Andy Burnham confirms he IS standing for Parliament : Keir Starmer faces civil warfare within the Labour occasion as he considers whether or not to dam mayor’s bid to rejoin Commons
Andy Burnham has announced he intends to stand for Parliament amid speculation he may be planning to launch a Labour leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer.
The Greater Manchester mayor has asked for permission to contest the Gorton and Denton by-election, which could take place as early as next month.
Mr Burnham is seen as the leading candidate to replace Sir Keir as Labour leader and Prime Minister.
He can only mount a leadership challenge as a Labour MP – meaning he will first have to quit as Mayor and then win the by-election in the north-west constituency.
However, there are still several hurdles he must clear.
As a serving regional mayor, Mr Burnham has had to request permission from Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC) to be able to run, with the deadline to make the request set at 5pm today.
Minutes after this expired, Mr Burnham took to social media to confirm he had written to the NEC to ask to run in the by-election.
In a lengthy statement, he said he had taken the ‘difficult decision’ having ‘given careful thought to what is in the best interests of our Party and the city-region I represent.’
Andy Burnham has announced he will stand for Parliament amid speculation he may be planning to launch a Labour leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer
Angela Rayner pictured canvassing in Birmingham with Mr Burnham in May last year
Mr Burnham said he plans to run a ‘hopeful and unifying campaign with broad appeal to voters’, as he hit out at ‘poison’ politics – a veiled swipe at the rise of the right under Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.
He said: ‘There is now a direct threat to everything Greater Manchester has always been about from a brand of politics which seeks to pit people against each other.
‘It brings with it a poison we should not let enter our city-region. I see this by-election as the frontline of that fight for the Manchester Way and I feel I owe it to a city which has given me so much to lead it from the front, despite the risks involved.’
Mr Burnham went on: ‘In my current job, I have tried to pioneer a different way of doing things with some success. But I have learnt in my nine years as Mayor that Manchester won’t be able to be everything it should be without similar changes at a national level. This is why I feel the need to go back.
‘When so many people in a city-region like this are struggling to afford the daily basics, they are surely right to question why the country gave away control of them in the first place, in whose interests it is run and why no government of any colour has corrected these things for them.’
He added: ‘My role in returning would be to use my experience to help it to go further and faster, as well as communicate the difference it is making. I would be there to support the work of the Government, not undermine it, and I have passed on this assurance to the Prime Minister.’
The NEC could feasibly still block his candidacy, with reports suggesting allies of the Prime Minister are eyeing up just that, either out of fear it would destabilise the Government or to prevent another by-election for the Greater Manchester mayoralty.
If he is given the green light to contest the seat, Mr Burnham would then have to see off competition from other parties to win the seat, which is now seen as a three-way marginal between Labour, Reform and the Green Party.
Regardless several figures within the Labour party have called for Mr Burnham to be allowed to stand.
Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London, speaks on stage during the Fabian Society New Year Conference in London
Most explicit was Sir Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, who told the Fabian Society conference today he thought Mr Burnham should be permitted to run and that he would campaign for him.
He said: ‘I think if Andy Burnham wants to be a member of Parliament, Andy Burnham should be allowed to be a member of Parliament.
‘I’m a firm believer in the best team having all the talent playing for them, and if Andy wants to return to Parliament, I will try and make some time between now and the by-election to knock on some doors for him, or whoever the candidate is.’
Earlier, Labour’s deputy leader Lucy Powell told the same conference that the decision on whether Mr Burnham should be the candidate ought to be ‘up to Andy and the local members’.
Both also reiterated their support for Sir Keir Starmer, with Ms Powell urging the party to ‘get behind’ the Prime Minister.
And Sir Sadiq stressed Sir Keir’s success in securing Labour’s election victory and pointed to achievements including more rights for renters and workers and the abolition of the two-child benefit cap.
Other MPs backing Mr Burnham reportedly include Chris Webb, Kim Johnson, Nadia Whittome, Karl Turner, Kate Osborne and Tony Vaughan.
Sir Keir Starmer has been warned against a ‘London stitch-up’ that would prevent leadership rival Andy Burnham from returning to Westminster
Speculation has surrounded a possible return to Westminster for Mr Burnham since Andrew Gwynne announced he would resign as an MP on health grounds on Thursday.
Mr Gwynne was suspended by Labour last year after The Mail on Sunday uncovered a series of offensive WhatsApp messages he had sent, including one in which he said he hoped for the death of an elderly constituent who complained about bin collections.
He is reported to have cut a deal to retire on health grounds in return for assurances about his MP’s pension.
Commons sources suggested the deal would see Mr Gwynne – who is only 51 – paid up until pension age, at which point he would receive a full Parliamentary pension. That package could be worth around £1million, according to one insider.
Mr Burnham, who is widely believed to have ambitions to lead the party, previously served as an MP for Leigh between 2001 and 2017.
He studied at Cambridge University and turned to politics at the age of 24 to become Tessa Jowell’s researcher.
Mr Burnham has stood for the Labour leadership on two previous occasions.
On Friday, several Labour MPs warned against using the NEC to block Mr Burnham from standing in Gorton and Denton.
Jo White, who chairs the Red Wall group of Labour MPs, said: ‘Let the North decide who their Labour candidate should be for the Gorton and Denton by-election. A London stitch-up will be a disaster for Labour.’
Crewe and Nantwich MP Connor Naismith said: ‘Gorton and Denton deserves the best possible choice of candidates.
‘I agree with the Prime Minister that our attention should be on delivering for the public, not speculating about future leadership contests.
‘Any decision made to limit the choice would be wrong.’
A member of the NEC told the BBC’s Newsnight she agreed with the parliamentarians.
Gemma Bolton, a constituency members’ representative on the committee, told the programme it would be ‘outrageous’ to block Mr Burnham should he stand, adding it would ‘show a real weakness’ in Sir Keir’s leadership.
Cat Smith, the Labour MP for Lancaster and Wyre, said it would be ‘disappointing’ if Number 10 were to block strong candidates from being able to be considered in the Gorton and Denton constituency.
Ms Smith told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I don’t know the decision that’s being made at Number 10, but what I do know is that Labour Party members in Gorton and Denton are the people who should be deciding who the Labour candidate is for the by-election and that the voters in Gorton and Denton are the people that will make the decision on who that person is when the by-election happens.
‘I think it would be disappointing if Number 10 were to block strong candidates from being able to be considered by the party members in Gorton and Denton, to be able to choose their candidate in this by-election.’
