Analysis
‘Astonishing’
win for Andy Burnham puts pressure on Starmer to step aside
Kiran
Stacey
Policy
editor
Size of
Makerfield victory has many allies hoping outgoing Greater Manchester mayor
will be installed in No 10 within days
Fri 19
Jun 2026 07.50 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jun/19/andy-burnham-win-makerfield-byelection-keir-starmer
Speaking
hours before polls closed in Makerfield, a Downing Street source acknowledged a
rare moment of doubt about the prime minister’s future. “Keir will fight on,”
the source said, repeating the message to which Keir Starmer has stuck for
several weeks. “Although, that might depend on the size of the majority.”
In the
end, Andy Burnham’s majority was so convincing that allies hope he can be
installed in No 10 within days. Louise Haigh, the Labour MP who helped run
Burnham’s campaign, said on Thursday night: “I hope that [Starmer] will
consider an orderly and managed transition.
“We have
said that the party is in an existential crisis and things cannot continue. It
was quite clear after the local elections, unfortunately, that he considered
that business as usual would suffice.
“Andy has
potentially shown tonight what change the Labour party can bring.”
Lisa
Nandy, the culture secretary, said Burnham was the “only Labour politician in
the country that could have pulled off that result”, adding: “That wasn’t just
a win, that was an emphatic win … It was an astonishing share of the votes, and
I think it shows that you can beat hate and division and anger and despair.”
In
fighting the byelection, the Greater Manchester mayor wanted not only to return
to Westminster to challenge the prime minister, but also to show how Reform UK
can be taken on and beaten, even in their most promising seats. He said after
the result: “We must now take this up and put this country back on the right
path and bring people back together and get things working properly.”
Of the 90
seats where Reform finished second to Labour at the 2024 general election,
Makerfield was the seventh closest result. At the local elections in this
constituency, Reform won more than half the vote, with Labour way behind on
23%.
Burnham,
however, has won the seat with a majority of 9,231 – nearly double that enjoyed
by his predecessor. With 54% of the vote, the mayor finished about 20
percentage points ahead of Reform, and, crucially, gained comfortably more
votes than Reform and Restore Britain combined. Nigel Farage, the Reform
leader, cannot argue that he would win this seat at a general election by
uniting the hard right.
Attention
will now return to Westminster, and how quickly Burnham might mount a challenge
to the prime minister. The mayor’s allies said before the vote that they did
not want ministers to resign over the weekend, insisting they wanted any change
of power to be as harmonious as possible.
Those
close to Burnham say he has the support of more than the 81 MPs needed to
trigger a leadership contest, in which Starmer would automatically have the
right to stand should he wish.
But they
hope it will not come to that, and that ministers will quietly spend the next
few days persuading the prime minister that he should agree to an orderly
transition of power.
Polls
suggest Labour would be doing about six percentage points better if Burnham was
prime minister – though even his allies accept he would face the same policy
dilemmas that have tripped up Starmer.
Joe
Twyman, the director of the polling company Deltapoll, said: “In the short
term, he may well manage a bounce in the polls if Burnham becomes prime
minister, but longer term, will voters perceive him and his Labour government
to have made a noticeable improvement in their lives? Or will they ultimately
view him as just more of the same?
“Regardless,
the phoney war of the Labour leadership contest is now over.”
Starmer,
the man Burnham is seeking to unseat, posted a brief message of congratulations
on social media on Friday morning. “Congratulations, @AndyBurnhamGM, Labour’s
new MP for Makerfield,” the prime minister wrote. “Voters chose Labour’s
campaign of hope and optimism over division and hate.”
Burnham
will use the win to argue that it shows his brand of politics can lead Labour
to a second consecutive general election victory. But the reality is that this
byelection was highly unusual in several important ways.
By
running as a Labour candidate but on a promise to challenge the prime minister,
Burnham was able to use the full resources of the governing party while also
positioning himself as the option for change.
Almost
every Labour MP went to campaign at some point over the last few weeks, many
more than once. Party officials say they knocked on some doors as many as seven
times, managing to speak to 60% of voters during the campaign – far above the
normal contact rate.
There
were so many Labour volunteers out on polling day that some in Burnham’s
campaign feared they risked angering local voters. By turning the byelection
into a de facto referendum on whether he should be prime minister, Burnham
succeeded in squeezing the vote share of almost every other major party except
Reform.
Voters
turned out en masse, with nearly 60% of people casting a vote, more than at the
general election. But that could not prevent the Conservatives, the Liberal
Democrats and the Greens all losing their deposits, on 2.2%, 0.4% and 0.7% of
the vote respectively.
The
result will disappoint Reform. Farage campaigned prominently in the
constituency, though the party did achieve its second biggest share of the vote
in any byelection, with 35%.
It will
delight Farage’s former colleague Rupert Lowe, whose new Restore Britain party
gained 7% of the vote, showing it could provide a threat to Reform in seats
across the country.
For now,
with Labour in flux, senior members of Starmer’s government showed signs of
hedging their bets on Thursday night. “I think that with [Burnham] back in the
top team, at the top table, helping to drive that change, I think we’ll be in a
really strong position,” Nandy said.
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