Westminster is exploding! 🌋 PM Keir Starmer is cornered as his own past comes back to haunt him. From “hypocrisy” accusations to approval ratings lower than Nixon’s… the crisis is UNSTOPPABLE!

The political atmosphere in Westminster is reaching boiling point as Prime Minister Keir Starmer prepares to face a historic House of Commons vote that will determine whether he is referred to the Privileges Committee for allegedly misleading Parliament.

Accusations of Hypocrisy and the Shadow of Boris Johnson

The current crisis stems from Starmer’s handling of the controversial appointment of Peter Mandelson as Ambassador to the United States. In a recent interview, Starmer dismissed the opposition Conservatives’ attempt to refer him to the Privileges Committee as a “political stunt.”

However, critics and opposition figures quickly accused him of hypocrisy. They pointed out that Starmer himself—while serving as Leader of the Opposition—used the same tactic to push for an investigation into former Prime Minister Boris Johnson during the Partygate scandal. Archived footage has resurfaced showing Starmer fiercely calling for Johnson’s resignation, accusing him of spreading “lies, deceit, and chaos.”

Pressure Mounts from Reform UK and Witness Testimonies

Reports indicate that Starmer is urging Labour MPs to follow the party whip and vote against the investigation. However, Zia Yusuf, chairman of Reform UK, issued a stark warning on the platform X. He threatened that if Labour MPs vote against the probe, Reform would “carpet bomb” their constituencies with media campaigns to ensure voters know they protected “the least popular Prime Minister of all time.”

International media have also mocked Starmer’s declining approval ratings. One U.S. television program joked that his support levels are now even lower than those of Richard Nixon at the height of the Watergate scandal, when Nixon was forced to resign.

Starmer’s position has been further weakened by testimony from three key witnesses before the Foreign Affairs Committee: Morgan McSweeney, Sir Philip Barton, and Ian Collard.

According to Fraser Myers, deputy editor of Spiked, these testimonies are highly damaging. Evidence from Ian Collard and leaked reports linked to Philip Barton appear to reinforce earlier claims by Olly Robbins that Downing Street exerted “persistent pressure” to accelerate Mandelson’s security clearance process.

These claims directly contradict Starmer’s previous firm statements in Parliament that “no pressure was applied” and that “proper procedures were fully followed.”

Although Labour holds a parliamentary majority and is unlikely to lose the vote, internal cracks are beginning to show. Several MPs from the party’s left wing have signaled they may wait to hear Barton’s full testimony before deciding whether to follow the party line.

With tensions rising and credibility under scrutiny, Starmer’s political standing appears to be eroding rapidly at a critical moment.