckler interrupts Keir Starmer’s speach.
Keir Starmer: “We gave up on being a party of protest five years ago. We want to be a party of power.” 👍 pic.twitter.com/30pK3Ow4Kg
Instead, it contained pre-announced pledges including plans to put VAT on private school fees, extend the windfall tax on oil and gas companies, and reform planning rules to build 1.5 million more homes.
Other policies include lowering the voting age to 16, recruiting 6,500 more teachers, delivering 40,000 more NHS appointments to bring down waiting lists and setting up a Border Security Command to tackle the small boats crisis.
Rejecting accusations that he is too boring, Starmer said: “It’s not about rabbits out the hat, it’s not about pantomime. We’ve had that.
Advertisement
“I’m running as a candidate to be prime minister, not a candidate to run the circus.”
The Labour boss said the election was a chance for voters to “stop the chaos” of the last 14 years of Tory rule.
“I have changed the Labour Party, and I am ready to change Britain,” he said.
“Labour’s first steps for change are a downpayment on our long-term plan for the country – an immediate repair job on the damage that has been caused under 14 years of Conservative chaos and decline.
“We know we can’t wave a magic wand and pretend that everything will be fixed overnight.
“But with Labour, our first steps for change will deliver economic stability, cut NHS waiting times, launch a new Border Security Command, create Great British Energy, crack down on ant-isocial behaviour and recruit 6,500 new teachers. They are the first steps towards our long-term plan.
“But to get change, you have to vote for it. The choice at this election is another five years of chaos under the Conservatives, with people paying £4,800 more on their mortgages, or change with Labour. It’s time to stop the chaos, turn the page and start rebuilding Britain.”
Rishi Sunak has denied he considered skipping the D-Day commemorations entirely as he struggled during a TV interview to defend leaving Normandy early.
Sunak’s decision triggered a fierce backlash, with Tory veterans minister Johnny Mercer branding it a “significant mistake”.
Speaking to broadcasters on Friday afternoon, the prime minister admitted that “on reflection” it was a “mistake” to ditch the ceremony attended by other world leaders.
And he denied reports he had even thought about not going to the event at all. “That’s simply not right,” he said.
“Having participated in all the British events with British veterans I returned home before the international leaders event later in the day. On reflection that was a mistake and I apologise.”
Advertisement
But Sunak also suggested those who criticised him were trying to “politicise” D-Day.
Sky News’ Sam Coates, who was conducting the interview, told the prime minister he sounded “more exasperated than apologetic”.
“These men made the ultimate sacrifice and you couldn’t even sacrifice an afternoon?” he said. “Prime minister, you didn’t care did you?”
Coates added: “Keir Starmer managed to stay for the whole event. You didn’t. What does that say about your judgment, your priorities and your character?.”
Sunak claimed the “itinerary” of the event had been set “weeks ago” before he called the election.
His absence meant David Cameron, the foreign secretary, was left to stand in for him at a high profile event with Joe Biden, Emmanuel Macron and Olaf Scholz.
Starmer – who stayed in Normandy for the entire ceremony – said earlier Sunak would have to “answer’ for his decision. “For me, there was nowhere else I was going to be,” he said.