Carol Vorderman on Monday told Labour that Sir Keir Starmer ‘will never be voted in as Prime Minister again’ as she urged the party to change leader in order to retain power.
Speaking at Labour’s conference in Liverpool, the ex-Countdown star said she felt ‘very let down’ by the party’s first year in office in a fiery attack on the Government.
Appearing at a fringe event, the 64-year-old lashed out at Sir Keir’s administration over freebies, winter fuel cuts and an ongoing donations row.
The outspoken broadcaster also said it was a ‘disgrace’ that the now-resigned Lord Mandelson had been appointed by the PM as Britain’s ambassador to the US.
She went on to shower praise on Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, amid feverish speculation he is plotting a leadership challenge against Sir Keir.
It came as a YouGov poll of Labour members, on behalf of Sky News, found Mr Burnham would beat Sir Keir by two to one if they went head-to-head in a contest.
But, later on Monday, Mr Burnham appeared to be in full retreat as he said Sir Keir was the right person to be PM when he spoke at a separate fringe event.
He offered his backing to Sir Keir despite having previously fuelled claims he was poised to rival the premier.
In other developments on Monday:
- Brits were put on high alert for another Labour tax bomb as a top minister suggested the manifesto promises on income tax, National Insurance and VAT might not last.
- London mayor Sir Sadiq Khan declined to follow Sir Keir and Chancellor Rachel Reeves in branding Reform UK’s migration policy as ‘racist’.
- Labour members defied the PM and told him to recognise Israel’s actions in Gaza as a ‘genocide’.
Carol Vorderman told Labour that Sir Keir Starmer ‘will never be voted in as Prime Minister again’ as she urged the party to change leader in order to retain power
Speaking at Labour’s conference in Liverpool, the ex-Countdown starl ashed out at Sir Keir’s administration over freebies, winter fuel cuts and an ongoing donations row
The outspoken broadcaster went on to shower praise on Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, amid feverish speculation he is plotting a leadership challenge against Sir Keir
Prior to the last general election, Vorderman was a frequent critic of the previous Tory government and spearheaded a ‘tactical voting’ campaign to help oust the Conservatives.
She left her weekly show on BBC Radio Wales in 2023 after breaking BBC guidelines with vocal attacks against the then-Tory government on social media.
In her appearance at Labour’s conference, Vorderman branded the Tories ‘scum’ and ‘the most corrupted party that we could ever have’.
But she suggested Labour had been similarly rocked by ‘sleaze’ rows that dogged the Tories, since Sir Keir entered Downing Street.
‘This is my prediction: Keir Starmer will never be voted in as Prime Minister again,’ Vorderman told the event.
‘It will have to be a change of leader if you want another Labour government, or he’ll lose.’
The Welsh presenter said her message to the Government was to ‘get your PR (public relations) better’, in comments that drew applause from the audience.
She added that, while she didn’t have a problem ‘in principle’ with Labour introducing means-testing for winter fuel payments, the now-reversed cuts had been too severe.
‘I’m coming up to pensionable age. I don’t have a problem because I would not need that,’ she said of the handout, which is worth up to £300 per household.
‘So I didn’t have a problem with means-testing it in principle, but it was the level.
‘Who on earth thought that was a good idea to go from 12 million pensioners receiving it to 1.5 million? Who thought that was a good idea? It’s nuts.’
Vorderman went on to criticise Labour over ‘freebiegate’, which saw top ministers – including Sir Keir – accept lavish gifts from party donor Lord Alli.
She also referred to a row over undeclared donations to campaign group Labour Together when it was led by the PM’s now chief of staff Morgan McSweeney.
‘I thought the Tories were scum, I thought they were the most corrupted party that we could ever have,’ Vorderman added.
‘And I wanted Labour to come in and for there to be none of these stories. But we’ve had minister after minister; the Mandelson thing, it was a disgrace.’
The slump in both Labour’s poll ratings and Sir Keir’s approval among voters has fuelled speculation about his leadership and a potential challenge by Mr Burnham.
‘I love Andy Burnham,’ Vorderman said of the Greater Manchester mayor, also quipping that she could one day stand to be an MP but ‘only if Andy asked me’.
