Brexit Echoes in Starmer’s Resignation
Plus: former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan dies at 100, and the Supreme Court reinstates the conviction in Etan Patz’s murder.

The government he led indulged in class warfare of the most spiteful kind.
Plus: former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan dies at 100, and the Supreme Court reinstates the conviction in Etan Patz’s murder.
Labour's Andy Burnham appears set to become the UK’s seventh prime minister in a decade after Keir Starmer laid out a timeline for his own departure. The 56-year-old former Mayor of Manchester could be installed as PM as soon as July 17, if no other challenger surfaces. Bloomberg's Lizzy Burden reports. (Source: Bloomberg)
President Trump on Monday blasted UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who announced his resignation earlier, saying he failed on immigration and energy, and that he was not a strong leader. Trump has previously slammed Starmer for bowing to the green energy lunatics and refusing to drill oil in what Trump called “one of the greatest fields in the World.” Trump said in April, “Aberdeen should be booming. The post Trump Blasts Outgoing UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Says He “Really Hurt Himself” on Immigration and Energy -“This Was Not Winston Churchill We’re Dealing With” appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Even when it came to his own resignation, Keir Starmer was beaten to the punch by Donald Trump.
Joe Twyman, Co-founder and Director at DeltaPoll, says the economy and cost of living, not Epstein-related controversy, will likely be seen as the issue that brought Starmer down after the UK Prime Minister resigned. Twyman says newly sworn-in UK Member of Parliament Andy Burnham, viewed as the frontrunner to succeed Starmer, remains "very much an unknown quantity" nationally. He speaks with Kailey Leinz and Joe Mathieu on the late edition of Bloomberg's "Balance of Power." (Source: Bloomberg)
Where did it go wrong for the outgoing PM? And how much - if at all - did it threaten to go right?
His government was directionless and confused, and from that murk emerged the Peter Mandelson scandal
Keir Starmer finally did what millions of Britons had been waiting for, announcing his resignation as Labour Party leader on Monday after losing the confidence of his own MPs — capping a tenure marked by free speech crackdowns, grooming gang scandals, and a Palestinian statehood blunder that left allies fuming. “Every decision I’ve taken has ...