Published: 1 May 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
In a stinging intervention that has pierced through the “accountability rot” of 2026, former Prime Minister Sir John Major has warned that the UK’s habit of “revolving door” leadership is turning British democracy into a “game show.” Speaking in a broadcast interview this morning, the elder statesman argued that the frequent turnover of prime ministers since 2016 has paralyzed the civil service, spooked international markets, and left ordinary citizens in a “dopamine desert” of broken promises and political theater.
Major’s warning comes at a delicate moment for Sir Keir Starmer, who is facing his own “national security emergency” as local election projections suggest Labour is defending over 2,500 seats amidst record-low approval ratings and a burgeoning cost-of-living crisis.
Major, who famously held office for seven years during the 1990s, did not hold back in his assessment of the current political class.
Policy vs. Personality: “Politics is not there just to provide fodder for the media and project your own career,” Major stated. “It is there to deal with problems that ordinary people elect you to do.”
The American Model: In a radical departure from traditional Tory thought, Major suggested the UK should consider the U.S. system of term limits (two terms and stop). He argued this would provide the “stability” needed for ordinary families to get on with their lives in confidence.
The “Betrayal” of History: Major warned that a government that cannot leave the next generation something better than it inherited has failed its primary duty—a sentiment echoing the “98-year-old in severe pain” case as a symbol of systemic neglect.
The timing of Major’s intervention is no accident. As the King concludes his Washington visit, the domestic front is increasingly fractious.
The Inquiry Bid: Earlier this week, Starmer successfully defeated a bid to launch an inquiry into claims he misled Parliament over the Lord Mandelson affair, but the “shadow of doubt” remains.
The Local Election Loom: With local elections taking place this month, the “fragmentation” of the two-party duopoly is evident. Major’s warning against changing leaders is being viewed by some as a “protective shield” for Starmer, while others see it as a condemnation of the instability that began with the Brexit-era Conservative coups.
The “Hormuz” Distraction: Critics argue that while the government focuses on the $126 oil spike and the Iran war, domestic reform has entered a “clinical silence,” much like the dementia care crisis currently facing the NHS.
This isn’t Major’s first warning of the season. In a lecture at King’s College London last month, he warned that democracy is “in retreat” globally and called for a serious discussion on electoral reform.
The “Taiwan” Comparison: Major’s focus on stability mirrors the geopolitical “Taiwan Exception” seen in China’s scrap of African tariffs—where political alignment is the price of economic security.
The “Golden Tone” of Service: Major urged politicians to view opponents as “opponents, not enemies,” a call for a return to the “civilized discourse” seen during the Southbank Centre’s 75th-anniversary celebrations.
Sir John’s intervention serves as a sobering “reality check” for a nation that has seen five prime ministers in a single decade.
“The fate of individual politicians doesn’t really matter as much as the development of the right policy,” Major concluded. “We are so self-centered that we can’t take in the message that our democracy is falling short of expectations.”
As the RHS Wisley wisteria reaches its peak bloom, the question remains: will Westminster heed the warning of its “quietest” prime minister, or is the UK doomed to remain in a state of perpetual “leadership transition”? With the King’s Speech on May 13, the nation is watching to see if “stability” is a promise the current government can actually keep.




























































