Mr Burnham appeared to be in full retreat as he said Sir Keir was the right person to be PM when he spoke at a separate event
But – despite leaving the door open for a future leadership bid – Mr Burnham seemed to be backing away on Monday following a backlash against his posturing.
Asked at a conference fringe event if he thought Sir Keir was the right man to be Labour leader and PM, Mr Burnham replied: ‘Yes.’
He had earlier insisted ‘you would have to wrench’ him out of the North West to return to Westminster.
‘There’s no ability for me to launch,’ Mr Burnham said, as he sought to address claims he was being ‘disloyal’ and ‘completely out for myself’.
Mr Burnham hit back at criticism of his recent headline-grabbing proposals for changes to tax and spending.
‘I reject entirely this idea that I’m sort of hopeless and I’ve no idea about how to make it add up,’ he said.
‘I’m doing it every day in Greater Manchester. No-one ever says Greater Manchester is run in a financially imprudent way.’
It came after ministers appeared to liken his economic agenda, which includes a call for some £40billion earmarked for housing to be spent exclusively on council homes, to the policies of former Tory PM Liz Truss.
In a broadcast round ahead of her conference speech in Liverpool, Chancellor Rachel Reeves suggested Mr Burnham was at risk of echoing the former Tory premier, whose mini-budget panicked the markets and sent the pound tumbling.
‘If he’s saying… anybody that says you can just borrow more, I do think that risks going the way of Liz Truss,’ the Chancellor told LBC.
Mr Burnham, a former New Labour minister and ex-MP for Leigh, insisted his proposals had been misreported.
He had pitched the policies, which include reform of land value taxation and council tax, in a series of interviews with national media during which he refused to rule out a tilt at Sir Keir’s job.
Speaking on Monday, he sought to address ‘the sense I’m completely out for myself, disloyal’, citing behind-the-scenes work he says he has been doing to help progress the Government’s Hillsborough legislation.
‘It sticks in my throat somewhat for people who have just arrived on the scene to be throwing some of the comments at me that they have done,’ he said.
‘I did everything that I possibly could (have) to make this conference a success.’
He said he had instead been seeking to provoke a wider debate within Labour about the party’s direction ahead of local elections next May, as the Government faces a sustained lag behind Reform UK in the polls.
The YouGov poll of 704 Labour members for Sky News, taken a week ago, found that 62 per cent would back Mr Burnham while 29 per cent would back Sir Keir.
It also revealed that around a third of Labour members no longer think that Sir Keir is a good PM and would rather he did not fight the next general election.
Some 37 per cent said Sir Keir should not take Labour into the next election, while 53 per cent said he should and 10 per cent didn’t know.
Polling by Ipsos Mori has put Sir Keir’s personal ratings at the lowest level for any PM since comparable records began in 1977
Britain’s top elections guru had earlier on Monday warned there seems to be no way back for Sir Keir from his record low ratings.
Professor John Curtice gave an apocalyptic assessment of Labour’s situation in a briefing in Liverpool.
With polls showing Reform on track for power and Sir Keir’s own ratings at a record low, Sir John suggested the Angela Rayner and Lord Mandelson resignations had not had much impact.
However, that was only because the problems were already so bad.
And he cautioned that even after 15 months in power voters still did not know what Sir Keir stood for or thought on key issues.
Asked whether there was any hope that Labour could turn it around, Sir John replied: ‘The honest answer to that is no.’
He added that ‘clearly, if by 2029 the economy is turned around and if by 2029 the waiting lists are way, way back down’, Labour might be able to recover its position.
But he cast doubt on whether Sir Keir would be the leader to achieve such a turnaround.
Sir John said Sir Keir had positioned himself as ‘the friendly local plumber’ fixing issues with ‘policy pipes’, when voters really wanted their leaders to be ‘the architect of Valhalla’.
Sir John said: ‘You need to do more than change the reality, you also have to influence perception.
‘And clearly, the question that is being raised about the current Labour leadership is, does it have the ability to change the mind?’
Saying people still did not know what Sir Keir stood for, Sir John – renowned for producing the exit poll on election nights – said: ‘The mystery of Keir Stamer, who is he, what does he stand for, that mystery, we are maybe two thirds of the way through the novel, but we are still not sure where the body lies.’