Other

Is Andy Burnham making a bid to replace Keir Starmer?

By The Week UK

Copyright theweek

Is Andy Burnham making a bid to replace Keir Starmer?

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Less than $3 per week

View Profile

The Explainer

Talking Points

The Week Recommends

Newsletters

From the Magazine

The Week Junior

Food & Drink

Personal Finance

All Categories

Newsletter sign up

today’s big question

Is Andy Burnham making a bid to replace Keir Starmer?

Mayor of Manchester is on manoeuvres but he faces a number of obstacles before he can even stand for Labour leadership

Newsletter sign up

Andy Burnham has been a cabinet minister, stood for election as Labour leader in 2010 and 2015, and became mayor of Greater Manchester in 2017

(Image credit: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images)

The Week UK

16 September 2025

Andy Burnham has made no secret of his desire to one day lead the Labour Party. The mayor of Greater Manchester has twice run for the leadership – in 2010 and 2015 – and just two years ago reaffirmed his aspirations for the top job, telling The Telegraph: “If the party thinks well maybe it is your time, I wouldn’t turn away from that.”

That naked ambition “has always made him an anxiety-inducing blot on the landscape for the incumbent leader”, said The Guardian, “but the road to No. 10 is a very difficult one”. Burnham may have a vision for his path to the leadership – “but he doesn’t have complete control of how to make it a reality”.
What did the commentators say?
After a disastrous two weeks, “Starmer’s premiership is on its knees”, said Kitty Donaldson in The i Paper, “with his own internal critics now publicly putting a timeline on how long it can last”. Some are warning he could be ousted after May’s elections.

Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Sign up for The Week’s Free Newsletters

From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.

From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.

The “despondent mood among his MPs isn’t limited to his left-wing critics”. Mainstream figures and grassroots Labourites are “questioning whether the chaotic departures of Angela Rayner and Peter Mandelson are fundamental markers of Starmer’s political judgement, his vision for the country, and even his basic competence”.

By contrast, Burnham has been consistently chosen as the next PM in polls of Labour members and his appeal extends to voters who backed Labour in the last general election. Last week, the man dubbed “the King in the North” by supporters launched a new soft-left campaign group, Mainstream, which “many expect to become a Trojan horse for a leadership bid”, said The Telegraph.
Backing calls for wealth taxes, nationalising utility companies and ending the two-child benefit cap, Burnham “would want to lead a government with a strikingly different tone – more sympathetic to dissent, more open to the Liberal Democrats and to the Green Party – a soft-left administration with strong appeal to many Labour members”, that would also be “better at combating Reform”, said The New Statesman’s Andrew Marr.
He has already called for a “reset” at the Labour conference later this month, and No. 10 is “braced for Burnham to pop up in Liverpool as a rallying point for a change of direction”, said Donaldson.

Sign up for Today’s Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

Under current rules, 20% of the parliamentary party (80 MPs) would be required to challenge Starmer by nominating an alternative candidate, “and it’s far from agreed who that could be”, said Politico.
Burnham faces an even greater obstacle than most candidates as he would first need to fight and win a parliamentary seat in order to stand in any future leadership race. One obvious option would be Gorton and Denton in south Manchester, where suspended Labour MP Andrew Gwynne has applied to retire on medical grounds. But that seat, along with many in and around Manchester, is vulnerable to Reform, according to the latest forecast from Election Maps UK.
“The harsh reality is that there is no realistic route for him to become leader” in the near future and attempting to do so could “hand Farage a huge opportunity in a genuine showdown”, said The Independent. “Even if the Labour Party needs saving, trying to bring back Andy Burnham would be a gamble too far.”

Explore More

Keir Starmer
Labour party

The Week UK

Social Links Navigation

Fit for a king: must-visit palaces around the UK

The Week Recommends
Our pick of the nation’s most magnificent residences for nobles and royals

Christian Brückner: why prime suspect in Madeleine McCann case can refuse Met interview

The Explainer
International letter of request rejected by 49-year-old convicted rapist as he prepares to walk free

Angela Rayner: the rise and fall of a Labour stalwart

In the Spotlight
Deputy prime minister resigned after she underpaid £40,000 in stamp duty

You might also like

Angela Rayner: the rise and fall of a Labour stalwart

In the Spotlight
Deputy prime minister resigned after she underpaid £40,000 in stamp duty

Will Donald Trump’s second state visit be a diplomatic disaster?

Today’s Big Question
Charlie Kirk shooting, Saturday’s far-right rally and continued Jeffrey Epstein fallout ramps-up risks of already fraught trip

The runners and riders for the Labour deputy leadership

The Explainer
Race to replace Angela Rayner likely to come down to Starmer loyalist vs. soft-left MP supported by backbenchers and unions

How should Keir Starmer right the Labour ship?

Today’s Big Question
Rightward shift on immigration and welfare not the answer to ‘haemorrhaging of hope, trust and electoral support’

‘Three Pads’ Rayner: a housing hypocrite?

Talking Point
As real estate moguls go, the Deputy PM is ‘hardly Donald Trump’

Can anyone save Jimmy Lai?

Today’s Big Question
‘Britain’s shameful inaction’ will mean it’s partly ‘responsible’ if Hong Kong businessman dies in prison

Jonathan Powell: who is the man behind Keir Starmer’s foreign policy?

Today’s Big Question
Prime minister’s national security adviser is a ‘world-class operator’

Who will win the battle for the soul of the Green Party?

An ideological divide is taking root among the environmentalists

View More ▸

Contact Future’s experts

Terms and Conditions

Privacy Policy

Cookie Policy

Advertise With Us

The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street