Keir Starmer out, Shabana Mahmood in? How Epstein revelations led to Britain’s first Muslim prime minister World News

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Keir Starmer out, Shabana Mahmood in? How the Epstein revelations led to the appointment of Britain's first Muslim prime minister
British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood (left) and Prime Minister Keir Starmer visit the Port of Peace Mosque in Port Peace, UK, on ​​October 23, 2025. (Peter Nicholls/Pool Photo via AP)

British Prime Ministers rarely get ruined for what they say. More often than not, they fail because of things they failed to anticipate.Keir Starmer is under increasing pressure not for any personal wrongdoing but for a political misjudgment made at the wrong moment: his decision to return Peter Mandelson to the heart of Labour’s power structure just as the Epstein dossier re-emerged in the public consciousness.Starmer has not been accused of wrongdoing and Mandelson has always denied any wrongdoing. However, British politics does not operate solely on legal thresholds. It operates on perception, timing and instinct. The renewed focus on Epstein has reignited broader unease about elite networks, proximity to power and the immunity of certain figures from consequences. In this climate, Mandelson’s return has become more of a liability than an asset, raising troubling questions not about guilt but about judgement.What unnerves Labor MPs is not the substance of any accusation, but the sense that Starmer failed to appreciate how unforgiving the political moment has become. When the moment called for moral distance and political clarity, his response was procedural and defensive. Once a leader’s judgment is called into question, Westminster’s authority quickly erodes.This is why Starmer’s once presumed retention of the premiership is now openly discussed as conditional.

Why Mandelson became a fault line

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FILE – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, right, speaks with British Ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson during a welcome reception at the ambassador’s residence in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025. (Carl Court/Pool Photo via AP, File)

Peter Mandelson is more than just a former minister or adviser. He embodies Labour’s New Labor era, a survivor of past scandals and a symbol of a ruling class that many voters now view with suspicion. With Mandelson’s experience in hand, Starmer showed his ability and seriousness. Instead, he inherits the baggage of an era increasingly seen as divorced from public outrage over privilege and access.The Epstein dossier exacerbated this discomfort. Even without direct accusations, Mandelson’s name has become synonymous with elite proximity, and Starmer’s inability to foresee the backlash has exposed him to criticism within his party. The issue quietly raised by Labor MPs is no longer Mandelson’s behavior but Starmer’s political instincts.In British politics, this is often the beginning of the end.

Succession questions will become inevitable if Starmer falls

Labour’s leadership rules are designed to protect incumbents but fail to protect leaders who have lost the confidence of their parliamentary parties. If Starmer resigns or is forced out, the transition will be swift and pragmatic. When authority breaks down, governments don’t pause to reflect; they act to achieve stability.This has brought renewed attention to a small group of senior figures seen as immediately viable. These include Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting and, increasingly, Shabana Mahmood.This is no longer just media speculation. Betting markets and prediction platforms are already pricing in this scenario with a degree of seriousness. Mahmoud is not seen as the front-runner, but she has been placed among the second-tier contenders, with bookmakers offering odds roughly in the 7/1 to 12/1 range, while prediction markets give her a high single-digit chance of becoming prime minister. These numbers are not an endorsement, but they reflect plausibility. Bookmakers reflect structure, not symbolism.

What are the odds?

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FILE – British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood leaves 10 Downing Street, Wednesday, November 26, 2025, in London. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File)

In the current market, when it comes to who can replace Keir Starmer, Shabana Mahmood is positioned as a solid second-tier contender rather than a long shot. On Polymarket, her implied probability is around 8%, well behind Angela Rayner, who trades in the mid-20s, and Wes Streeting, who typically trades in the mid-10s. Traditional bookmakers broadly reflect the same hierarchy. In recent snapshots, Bet365, William Hill, Ladbrokes and Paddy Power have all priced Mahmood in the 7/1 to 12/1 range, with Rayner and Streeting offering lower and more speculative odds significantly longer. The ranking places Mahmoud between frontrunners and outsiders, suggesting the market sees a plausible route to leadership, even if they don’t yet view her as the most likely outcome.

What does it mean for Mahmoud to be Prime Minister?

If Shabana Mahmood becomes prime minister, Britain will have its first Muslim prime minister. This will be an undeniable historical milestone, but it will come quietly, not triumphantly.Mahmoud never centered her politics around identity mobilization. She doesn’t view the campaign as a symbol, and she has shown little interest in cultural signaling. Her appeal really depends on competence, qualifications and institutional trust. Any history-making will be a by-product of parliamentary arithmetic, not ideological intent.

Who is Shabana Mahmood?

As interior minister, Mahmoud held one of the four major state offices and arguably the most politically punishing branch of government. The Home Office’s authority is tested every day, requiring decisions on borders, policing, national security and public order. This is a role that rewards control and punishes poor judgment.Mahmoud has been the councilor for Birmingham Ladywood since 2010, earning a reputation as a no-nonsense, detail-oriented administrator. She is not a born showrunner in the media age, nor does she seek rhetorical flourishes. Within the government, she was known as methodical, cautious and strong-willed.Her political views were closely aligned with Labour’s governing instincts rather than its activist impulses. On immigration and settlement, she supports a stricter framework related to conduct and contribution. On policing and protest, she highlighted the cumulative impact of public order and disruption. In terms of security and technology, she expressed satisfaction with the expansion and modernization of national capabilities.This positioning gave her wide acceptance within the Labor Party. She may not inspire enthusiasm, but she commands a level of trust that, in times of crisis, is more important than charisma.

Why she can win, why she can’t

Mahmoud’s case hinges on stability. She holds a high position, is scandal-free and already runs one of the most demanding departments in government. In a post-Mandelson era when Labor needs to project seriousness and distance itself from elite complacency, her low-key profile could prove to be an asset.Yet leadership competitions are rarely decided on merit alone. They are shaped by internal alliances, momentum and narrative control. Mahmoud does not yet possess a clear factional machine, and her cautious approach in office may limit her influence in the fast-evolving competition.Most importantly, this future remains hypothetical. Keir Starmer remains Prime Minister and until that changes, every succession scenario remains provisional.

greater irony

If the Epstein fallout and Mandelson’s miscalculation ends Starmer’s tenure as prime minister, if the debacle boosts Shabana’s standing Mahmoud, British politics will complete a quiet historical cycle.The same political system that once divided India and Pakistan along religious lines will within a decade produce a Hindu prime minister, Rishi Sunak, and possibly a Muslim prime minister.History, it turns out, has an irony that the imperial cartographers never planned for.

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