‘We need move quickly,’ says Labour Mp seeking to challenge PM17 Minutes agoKate WhannelPolitics reporterBBC “We have a serious problem and we must move quickly,” said Labour MP Catherine West as she defended efforts to trigger a challenge against the Prime Minister. The north London MP said that she would prefer a Cabinet member to step forward to replace Sir Keir but would consider doing it herself if they failed to act. Speaking to the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg, West said she would listen to Sir Keir’s planned relaunch speech on Monday but would mount a challenge if she remained “dissatisfied”.Addressing the MP directly on the same programme, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “I love you dearly Catherine, but we just disagree on this one”. Bridget Phillipson, Education Secretary, said: “I love you dearly Catherine, but we just disagree on this one.” Addressing the MP directly, Bridget Phillipson said: “I love you dearly Catherine, but we just disagree on this one.” She said, “We need to tell a more compelling story and deliver faster.” The party lost nearly 1,500 councillors mainly to Reform UK, the Greens and was kicked off power in Wales. Sir John Curtice says the results of the election show that politics in the UK is fragmented. Elections 2026: Follow live updates and reactions. She said that she has 10 MPs ready to endorse her. More than 30 Labour MPs publicly called on the prime minister to step down or set a date for his departure. West told BBC: “I’ll hear what the Prime Minister has to say tomorrow. If I’m still not satisfied, I’ll send an email to the Parliamentary Labour Party asking for names. “And I’m not doing it for me. It’s not for me, but for the working people. Labour is the only political party that can defeat Reform. “Asked whether she could gather enough people to start a competition, the Hornsey & Friern Barnet Mp said: “We’ll find out when I send my email to Parliamentary Labour Party. “But we need that timetable [from the chair of the Party, Anna Turley] and she and me are very good friends. She knows I’ve asked for an orderly transition to a leadership race. “Phillipson, reflecting on the election results said that people did not believe the Labour government “delivered” the change it promised at the 2024 general elections. Cabinet Minister Phillipson warned that the rise Reform UK, which made huge gains during the elections, was a “perilous time” for the country and that only Labour can “bring back our divided country”. Sir Keir’s major speech on Monday will attempt to reset his premiership. This will be followed by King’s Speech in which the government will outline the new laws they intend to pass in the next year. Phillipson said that the speech would be used by the prime minister to set a “fresh course for our country and our party”. Phillipson was asked if Sir Keir will still be the party leader when the next general elections, which are expected in 2029, take place. Phillipson replied: “Yes, I believe so.” Sharon Graham, the leader of Unite, said that she was “very certain” that the Prime Minister would not lead Labour to the next election. Nadine Dorries is a former Conservative Minister who switched to Reform. She said that Sir Keir would be a “benefit” to her party. “We’d like Starmer to remain there”, she said, but added that “For the sake the country… Labour must change their leader.” “‘Orderly Transition’Health Secretary Wes Streeting and former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner are thought to be the most likely challengers to Keir’s Leadership. Burnham cannot enter a competition without first becoming an M.P. and earlier this year he was prevented from standing in the Gorton & Denton by-election by the ruling body of the party. The mayor’s supporters hope that a leadership race can be delayed until the mayor is able to return back to Parliament. On Sunday, Josh Simons and Anna Dixon became the latest Labour members to urge the Prime Minister to step down. Simons was an important figure in Labour Together, the organization that helped Sir Keir to win the Labour leadership. He was also a minister until last month. In The Times, Simons wrote: “I don’t believe the prime minister is up to this moment.” He has lost the nation. He should take charge of the situation and oversee an orderly transition from one prime minister to another.” Dixon, MP for Shipley told BBC Politics North that she did not believe the public had confidence in the prime minister to lead us into the next round of elections. She said that she thought the PM was a good man, but needed to take control of the situation and plan for a smooth transition of leadership.Liberal Democrat Leader Sir Ed Davey said that the Prime Minister refused to see that the results of the local elections this week were a referendum on him, and his failure to address the cost-of living crisis. Sir Ed Davey, Liberal Democrat leader, said that the prime minister refused to see this week’s local elections as a referendum on him and his failure to tackle the cost-of-living crisis. He argued that building a closer relationship with Europe was “the best way to deliver economic growth which this country desperately needs” but that Sir Keir’s plans were “too weak and unambitious”.He urged potential Labour leadership candidates to “commit themselves in fixing our broken relationship with Europe”.