LONDON (AFP)
Wes Streeting, who resigned as UK health secretary this week, announced on Saturday he will run to replace Keir Starmer as Labour leader and prime minister, after the party suffered disastrous local election results.
Streeting quit the government on Thursday with a withering assessment of Starmer's leadership, but no other senior minister followed suit and the 43-year-old MP did not immediately trigger a leadership contest.
Later that day, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham unveiled a bid to become an MP which, if successful, would allow him to stand in that contest.
While still not announcing he has kickstarted the formal leadership challenge process, Streeting confirmed he will vie to replace Starmer and become Labour's new leader.
Whoever leads the ruling party, which has a big majority in Britain's parliament, will by default become prime minister.
"We need a proper contest with the best candidates on the field, and I'll be standing," Streeting said Saturday in a speech and question-and-answer session at a think tank event in London.
Explaining the lack of a formal contest launch, Streeting said he wanted "all of the candidates... on the pitch".
"If we had rushed ahead without giving Andy a chance to stand, the new leader, whether it was me or anyone else, would lack the legitimacy."
A Labour party leadership contest can be triggered if 81 of its MPs -- 20 percent of the party in parliament -- formally back a candidate to challenge Starmer and submit the necessary paperwork.
Starmer, as current leader, would automatically be on the ballot if he wants to defend the challenge.
Labour members and affiliates then get to vote, not just MPs. They rank candidates in order of preference and a contender needs 50 percent to win.
Labour's National Executive Committee (NEC) -- which selects the party's candidates -- said on Friday it had permitted Burnham "to stand in the candidate selection process" in the by-election in Makerfield, northwest England.
That contest is expected in mid-June at the earliest, meaning any formal leadership challenge is likely to be triggered afterwards.