sexta-feira, 26 de junho de 2026

Another June heat record broken as extreme weather warning is extended to Friday

 

Mike drop?

 


Mike drop?

By Sam Francis

June 26, 2026 8:05 am CET

https://www.politico.eu/newsletter/london-playbook/mike-drop/

 

London Playbook

By SAM FRANCIS

with NOAH KEATE

 

Good Friday morning. This is Sam Francis.

 

DRIVING THE DAY

TAPP DANCE: Anyone hoping to put this strange, overheated week behind them and ease into a cooler weekend … well, bad luck. Immigration Minister Mike Tapp, accused of briefing out Home Office plans as his own, has handed Keir Starmer a neat little test of his authority — and his political judgment — in the final days of his premiership. Shabana Mahmood has called for Tapp to be sacked. But Starmer is keeping one of his more loyal outriders in place — for now.

 

Mike drop? Downing Street confirmed last night that Tapp is “still in his job,” despite an official request from the home secretary to sack him over what she sees as a breach of the ministerial code’s commitment to collective responsibility. Mahmood’s allies are accusing Tapp of trailing immigration changes the department was quietly working on and dressing them up in a Times op-ed as his own thinking “to try to win a job in the new administration.” Government officials were quick to point out last night that firing ministers is ultimately a matter for the PM, who wanted to look into the case and take advice before deciding Tapp’s fate.

 

Playing away from home: Playbook hears Mahmood was unaware Tapp had written in the Times, only finding out once the op-ed had been published. In the piece, Tapp said it was his “strong belief” that migrant care workers who have come to the U.K. and “played by the rules” should not be subject to the proposed reforms to indefinite leave to remain (ILR)  — meaning they have to wait longer to apply for permanent settlement. By pure coincidence, the comments rather closely mirror the thinking of Andy Burnham, who has previously criticized applying the changes retrospectively.

 

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Tapp-tapp — Mike check: Tapp has been approached for comment by virtually every national outlet and replied to none of them. As of late last night, WhatsApp was suggesting messages from your Playbook author hadn’t even been opened.

 

TAPP OVERFLOWS: The clash is already bubbling out across Westminster. One MP who has worked with Tapp said passing off “someone else’s homework” as his own to get ahead “is the kind of thing that Mike Tapp would absolutely” do. The lawmaker said they had warned Mahmood about Tapp’s “ambition” and “self-promotion,” only to be ignored — which summed up a central party machine that refused to listen, in their view. Sky’s Sam Coates, meanwhile, reports disbelief among Starmer loyalists that Mahmood, who was one of the first ministers to tell Starmer to quit, wants a minister sacked for breaking with the government line.

 

License to Bill: The controversy now threatens to overshadow the Immigration and Asylum Bill, due to land in parliament on Tuesday. The Home Office has spent the past week preparing the ground for the legislation, as Mahmood tries to make the case for it to survive into Burnham’s premiership. (It’s worth noting, however, that the ILR changes aren’t part of the bill.)

 

This is fine: With a furious home secretary and a prime minister unwilling (or unable) to act, the clash is also a handy snapshot of the chaos in government right now. How Starmer handles the brewing spat will test how much authority he has left and whether he can hold together what remains of his government.

 

And the Conservatives are loving it: Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said it was “beneath contempt” that Labour had descended into “chaos and infighting.” All Labour ministers care about now “is their own personal ambition and jockeying for government jobs,” he added.

 

Whip it good: Spare a thought, then, for the minister dispatched to face the cameras this morning: Justice Minister Jake Richards — who, as a government whip, is about as well placed as anyone to talk about party discipline (timings as ever below). Richards, an ultimate Downing Street insider, would have been hoping to use the broadcast round to talk up the Home Office’s plan to open up to three new former MoD sites to house asylum-seekers — as trailed in yesterday’s i Paper — alongside the closure of 20 more asylum hotels.

 

BURNHAM WOULD

A FOREIGN CONCEPT: While Starmer and Mahmood slug it out, the rest of Westminster is still trying to read the runes for what the next regime might look like. This morning, several papers are focusing on the fact there is little out there to suggest what Burnham’s approach to foreign policy would be. Every senior brief he has held — culture secretary, health secretary, shadow home secretary, mayor of Greater Manchester — was domestic-facing. Burnham has also been careful not to pin himself down too much. During the Makerfield by-election campaign, he refused to say whether he believed “genocide” was occurring in Gaza and stepped back from previous comments about wanting to rejoin the EU.

 

This could all be about to change … The Observer’s Rachel Sylvester reports that a Burnham speech on foreign policy is in the works. She has also spoken to allies who claim Burnham, a true remainer at heart, is “much warmer to the Europeans and they’ll be much warmer to him” and will not “try and be a Trump whisperer” like Starmer.

