Businessweek Daily

Absurdity and Ambition in London as Starmer Faces Ouster

A day after King Charles III opened Parliament, the prime minister finds himself staring down Labour insurgents.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Wednesday at the state opening of Parliament in London.Photographer: Toby Melville/WPA Pool/Getty Images Europe

The UK is once again descending into political chaos as Parliament kicks off a new session and a wounded Keir Starmer fights for his job as prime minister. Bloomberg News reporter Ellen Milligan in London explains the pomp, protocol and pure ambition fueling the process. Plus: Meet the entrepreneur who’s fighting against longevity’s male bias and see how Europe is trying to reassert its influence in Africa.

If this newsletter was forwarded to you, click here to sign up.

The King’s Speech opening each new session of Parliament is one of the most tightly choreographed events on the British political calendar: There’s a search for explosives in the Westminster basement by red-coated guardsmen wielding gas lanterns, a parliamentary “hostage” is held at Buckingham Palace (in case the chamber refuses to let the sovereign go home), and the king arrives in a horse-drawn carriage at a special entrance reserved just for him. This, among myriad other archaic rituals, are all for him to read a speech written not by himself or his staff, but by the governing party to lay out its legislative agenda.