Sir Keir Starmer, previous PM Gordon Brown and several government ministers were among those at the service at Hull Minister.
A Conservative shadow minister warned the UK could "fall further behind" on growth targets following the Chancellor's "desperate" attempts to save the economy.
There are huge clues that Keir Starmer could unwittingly force his party into a situation in which they have to beg Britain to be allowed to stay in power.
Jonathan Reynolds, Labour’s business secretary, told the Financial Times, “We have to respond to the agenda the US president has just set out with our own dynamism… Every country has to do it.”
Norway's eurosceptic Centre Party quit the government on Thursday in a dispute over the adoption of European Union energy policies, leaving the centre-left Labour Party to rule alone eight months before an election.
Sadiq Khan can’t stop the government’s planned Heathrow expansion from going ahead, Rachel Reeves has said.The London mayor has been a vocal opponent of the plan to build a third runway at the London airport.
A LONG-serving Labour councillor has announced she has left the party and will represent her constituents as an Independent instead.
Nigel Farage's Reform UK has taken the lead in a recent voting intention poll and Mirror readers are concerned about what that means for the future of Labour and British politics.
The service at Hull Minster was attended by three Labour Prime Ministers, as well as several other current and former MPs
Governor Alex Otti of Abia State has reassured the public that the Labour Party remains united and stronger, despite leadership challenges.
A South Gloucestershire councillor has been expelled from Labour after 40 years for announcing he will stand as an independent in May’s West of England metro mayor election. As previously reported, Cllr Ian Scott accused the party of age and sex discrimination in November after a panel culled him from the shortlist of nominees for its candidacy.
Reform UK has started tying green policies to grimly high energy bills — and some government MPs are getting nervous.