 

May or May-or not: On this week’s Westminster Insider, Sascha O’Sullivan looks into whether being a good mayor makes a good prime minister. She speaks to fellow Labour mayor Helen Godwin who reckons Burnham’s leadership of Greater Manchester will give him little help on the world stage because mayors are used to “reacting to macroeconomics” not “geopolitics.”

 

Major intervention: John Major has a similar message in an interview with Independent editor-in-chief Geordie Greig. The former PM warns Burnham that he needs to get his foreign policy game in gear as “Putin, Trump, Macron, Merz” are a very different “sort of problem than dealing with buses in Manchester.”

 

Oliver’s twist? It’s not just Burnham keeping his agenda at home; his incoming chief of staff James Purnell has always had a pretty domestic focus too. But allies insist help is at hand. As covered by Tim Shipman (and in Playbook PM), former head of the Foreign Office Olly Robbins has been in touch with Burnham’s transition team about a potential role in No. 10.

 

Right on cue: David Miliband, touted as a potential foreign secretary under Burnham, appears on Brussels Playbook’s Week Ender podcast advising Burnham to push harder for closer alignment with the EU. He argues Starmer’s reset lacked the “momentum and heft,” as well as the “coherence or the ambition,” to make a meaningful difference.

 

Getting the Mili-band back together: Miliband demurred when asked at the Institute for Government on Thursday whether he would accept an offer to return as foreign secretary under Burnham, a fellow Brown-era Cabinet minister. ”Let him make his choices,” he said. Watch the clip 38 minutes into this video. If that weren’t enough D. Miliband for one day, he will be doing a fireside chat at the Centre for Global Development at 3.30 p.m. Attendance is by invitation only but plebs like us can listen in here.

 

Cooper trooper: While the presumptive PM is being urged to consider his world view, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper flies to NATO’s eastern flank near Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave this morning — ahead of the second day of the Ukraine Recovery Conference — to meet British troops stationed there. ITV’s Robert Peston is along for the ride, with an interview on foreign policy to follow later in the day.

 

MILIFANDOM: Who becomes Burnham’s chancellor remains the big question in Westminster — and Ed Miliband has picked up two useful endorsements. Andrea Egan, the general secretary of Unison, told the Guardian’s Kiran Stacey that “only Ed Miliband could enact the kinds of policies trade unions and our members urgently need.” More unexpectedly, the Daily Mail’s City Editor Alex Brummer — in defiance of his own paper’s front page on Wednesday — argues Miliband’s “single-mindedness and refusal to be bullied into U-turns shows just the kind of willpower urgently needed at the Treasury.”

 

Streets away: Despite Team Burnham insisting that the conversation is still live, one person close to the incoming PM tells my colleague Dan Bloom the idea of Wes Streeting as chancellor is for the birds. “He is trying to brief himself into existence,” they add.

 

Continuity candidate: Rachel Reeves, who yesterday made her pitch to remain as chancellor, is helping Burnham prepare for government in the name of economic stability and continuity, the i Paper’s Jane Merrick and Kitty Donaldson report.

 

Even Greater Manchester: Whoever gets the keys to No. 11 may find a few bits missing when they move in. The FT’s George Parker, Sam Fleming and Jennifer Williams report Team Burnham is considering breaking up the Treasury and creating a separate growth department. The piece also has new details on Burnham’s plans to move more of the machinery of government to his Manchester power base, where he plans to set up a “devolution department.” Meanwhile, Caroline Wheeler in the i Paper hears Burnham is considering giving England’s regional mayors the power to raise and retain their own taxes, including business rates.

 

The doctor will see you now: In what would be one of the more surprising moves, the Spectator is reporting that trained surgeon Zubir Ahmed has been in talks with Burnham’s team about the possibility of taking up the role of health secretary. Last night Team Burnham was playing down the speculation, claiming there was no formal meeting.

 

DOUBLE ACT: My colleague Dan has a nugget-packed profile of James Purnell — who shared the same age, flat, job, office, football team and ambitions with Burnham before one became the trendy London media exec and the other headed north. Allies are hoping the incoming chief of staff will be the Goldilocks chief — part bureaucrat, part strategist — and know Burnham’s mind enough to actually get stuff done. And centrist Labour types now reckon they have one of their own in the Burnham camp.

 

Times change: Former Gordon Brown SpAd John Woodcock recalls the night in 2009 that Purnell tried to topple the PM … and one minister who was particularly loyal in rowing in behind Brown. Andy Burnham was the Cabinet minister “most keen to come out with a pledge of loyalty to Gordon as quickly as possible,” Woodcock told Dan.

