Yet within months, his government found itself mired in controversy, his poll numbers collapsing and his party in open revolt.
For political observers across the world, Starmer's stumbling tenure carries lessons that stretch far beyond Westminster — including for African states navigating their own complex leadership transitions. This week he resigned from his leadership role.
The reality is that African countries are not immune to political fatigue, leadership struggles, or the uncomfortable instability that arises when power is in flux. What can they learn from Britain's leadership difficulties? And how can they prepare for their own transitions in the years ahead?
Imagine a man on a sinking ship who, rather than jumping when the waves first rise, watches the water creep up and only then decides to abandon ship.
This is the trap that has ensnared many leaders across the democratic world. The temptation to overstay one's welcome is powerful, but history is full of leaders who pushed their luck and left their countries in worse shape as a result.
When the clock starts ticking down on a government's popularity and authority, leaders must recognise the signs of stagnation and move decisively, even if that means stepping aside before the final bell rings.
Delay, as Britain's experience illustrates, rarely produces a dignified exit. It produces a chaotic one.
For African governments navigating the complexities of leadership longevity, proactive succession planning is not optional—it is essential. Delays in addressing leadership transitions, or a reluctance to confront the realities of political renewal, risk creating the very conditions of instability that undermine everything a government has built.
Recognising the right moment to step aside is not a sign of weakness. It is a mark of visionary leadership and genuine commitment to a nation's long-term stability.
One of the most instructive elements of the Starmer government's difficulties has been the role played by the Labour caucus itself.
Members who privately harboured deep doubts about the direction of the government repeatedly fell into line in public, hoping for a correction that was slow to come. The result was a prolonged period of drift in which honest counsel was in short supply precisely when it was most needed.
This dynamic is not unique to Britain. In any system where those in power are insulated by loyal inner circles, candid advice becomes a casualty of proximity to power. In many African political contexts, this problem can be even more pronounced.
The weight of authority, fear of reprisal and the discomfort of challenging a long-serving leader can transform the political environment into one of private grumbling and public compliance — a combination that serves no one well.
For African leaders, the message is clear: effective governance requires advisers who provide frank and constructive counsel. When members of a governing party express concerns in private while maintaining silence in public, it is a signal that something has gone structurally wrong.
In politics, truth is not merely a moral virtue — it is a strategic asset, one that helps leaders navigate crises and avoid compounding their mistakes.
The succession vacuum
Perhaps the starkest warning from Britain's experience is the danger of failing to cultivate a credible successor. A leadership transition with no clear next-in-line does not produce an orderly handover. It produces a scramble — one that consumes the governing party's energy, damages public confidence, and turns what should be a routine moment of democratic renewal into a crisis.
For African states, this is not an abstract concern. The absence of well-structured mechanisms for political renewal has, in too many cases, resulted in transitions confined to a leader's inner circle, or worse, power vacuums that invite instability. Such gaps in planning do not merely inconvenience the political class — they weaken the resilience of entire governing systems.
The focus must extend beyond identifying an individual successor to strengthening the institutions that will endure regardless of who leads them. Robust political systems ensure smooth transitions of power, safeguard institutional integrity, and allow the political class to unite around new leadership without convulsion.
Kenya, like many of its neighbours, has experienced the cost of inadequate succession frameworks. The British example, whatever its other failings, at least demonstrates that these conversations must happen within institutions before a crisis forces them into the open.
Governments that defeat themselves
There is a final lesson from the British experience that carries particular resonance: more often than not, governments lose power through their own missteps rather than through the brilliance of their opponents.
The erosion of public trust is rarely a single dramatic event. It is a cumulative process — a series of avoidable errors, failures of transparency and missed opportunities for course correction that compound over time until the damage becomes irreversible.
For African nations, this underscores the importance of honest self-assessment. Challenges such as unchecked authority, institutional inefficiency and declining accountability may each appear manageable in isolation.
Left unaddressed, they become systemic — and systemic failures are far harder to reverse than the individual errors that gave rise to them. No external intervention, no international goodwill and no favourable economic wind can substitute for the internal discipline required to maintain the trust of citizens over the long term.
The universal lesson
Britain's leadership difficulties are not simply a Westminster story — they are a reminder of truths that apply wherever democratic governance is practised, from Nairobi to Brussels to Ottawa. Leadership is about timing, honesty, succession and the wisdom to know when to step aside in the national interest.
For African leaders, policymakers and political analysts, the invitation is to watch closely and reflect seriously. The governments most likely to endure are those that plan honestly for their own renewal, engage truthfully with their citizens and build institutions strong enough to outlast any individual leader. Those who do not learn this lesson from others will, sooner or later, be compelled to learn it from their own experience.
Governance and political analyst and Mandela Washington Fellow, a US government initiative. The views expressed are their own