UK PM Starmer says he has not lost authority, will fight to stay in job


British Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks as he visits STARK, a leading defence tech company in Swindon, England, Friday, June 5, 2026. Alastair Grant/Pool via REUTERS

LONDON, June 12 (Reuters) - British ⁠Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Friday rejected the idea that ⁠he had lost authority in his role, and said he ‌would fight to keep his job, adding that anyone who wanted to replace him would have to deal with the same financial constraints.

The comments come a day ​after defence minister John Healey delivered a fresh ⁠blow to the prime ⁠minister's already weakened leadership by quitting and accusing Starmer of being unable ⁠to ‌commit the resources needed to keep the country safe, in a dig at the authority the PM has over ⁠his ministers.

"I'm not going to walk away," Starmer told ​the BBC, making ‌his first public comments since Healey's shock resignation.

With rivals expected ⁠to launch a ​contest to replace him in the coming weeks or months, Starmer said he would fight any challenge to his role.

"Let me just be clear ⁠with you, that's not about personal vanity, ​it's not about stubbornness, it's out of a very deep sense of duty. I was elected to serve this country, notwithstanding the difficult circumstances. ⁠That is what I am doing," he said.

Starmer rejected Healey's criticism, saying defence and security were his top priorities and would remain so every time the government had to make spending decisions in the ​future.

He said he had already made "hard-edged" choices ⁠to cut other departments' budgets in order to put more money towards ​defence investment.

"Whoever is prime minister is going ‌to face the same prevailing winds ​as I am facing. None of that is going to change," Starmer said.

(Reporting by William James; editing by Sarah Young)

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