Andy Burnham latest: Mayor ‘disappointed’ after bid to return as Labour MP in by-election is blocked

Editorial: Starmer must deliver on Labour’s manifesto pledges to stop party being ripped apart by decision on Burnham

The decision to bar the mayor of Greater Manchester and former MP Andy Burnham from standing for the now vacant parliamentary seat of Gorton and Denton raises a host of questions, both about Sir Keir Starmer himself, as party leader and prime minister, and about the governance of the Labour Party.

In his 18 months as prime minister, Sir Keir has often appeared a weak and indecisive leader, with policy U-turns and prevarications under pressure more in evidence than any determined pursuit of the objectives set out in the manifesto on which he led Labour to its landslide election victory.

There is, however, another side to that picture. Where party and government discipline is concerned, and – it might be added – his own survival as leader, he has shown a determination little short of ruthlessness. This was fully on display in the way he ejected Jeremy Corbyn from the party and his attempt to do the same to Diane Abbott. He was both unhesitant and unrepentant in removing the whip from MPs who rebelled against proposed government welfare reforms (only to yield on the policy issues later), and he demonstrated a similar resolution in effectively sacking both his deputy, Angela Rayner, and his hand-picked ambassador in Washington, Peter Mandelson, when their missteps threatened to harm his own position.

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 05:00

Labour MP warns of ‘a lot of bloodletting’ after Burnham blocked

A Labour MP has warned that “there’ll be a lot of bloodletting” following the move to block Andy Burnham from standing in the upcoming by-election in Gorton and Denton.

Karl Denton issued the warning to Metro, while he also told LBC that the NEC’s decision was a “mistake”.

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 04:00

Watch: NEC called for pause in Burnham by-election decision over stitch-up fears

NEC call for pause in Burnham by-election decision over stitch-up fears

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 03:00

Explained: Why has Labour blocked Andy Burnham from standing as an MP?

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 02:00

Starmer ‘personally led calls’ to block Burnham’s path back to Westminster

Sir Keir Starmer personally led the calls to block Andy Burnham’s path back to Westminster, according to reports.

A source within the NEC told the Daily Express: “Keir was there and led from the front. He took up the mantel and even the most sceptical about Keir were very impressed.

“The Prime Minister argued that we couldn’t risk a by-election in Greater Manchester [for mayor], and that the psychodrama from the last 48 hours had not been helpful.”

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 01:00

Watch: Diane Abbott says Burnham decision makes Starmer look ‘weak’

Diane Abbott says Burnham decision makes Starmer look ‘weak’

Tara Cobham26 January 2026 00:00

Profile: ‘King of the North’ Andy Burnham whose bid to return to Westminster sparked Labour civil war

It would not be the first time that the mayor of a big city went on to become head of their country’s government, though it’s unusual. Three US presidents have done so (Andrew Johnson, Grover Cleveland, Calvin Coolidge), and in Europe there are the highly notable examples of Chancellor Willy Brandt (graduating from West Berlin), and Jacques Chirac (Paris). Here, of course, we saw Boris Johnson perfecting his populist skills in London before, in due course, graduating to the premiership. The question for 2026 is whether Andy Burnham can make a similar journey from his mayoral HQ at the Tootal Building in Manchester to 10 Downing Street. The upcoming by-election in the usually safe Labour seat of Gorton, well inside Burnham’s northern fiefdom, opens up at least the possibility that Burnham might repeat Johnson’s feat.

Burnham, a minister in the Blair and Brown governments who has been reborn as the mayor of Greater Manchester, has already been almost prime minister, you know. He may presently be the “King of the North”, enjoying marginally better ratings that the party nationally, but he could now be trying, for the third time, for an even more exalted position – leader of the Labour Party, and with it, the premiership. It was a laughable proposition for almost the whole of Sir Keir Starmer’s period of previously unassailable dominance, but suddenly, before last autumn’s party conference, in a panicky mood, the Labour Party seemed to have caught what might be termed “the Tory disease” – the delusion that a change of leader can solve all its problems, coupled with an addiction to plotting. Burnham, away from Westminster for most of the past decade, seemed to be the nearest thing they have to a fresh start.

Tara Cobham25 January 2026 23:00

Labour source says Burnham’s claim media was told of NEC decision before him is ‘categorically untrue’

A Labour source has said Andy Burnham’s claim that the media was told of the NEC’s decision before him is “categorically untrue”.

The Manchester mayor posted on X earlier: “The fact that the media was informed of the NEC decision before I was tells you everything you need to know about the way the Labour Party is being run these days. You would think that over 30 years of service would count for something but sadly not.”

But a Labour source told Sky News this was “categorically untrue”.

Beth Rigby posted on X: “Am told the party attempted to contact Andy shortly after the meeting had concluded over the phone and then contacted him via email. Am told the party categorically did not brief the media until Andy and the full NEC had been informed of the decision.”

Tara Cobham25 January 2026 22:11

Burnham hits back at those backing blocking of his path back to Westminster

Andy Burnham has hit back at those backing the blocking of his path back to Westminster.

Journalist Tom Baldwin, a former Labour adviser, posted on X on Sunday evening: “I’ve always liked @AndyBurnhamGM but the prospect of him returning to Westminster has already added to inward-looking psychodrama that does no one any good. And an unnecessary by-election for Mayor of Manchester might well have resulted in long term damage to his reputation too.”

The Manchester mayor replied in the comments: “I’m not sure losing a by-election does us any good either, Tom.”

Tara Cobham25 January 2026 21:58

UK’s unions divided over Burnham decision

Andrea Egan, the newly-elected general secretary of Britain’s largest trade union Unison, said: “I know many, many trade unionists will be so disappointed and angry at local members not being given a say over who their candidate should be.

“This isn’t the way any democratic organisation should be run. Now’s the time to unite our movement, not divide it.”

The TSSA union accused the NEC of blocking Mr Burnham for “factional reasons”, adding: “Labour has lost its way and must change its path to survive.”

But Usdaw general secretary Joanne Thomas said her union accepted the decision and the conclusion that Mr Burnham’s candidacy would mean “major disruption”.

Tara Cobham25 January 2026 21:13