As a petition for a general election approached three million signatures, Kemi Badenoch asked a strange question, which Keir Stamer laughed off.
Mr. Starmer began Prime Minister's Questions by praising the early-morning ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. He claimed that although it is long delayed, it proves that diplomacy is effective.
He also gave credit to people helping those impacted by the UK floods. Then, in a peculiar conversation, Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative Party, offered that Keir Starmer "resign" as prime minister in order to learn about the Conservatives' spending and tax plans.
It followed Ms. Badenoch's suggestion that she would not repeal the increase in employee national insurance contributions outlined in the Budget
included payments for employees.
She also started a petition to force the PM to step down, but she wasn't prepared for his reaction. Two million people have signed a petition for him to leave, according to Ms. Badenoch. It's him who doesn't understand how things operate. Mr. Speaker, business is what generates growth, not the government.
His employment secretary wants more young people to be employed, while companies claim that the chancellor's budget is causing them to lay off employees. "On Monday, the CBI stated that the government's policy does not make sense.