Burnham should launch leadership bid ‘really quickly’ if he wins byelection, says Labour MP Rachael Maskell

Josh Halliday

Josh Halliday

Josh Halliday is the Guardian’s North of England editor.

The talk in Westminster has turned to the timing of a leadership challenge to Keir Starmer if, as expected, Andy Burnham wins in Makerfield tomorrow. Will Burnham call immediately for Starmer to step down? Or should Labour focus first on fighting Reform UK in what would be a fierce contest for Burnham’s job as Greater Manchester mayor?

I was out all day in Makerfield yesterday and bumped into the Labour MP Rachael Maskell looking very upbeat as she headed out campaigning.

She was very clear that Burnham should launch a leadership challenge immediately, saying:

double quotation markWe need to move forward. This country is crying out for [Burnham’s] leadership. He needs to get sworn in and after that we need to look at the leadership and make sure we can form a good cohesive Labour government on the back of it.

Asked whether she wanted to see Burnham in No 10 before Labour conference in September, she hinted that it could be sooner than that: “I’m optimistic that can happen really quickly.”

Before any leadership challenge, Burnham has to win the Makerfield byelection. The polls suggest he is on course for a relatively comfortable victory, thanks in part to his own profile, the backing of an anti-Reform coalition of Lib Dem and Green voters, and Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain splitting the vote on the right.

Maskell said the mood in the Burnham camp was “really positive”:

double quotation markThis whole campaign … people are smiling in the party again and [feel] that Labour has found its values and purpose once again.

I’ve had people take down Reform posters and come behind Andy because they can see it’s become so divisive. People are now in the last minute of reaching a decision, turning to Andy because he’s bringing people together and doing politics in a different way.

Restore Britain party stickers and Andy Burnham posters on display in Ashton-in-Makerfield today.
Restore Britain party stickers and Andy Burnham posters on display in Ashton-in-Makerfield today. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Share

Key events

Unison leader Andrea Egan says next Labour leader will ‘crash and burn’ unless they ‘break with establishment consensus’

The next Labour leader will “crash and burn” unless they have the confidence to repair public services and stand up for progressive values, a union leader has warned.

Andrea Egan, general secretary of Unison, said fixing the country required huge investment in schools, hospitals, councils and transport, the Press Association reports.

Speaking at Unison’s annual conference in Brighton, she said:

double quotation markWhoever the next Labour leader is will crash and burn just like this one unless they have the confidence to break completely with the establishment consensus.

The next prime minister must repair our broken public services through massive public investment and bringing everything back in house.

Major sectors brought back fully under national public ownership. Not just publicly controlled or regulated a bit more actively.

They must stand up for progressive values, end the attacks on migrants, protect hard-won freedoms and invest in our communities.

That means investing in schools, hospitals, councils and transport. Not spending more money on American weapons and wars abroad.

Egan also strongly condemned the plans from Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, to double, or even triple, the amount of time migrant workers have to wait until they can qualify for indefinite leave to remain in the UK.

She said:

double quotation markI’m not sure if politicians like the home secretary thought we’d just look away when they decided to come for migrants.

When they decided to scapegoat them, strip away their rights and deepen exploitation.

Because if they did, they couldn’t have been more wrong.

An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.

It doesn’t matter where we come from or what we look like.

Workers stick together and that’s why the entire union is four-square behind our migrant members in this fight.

Share

Updated at 

#Labour #pushes #Burnham #launch #leadership #bid #quickly #Makerfield #byelection #result #politics #live #Politics