 

TAKING A STEP BACK: It’s worth taking a beat and considering what has happened since Monday. A prime minister resigned, even before his heir apparent was sworn in as an MP. Since then every barrier between him and Downing Street has simply given way. Streeting, his likeliest challenger, endorsed Burnham on the same day the bulk of the Parliamentary Labour Party did the same while beaming beside him for a selfie in Westminster Hall. Then on Wednesday morning, when Darren Jones confirmed he would not stand, the last flicker of rebellion appeared to die.

 

This is not normal: The speed and smoothness of Burnham’s path to power is even more remarkable when you consider he has not made a single public appearance this week to explain what he would actually do or answer questions from the press. A party in government is changing leader midterm, with no contest and no program, around a man working largely behind the scenes. While it has felt inevitable for some time, that has not made it any less startling to watch it unfold this fast.

 

Early election? For those nervous about their summer holidays, my colleagues Tim Ross and Andrew McDonald have looked at the case for Burnham to call a snap general election and found a … mixed picture. Leaders tend to be the most popular at the start of their terms, but Reform is leading in the polls. Meanwhile polling indicates voters are not desperate for Burnham to secure a fresh mandate, but do not much like the way Labour is choosing a leader either.

 

Finally, some scrutiny: Yesterday’s NEC meeting, which set the timetable for appointing a new leader, was not all rosy for Andy Burnham according to NEC member Abdi Duale. He was one of “many members” dissatisfied that CLPs will not be able to make their feelings known if there is no contest. If Burnham is coronated, as expected, Duale has proposed a members’ Q&A on July 16 to let constituent parties have their say on the new leader.

Burnham’s dilemma: A free ride on Starmer’s majority, or risk an election to seek his own

 



News

Burnham’s dilemma: A free ride on Starmer’s majority, or risk an election to seek his own

 

Polling indicates voters aren’t desperate for Andy Burnham to secure a fresh mandate, but don’t much like the way Labour are choosing a leader either.

 

Analysis

June 26, 2026 4:01 am CET

By Tim Ross and Andrew McDonald

https://www.politico.eu/article/andy-burnham-keir-starmer-labour-dilemma-nigel-farage-majority-risk-election/

 

LONDON — It is an unwritten rule in British politics that a new prime minister who takes over mid-term will soon want a general election to win a majority they can call their own.

 

That is the position Andy Burnham will find himself in, if, as expected, he succeeds Keir Starmer in three weeks’ time.

 

The calculation is never straightforward — and for Burnham, the dilemma is particularly acute. If he sticks with what he’s got, he will leave himself vulnerable to accusations that he is illegitimately squatting in No. 10 on a majority he played no part in winning.

 

And the alternative — calling an early general election to secure his own mandate — would be a massive gamble that seems certain to cost Labour scores of seats, with the party lagging far behind Nigel Farage’s populist right Reform UK.

 

Yet, if polls show a “Burnham bounce” — and analysis suggests voters do prefer him to Farage for the role of PM — an early contest might give Labour its best chance against Reform UK. The popularity of new leaders tends to wane with time.

 

It’s a quandary many previous leaders will recognize and remember, often with a shudder. As they have shown repeatedly in recent years, British voters have a habit of upending prime ministers who fancy the odds of a casual dalliance with democracy.

 

Theresa May triggered a snap election in 2017 after nine months in the job, expecting her 25-point poll lead at the beginning of the campaign would give her a massive landslide. But a disastrous few weeks on the stump saw her lose the small majority she had inherited.

 

Ten years before that, Gordon Brown took over from Tony Blair and flirted with calling an election only to pull out after polling indicated it would be too difficult, earning him the nickname “Bottler Brown.” He lost anyway, three years later.

 

And even before he won the Tory leadership to replace May in 2019, Boris Johnson and his team had their eye on a popularity bounce that would give him the chance to call an early election and secure a majority to do what he wanted. For Johnson, the bet paid off, and he won a big majority of 80. 

 

Missing in action

May, Brown and Johnson had all been cabinet ministers and leading figures in their parties for years before they took over as PM mid-term.

 

Burnham, by contrast, is on the verge of walking into Downing Street without even having been a candidate at the election that gave Labour the massive majority he is set to command in the House of Commons.

 

The nature of Labour’s majority doesn’t help him either. Starmer’s victory was the most disproportionate in history: He won almost two-thirds of the seats in the Commons with just one-third of the votes in the country. Even before Burnham arrived at Westminster, there were questions over the fairness of Labour’s dominant position in parliament.

 

Opposition parties on the right, like Reform UK and some Conservatives, are now demanding an immediate election if Burnham takes over. It is in Farage’s interests, of course — his party currently leads opinion polls and is on track to be by far the biggest after the next election.

 

For what it’s worth, Labour MPs hate the idea of an early polling day, fearing they will be all-but wiped out in places like Scotland. One said a snap vote would definitely amount to “throwing seats away.”

