Sir Keir Starmer is firmly established in No 10, with a landslide victory behind him. But if a week is a long time in politics, a year is an age.

The Prime Minister has been beset by problems, from rebel MPs forcing a U-turn on flagship benefit reforms, a backlash over his decisions on winter fuel payments , disgruntlement in the ranks for his policy on Gaza , and economic head winds failing to create growth and making tax rises ever more likely in October’s Budget.

Former leader Jeremy Corbyn is launching a rival party to the left, and Nigel Farage’s Reform is ahead in the polls, squeezing Labour on the right, and in the crucial ‘Red Wall’ seats in the north of England.

It might be fanciful to think the Labour leader is in immediate danger. But with his personal ratings plummetin

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