Keir Starmer would have blocked Peter Mandelson’s appointment as UK ambassador to the US had he been informed of the vetting issues, according to ministers. “Starmer out by June 30, 2026” is at 36.5% YES, down from 42% yesterday.
Market reaction
The June 30, 2026, sub-market dropped 2 percentage points yesterday. The December 31, 2026, market sits at 62.5% YES. The gap between these two dates suggests traders expect the real danger zone for Starmer is in the second half of 2026, not the next few months.
Daily trades in the June sub-market are at $8,374 in actual USDC. It would take $3,486 to move the market 5 points, which indicates moderate liquidity. The largest move in the past day was the 2-point drop, showing the market responds to news without swinging erratically.
Why it matters
The Mandelson vetting story creates a specific problem for Starmer: it raises questions about either his judgment or his grip on the appointments process. The BBC’s reporting on the issue adds direct pressure. A YES share at 36¢ pays $1 if he resigns by June 30, a potential 2.78x return. For that bet to pay off, you’d need to believe serious political shifts happen in the next 73 days.
What to watch
Any Labour NEC actions or Cabinet resignations. If figures like Angela Rayner or Wes Streeting make leadership moves, or if public opinion turns sharply against Starmer, those would be concrete signals of further instability.
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