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William James

UK PM's leadership woes overshadow parliament's opening

Britain's King Charles has delivered a speech at the reopening of the UK Parliament. (AP PHOTO)

Britain's grand parliament opening ceremony ‌does not normally feature an elephant. 

But on Wednesday, there was a large figurative elephant in the room: an imminent leadership ‌challenge that could put Prime Minister Keir Starmer out of a job before the summer and consign his freshly minted plan ‌for government to the scrap heap. 

Starmer has weathered days of growing calls to quit after his Labour Party suffered heavy losses in local and regional elections, and was looking to a ceremonial address from King Charles as a way to reassert his authority and "get on with the job of changing our country for the better".

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife
Prime Minister Keir Starmer was putting on a brave face as he headed to the parliament opening. (EPA PHOTO)

But what had ‌already promised to ‌be a difficult ⁠day, in which he would be forced to mingle in front of television cameras ​with opponents who had delighted in his woes, took a turn for the worse in the morning.

The Times newspaper reported that Wes Streeting, Starmer's health minister and arguably best-positioned rival to challenge his position, was poised to resign and fire the starting gun on a leadership contest.

When the news broke, King Charles, dressed in full ceremonial military dress and accompanied by ⁠his wife Queen Camilla, was still approaching parliament in his royal ‌carriage.

Streeting's ​team had no immediate comment. 

Earlier, they said he didn't want to distract from the king's speech.

Britain's King Charles III and Queen Camilla
King Charles and Queen Camilla were in the royal carriage as the leadership plot twist thickened. (AP PHOTO)

Minutes later, ‌Starmer led a procession of MPs from one chamber of parliament, the House of Commons, to another, the House ​of Lords, part of the complex, centuries-old ritual of reopening the legislature that takes place roughly every year.

As the king's representative knocked loudly on the heavy door, one MP joked, "Not now, Andy", in reference to ​Andy Burnham, ​another possible challenger, who is currently mayor ​of Greater Manchester and thus not entitled to take part ‌in the ceremony.

Television footage showed the prime minister making stiff small talk with Kemi Badenoch, leader of the main opposition Conservative Party, who on Tuesday had posted on social media that Starmer would be lucky to survive two weeks in his job, let alone two years.

The MPs in his own party - almost a quarter of whom want him to quit - followed ​behind.

The king then read out a speech written by Starmer's government, setting out their plans for the next ​12 months.

He closed his speech ⁠with the line: "I pray that the blessing of Almighty God may rest upon your ​counsels". 

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