Anger over Gaza could unseat top UK ministers: Pollsters

Palestinians carry aid supplies that entered Gaza through Israel, in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip, August 2, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 02 August 2025
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Anger over Gaza could unseat top UK ministers: Pollsters

  • Pro-Palestine candidates will challenge Labour MPs at next election
  • Muslim voters could feel they are ‘taken for granted, ignored, left behind’ by governing party 

LONDON: Pro-Palestine election candidates in the UK could unseat top government ministers at the next general election, leading pollsters have said.

Figures including Health Secretary Wes Streeting and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood will likely face major battles to keep their seats despite Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s decision to potentially recognize a Palestinian state, The Independent reported on Saturday.

At the last election in 2024, a pro-Palestine candidate unseated a key member of Starmer’s team, Jonathan Ashworth. Streeting retained his seat but with a tiny majority of 528, down from 5,198 in 2019.

Mounting public anger over Britain’s response to the Gaza war could cause major embarrassment for the government at the next election, pollsters say.

Jeremy Corbyn, the former Labour leader and now independent MP, has announced a new party that could also take a chunk of votes from the government by highlighting the Gaza crisis.

John Curtice, the country’s top pollster, told The Independent that Starmer’s pledge to recognize a Palestinian state in September — should Israel fail to meet key conditions — “may not be sufficient” for voters.

Both Streeting and Mahmood are in significant danger of losing their seats at the next election, while other ministers and MPs could also fall if anger continues to grow over Gaza.

Starmer had also “lost out” on votes in his own constituency last year because of concerns over Gaza, Curtice said.

However, the prime minister’s majority is substantially larger than some of his Cabinet ministers.

“Here is somebody (Starmer) who spent a great deal of time and effort trying to reconnect with the Jewish community, and now he’s finding himself having to spend a great deal of effort trying to reconnect with the Muslim community. It is very difficult to keep himself on board with both groups at the moment,” Curtice said.

When Corbyn launched his party last week, he said its members would campaign heavily on Palestine, as well as Britain’s response to Israel’s war on Gaza.

Luke Tryl of polling firm More in Common said events in Gaza and government policy toward the war have revealed “deeper” problems within the ruling Labour Party.

“When we have done focus groups with voters in Muslim areas, particularly some of those who backed or were thinking about backing pro-Gaza independent candidates, I compared it to speaking to voters in the red wall after Brexit,” he said.

“In the sense that Brexit was the thing which caused the split, but it actually brought to the fore much deeper resentments — that they have been taken from granted, ignored, left behind by Labour … I think we’re going to see exactly the same thing with Muslim voters.”


Ukraine, US, Europe still seeking common ground in peace talks, French official says

Updated 13 December 2025
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Ukraine, US, Europe still seeking common ground in peace talks, French official says

  • French presidency official: “The European perspective of Ukraine is clear and it’s a realistic perspective”

PARIS: Ukraine, the United States and European powers are still working to find a joint position that would outline the contours of a peace deal, including security guarantees for Kyiv, that could be taken to Russia, a French presidency official said on Friday.
“Our goal is to have a common foundation that is solid for negotiation. This common ground must unite Ukrainians, Americans and Europeans,” the official told reporters in a briefing.
“It should allow us, together, to make a negotiating offer, a solid, lasting peace offer that respects international law and Ukraine’s sovereign interests, an offer that American negotiators are willing to bring to the Russians.”
The official said there was no joint document yet, but all sides would carry on negotiations in the coming days through various calls and meetings. He did not say whether Washington had set a deadline.
Kyiv is under pressure from the White House to secure a quick peace but is pushing back on a US-backed plan proposed last month that many see as favorable to Moscow.
Britain, France and Germany, along with other European partners and Ukraine, have been working frantically in the last few weeks to refine the original US proposals that envisaged Kyiv giving up swathes of its territory to Moscow, abandoning its ambition to join NATO and accepting limits on the size of its armed forces.
The French official said the talks aimed at narrowing differences with the United States and centered on territory and potential security guarantees for Ukraine once there is a peace accord.
Those discussions include the possibility of a NATO Article-5 type clause involving Washington that would seek to reassure Kyiv in case it was once again attacked by Russia, the official said.
The Europeans have also faced pressure in recent weeks with some American proposals touching on elements that concern NATO and the European Union, including suggestions on fast-tracking Ukraine’s accession to the bloc.
“The European perspective of Ukraine is clear and it’s a realistic perspective,” the official said. “That is what we are committed to and it is up to the Europeans and the Ukrainians to agree on how to proceed.”