Burnham
will try again for Westminster return but declines offer of seat in 2027
Greater
Manchester mayor’s hopes of imminent return as MP appear remote as relationship
with Starmer at low ebb
Pippa
Crerar, Jessica Elgot and Peter Walker
Mon 26
Jan 2026 20.25 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jan/26/andy-burnham-try-again-westminster-return
Andy
Burnham has not given up hopes of returning to Westminster and will try again,
allies say, but would need to be convinced that Keir Starmer would not try to
block him again before running.
The
Greater Manchester mayor’s hopes of an imminent return to parliament appeared
remote, however, as No 10 sources suggested that relations between the two men
were at a low ebb and played down chances of a rapprochement.
As the
leadership tried to defuse the anger, Starmer himself defended the decision to
prevent Burnham running in the Gorton and Denton byelection next month, a move
that triggered a backlash against the prime minister from sections of his own
party.
Starmer
is understood to have offered to support Burnham running for another seat in
the north-west of England in 2027, nearer the end of his mayoralty, by which
time the voting system would have changed in Labour’s favour and the party
would be able to line up a strong replacement.
However,
the proposal was not accepted and the prime minister’s allies have since
suggested that Burnham’s publicly angry response to being blocked may mean that
even a tentative deal will not come to pass.
“Andy had
thought deeply about all of this and once you’ve reached the conclusion you
want to come back, you don’t change your mind,” one ally of the mayor said.
“But he will be feeling bruised and disappointed, and you’re not going to put
yourself through it again unless you’re confident of a different reaction.”
A second
Burnham supporter argued that Labour MPs should have fought harder to get him
on the ticket for Gorton and Denton, as sticking on the same trajectory would
probably end in electoral disaster.
“The
[parliamentary Labour party] does not yet feel a burning sense of the
existential threat to the party. It’s now more likely that any change will be
in the wrong direction or insufficiently radical,” they said.
A letter
being circulated by soft left Labour backbenchers said the decision to block
him from running was a gift to Nigel Farage and that losing the byelection
would be “unimaginable”. It came after Burnham himself appeared to predict that
Labour would lose the byelection.
The
executive of the soft-left Tribune group of MPs – which includes the former
ministers Louise Haigh and Justin Madders and the select committee chair Sarah
Owen – have conveyed concern to Shabana Mahmood, the chair of Labour’s national
executive committee (NEC).
But with
the interviews for candidates for the seat due to begin on Tuesday, many
Burnham allies have conceded that their hopes of him fighting Gorton have been
dashed.
Starmer
said on Monday that he and his fellow NEC officers had decided not to let
Burnham quit to avoid triggering a costly mayoral election.
He said:
“Andy Burnham’s doing a great job as the mayor of Manchester, but having an
election for the mayor of Manchester when it’s not necessary would divert our
resources away from the elections that we must have, that we must fight and
win. Resources, whether that’s money or people, need to be focused on the
elections that we must have, not elections that we don’t have to have. And that
was the basis of the NEC decision.”
Addressing
the turmoil in his party, he said: “Yes, there is a fight, but that fight is
with Reform and we all need to line up together to be in that fight, all
playing our part. I think that everybody in the Labour party, everybody who’s a
Labour MP, wants to be in that fight, wants to fight alongside all their
colleagues in a fight that matters hugely to the future of our country.”
The prime
minister’s allies were trying to shore up support after a turbulent few days,
as Starmer left the country for the rest of the week on a visit to China and
Japan.
Richard
Hermer, the attorney general and a close friend, told a regular private meeting
of MPs: “What we are achieving as a government is radical, deeply principled
and nothing short of an attempt to rework the state so it is fairer and more
equal for all.
“I do not
for one minute underestimate the political challenge we face. Or how many
people do not trust politicians and will not do so until they can at least feel
we are making a difference. But nor do I underestimate this party, and my
passionate belief that as our policies take hold, we will change this country
for the better and for the long term.”
He added:
“I can say with all honesty that Keir was the most able and principled lawyer
of his generation and his belief in public service is every bit as strong today
as it was then.”
Reactions
were mixed. One usually loyal MP said: “Everybody was in a massive grump before
Christmas and now they’ve come back and nothing has got any better. Keir has
used an opportunity to demonstrate strength and instead demonstrated weakness.”
Burnham
said on Sunday he was disappointed by the decision but promised to support
whoever was selected to fight the seat vacated last week by Andrew Gwynne.
In a
social media post on Monday night, he sought to make light of the situation.
Ahead of a match between his football team, Everton, and Leeds, he posted:
“Given the weekend I’ve had it feels very much like a [former Everton and now
Leeds striker] Dominic Calvert-Lewin hat-trick is now incoming.”
If
Burnham had been selected for the seat, he would have been obliged to give up
his Greater Manchester mayoralty less than halfway through a four-year term,
triggering a byelection there.
A Labour
statement on Sunday said this “would have a substantial and disproportionate
impact on party campaign resources ahead of the local elections and elections
to the Scottish parliament and Welsh Senedd in May”.
The
decision caused fury among many Labour MPs, not all of them natural allies of
Burnham, with one condemning what they called “petty factionalism”. Several of
Labour’s union backers have also criticised the move.

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