Last week, Sir Keir Starmer stepped down as Prime Minister with quiet dignity, accepting his parliamentary party’s verdict without bitterness, excuses or performative outrage.
It brought to mind Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard’s resignation in 2013.
She faced intense scrutiny, personal attacks and relentless political pressure. Yet in her final speech, she chose evenness, decorum and humour over recrimination. She acknowledged what had happened without allowing it to define her departure.
There’s a leadership lesson here that extends well beyond politics.
People may debate policies and results for years. What often endures is how leaders conduct themselves when their authority is challenged or comes to an end.
When the room stopped believing in you, did you dignify the process? Did you protect what came next, even as your own chapter closed?
Because that is often what people remember.
Not the triumphs.
Not the title.
But the grace shown under pressure when it was time to leave.
How do you want to be remembered when your watch ends?
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Watch Keir Starmer’s announcement and Julia Gillard’s press conference below: