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Jul 01, 2026

Keir Starmer accused of dragging King Charles into party-political row

Keir Starmer accused of dragging King Charles into party-political row

EXCLUSIVE: Swipe at Tory austerity was removed from King's Speech for lack of impartiality

Share Article Facebook X LinkedIn Reddit Bluesky Email Copy Link Link copied Add as a preferred source on Google Add us as preferred source Comments By Aaron Newbury, Political Correspondent 12:25, Wed, Jul 1, 2026 Updated: 12:31, Wed, Jul 1, 2026

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Sir Keir Starmer was accused of not showing respect for the King (Image: Getty)

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of dragging the King into a party-political row over the monarch's flagship speech, the Daily Express can reveal.

The outgoing Prime Minister used a briefing document attached to the speech to attack his political rivals.

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Mandarins were forced to strip a swipe at the Tories from the official paperwork after Conservative MPs staged a protest.

The politicised line was not in the speech His Majesty delivered to Parliament, but buried in Sir Keir's foreword, which took aim at "Tory austerity".

That reference has now been formally branded a "party political" statement and removed, in an embarrassing climbdown for the resigning Prime Minister.

Critics said it was a constitutional outrage that the monarchy's most important parliamentary occasion had been tainted by political point-scoring.

Such briefings are longstanding official publications produced by the Civil Service, not the governing party.

They are meant to lay out the Government's legislative agenda free of political bias.

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Shadow Cabinet Office minister Mike Wood wrote to the Cabinet Office's top mandarin to complain the dig breached strict impartiality rules.

In his letter, Mr Wood said the comment broke the Civil Service Code, the Ministerial Code and official guidance for government communicators.

That guidance states that communications must be "objective and explanatory, not biased or polemical".

In a reply seen by the Daily Express, permanent secretary Catherine Little confirmed officials had pulled the offending content.

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