 

“If he gets a big, big bounce and the other parties decline, it will be very tempting for him, for example, if we’re 15 points ahead in October,” said this MP, who, like others in this article, was granted anonymity to speak frankly. “I can tell you though the mood among Labour MPs is that we very much do not want him to go for an early election.”

 

Not another one

Burnham’s backers are well aware he will face an onslaught of demands to give voters a say and criticism for having no mandate as soon as he walks into No. 10 Downing Street. That’s partly because he made the same argument, calling for an election, when Johnson announced his resignation in July 2022.

 

“It’s what we’re going to be hit with and we need to be prepared for that and able to counter it,” said one Burnham ally of the call they expect to face to go to the country. “But I seem to remember it working out well for the Tories when they replaced [Margaret] Thatcher with [John] Major mid term.” Against expectations, Major won the subsequent election in 1992.

 

The Burnham ally insisted the public tends to be more understanding of leadership changes than they are given credit for. That may turn out to be true, though the reason might not be sympathy so much as weariness.

 

Any PM calling a snap vote would do well to keep in mind the words of one voter, who nine years ago summed up the mood of a nation already tired of endless political drama. The country had seen a referendum on Scottish independence in 2014, a general election in 2015, a Brexit referendum in 2016 and May had just called a snap election in 2017.

 

The voter, who was identified only as “Brenda from Bristol” in a television interview, became a viral hit when she gave her reaction to May’s announcement of a snap vote: “You’re joking,” said Brenda. “Not another one. Oh, for God’s sake, honestly, I can’t stand this. There’s too much politics going on at the moment.”

 

A YouGov poll this week found 48 percent of respondents thought there should be an election when Starmer’s replacement is in post, compared to 35 percent who said there should not be one.

 

But another poll by More in Common this month suggested there was no clear desire from the public for the next PM to call an election: 43 percent thought the new leader would have a mandate and should just “get on with the job,” compared to 37 percent who disagreed and wanted an election.

 

“I think people balance just absolute exhaustion with seemingly endless political chaos with the idea that a new prime minister needs a new mandate,” said Luke Tryl, Executive Director of More in Common UK. “It’s like Brenda from Bristol is the voice of the nation now.”

 

If there’s one thing jaded British voters dislike more than not getting a vote on who becomes their prime minister, it might just be voting.

Burnham Should Make Blackpool His Mar-a-Lago To Reform No 10 Operations

Brexit: a revolution betrayed? | Britain’s democratic revolt, 10 years on | DOCUMENTARY

Brexit: Were there ANY benefits to the UK leaving the EU?

 

No, the United Kingdom is not currently rejoining the European Union.

 


Is the UK rejoining the EU?

No, the United Kingdom is not currently rejoining the European Union.

While public sentiment has notably shifted a decade after the 2016 referendum, both the political realities in London and the accession rules in Brussels prevent any immediate return. Instead of full membership, the UK and EU are pursuing a careful economic and regulatory "reset".

The Domestic Political Stance

  • Government Policy: The ruling Labour government under Prime Minister Keir Starmer has firmly ruled out rejoining the EU, the Single Market, or the Customs Union, stating they are upholding the original Brexit mandate.
  • The "Reset" Strategy: Instead of rejoining, the UK has passed legislation for "dynamic alignment" with certain EU rules. This lowers trading barriers for food and agricultural products, links carbon emissions trading systems, and returns the UK to the Erasmus+ scheme.
  • Divided Views: While figures like London Mayor Sadiq Khan have urged the government to pledge to rejoin, other senior politicians caution that rejoining tomorrow would not magically fix the UK's core economic issues.

Public Opinion Shifts

  • Polled Majorities: Ten years post-referendum, current polling from YouGov and Ipsos shows that roughly 55% to 58% of Britons support rejoining the EU.
  • The Opt-Out Catch: This support evaporates if the UK cannot keep its previous special terms (like keeping the Pound Sterling and skipping the Schengen border-free zone). Support for rejoining drops to just 35% if the UK is forced to adopt the Euro currency.

The View From Brussels

  • European Openness: Prominent EU leaders, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and former Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, have expressed openness to the UK returning to the European fold eventually.
  • Strict Accession Rules: If the UK ever applied, it would have to go through the standard Article 49 application process like any other nation. This requires unanimous approval from all 27 EU member states.
  • Fear of Instability: European diplomats remain highly cautious. With the UK having seen multiple prime ministers since Brexit, the EU wants to see a durable, permanent British consensus before entering years of complex negotiations.

Political analysts and former leaders note that while a return is possible in the long term—driven primarily by younger generations—any realistic timeline for the UK to actually rejoin the EU would take at least a decade