“Starmer will go because he’s targeted the bedrock of British society”

Being interviewed by the Telegraph and confined to an armchair by a shattered femur and a brand-new hip, Piers Morgan is in his natural habitat: screens glowing, news channels rotating, scandal unfolding on cue. For Morgan, the current crisis engulfing Keir Starmer is not merely another Westminster wobble but the opening act of a familiar political tragedy.


From his Kensington convalescence, Morgan delivers his verdict with relish: "Starmer's toast."

The cause, in his telling, is not just a single scandal but a deeper rupture — a Labour leadership that, he argues, has misjudged where power actually lies in British politics.


"He's targeted the bedrock of British society," Morgan says, folding Mandelson, monarchy, money and morality into a single indictment.


The comparison Morgan reaches for is telling. The latest controversy around Peter Mandelson, he claims, dwarfs even Profumo — not because of sex or secrecy, but because of proximity to power, wealth and perceived hypocrisy. Mandelson, in Morgan's words, is a man repeatedly undone by himself: brilliance curdled by entitlement.





Labour's problem: loyalty over legitimacy



What Morgan is really circling, though, is not personality but party culture.


Historically, Labour removes leaders slowly, painfully, and morally. It hesitates. It agonises. It frames leadership collapse as a betrayal of values rather than a failure of delivery. When Labour leaders fall, they tend to do so under the weight of legitimacy — have they lost the right to lead?


Starmer, Morgan implies, is drifting into precisely that territory.


Labour MPs, unions and activists are tolerant of failure in office if they believe the leader still represents something bigger: fairness, solidarity, the national interest. But once a Labour leader is seen as serving power itself — donors, fixers, unelected grandees — the emotional contract snaps.


That is when Labour turns. And when it does, it rarely forgives.





Conservatives: brutal, quick, mechanical



The contrast with the Conservatives could not be sharper.


Tory leaders are removed transactionally, not morally. The question is not "Is this right?" but "Can this still work?" Once the answer becomes no, the knife comes out — swiftly and without much sentiment.


Thatcher, Major, May, Johnson, Truss: different circumstances, same pattern. The Conservative Party treats leadership as a job, not a calling. When performance collapses, the dismissal follows.


Labour, by contrast, sacks leaders as though expelling heretics.





Scandal fatigue — and the tipping point



Morgan's fixation on Epstein, kompromat, money trails and elite corruption is not accidental. His argument is that voters can tolerate many things — incompetence, blandness, even dishonesty — but not the sense that politics has collapsed into a closed club protecting itself.


"I refuse to believe a lot of them didn't know."


That sentence is doing heavy lifting. It is less about guilt than about credibility. Once a prime minister is seen as incurious, indulgent, or morally incurable, the end comes not via opposition attacks but internal erosion.





The historical pattern



Labour leaders usually fall after winning power, not before — but when they do, it is because the party concludes they have become unrecognisable to the voters they were elected to represent.


Morgan, enjoying the spectacle from his armchair, sees the signs already:


  • scandal metastasising
  • allies becoming liabilities
  • moral authority draining away



Whether Starmer actually goes is still an open question. But Morgan's larger point lands uncomfortably well: Labour leaders don't survive once their party stops believing they are different.


And if that belief has gone, no amount of party discipline will save them.