Welsh first minister backs Starmer but calls Mandelson scandal 'troubling'

David DeansWales political reporter
News imageGetty Images A woman with brown hair and a beige suit, Eluned Morgan, walks alongside a man with short grey hair, glasses, and a navy suit, Keir Starmer.Getty Images
Eluned Morgan has failed to support Sir Keir Starmer in previous interviews

Welsh First Minister Eluned Morgan says she backs Sir Keir Starmer remaining as prime minister, saying "the country needs stability in an age of instability".

But in her statement on Tuesday Morgan also called the Lord Mandelson scandal "deeply troubling" and that "once again, the voices of women and girls were ignored".

It comes a day after Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar called for Sir Keir to resign, after which Morgan was criticised for remaining silent as Sir Keir battled to shore up his premiership.

UK cabinet ministers, including the Welsh Secretary Jo Stevens, responded to Sarwar's call by offering their support to the prime minister.

The statement from Morgan was issued ahead of her meeting with Labour politicians in Wales's parliament, the Senedd.

Morgan said she backed the prime minister "in the job he was elected to do", but also set out her own concerns about Sir Keir's leadership.

"I had concerns that Peter Mandelson was incompatible with public office because of the company he kept. What has since come to light has only reinforced those concerns," she said.

She said the failure of ignoring female voices regarding Lord Mandelson's appointment "must be acknowledged and confronted honestly".

The Welsh Labour leader also said the prime minister needed to deliver more for Wales.

"I have been clear with Keir about what Wales needs. Action on the cost of living, investment in our economy and infrastructure, and a continued commitment to stronger devolution," she said.

Morgan previously refused to say whether she supported the prime minister when asked in two separate BBC interviews.

Anas Sarwar's call for Sir Keir to resign sparked speculation among some in Westminster that Morgan would so the same.

Sources told BBC Wales on Monday that this would not be the case, in part because of the support Sir Keir has among Welsh MPs, most of whom are also part of the UK government.

Morgan faces a Senedd election on 7 May, with opinion polls suggesting Labour could lose the Welsh Parliament for the first time.

Analysis

By Gareth Lewis, BBC Wales political editor

With the political temperature high, Eluned Morgan's support for Sir Keir could be described as lukewarm.

There are serious caveats in what she says including an implication that failures in the appointment of Lord Mandelson have not been fully confronted.

Yet her "ultimate" test is whether the prime minister delivers for Wales – might opposition parties pick up on that potential contradiction later on Tuesday in first minister's questions?

Is that more important than the Mandelson scandal, and does she think he is delivering?

This is the third time in as many weeks that Morgan has not given Sir Keir her full-throated support, but the situation this time is far more serious given events on Monday, with that Senedd election now less than three months away.

In February, BBC Wales is holding a live debate in Aberystwyth with a panel of politicians ahead of the Senedd election. Click below to apply to be in the audience.