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Andy Burnham Launches His Campaign As Labour's Candidate For The Makerfield By-election

Andy Burnham launches his Makerfield by-election campaign (Image: Getty)

Andy Burnham set out his plans for government as he launched his Makerfield by-election campaign with a dig at Sir Keir Starmer. The politician declared: โ€œWe need to be better.โ€

He called for the biggest programme of council house building since World War 2, lower train fares and improvements to schools. In a criticism of Sir Keirโ€™s leadership, Mr Burnham said: โ€œI know my own party needs to change. We need to be better than we have been.

“A vote for me in this by-election is a vote to change Labour.โ€ And he said the voters of Makerfield would get โ€œthe party back they used to knowโ€.

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Mr Burnham, currently Mayor of Greater Manchester, was launching his bid to return to Parliament at a rally outside a sports and social club in the North-west constituency.

He is expected to launch a leadership challenge to depose Sir Keir as Labour leader and Prime Minister if he wins the by-election, but faces a challenge from Reform, which says it aims to pull off a โ€œshockโ€ victory.

Mr Burnham called for change to the education and housing systems, saying the country needed the biggest programme of council house building since World War 2.

He said: โ€œWe need to use rail renationalisation to reduce those train fares and make them affordable to people again.โ€

He also called for changes to the care system.

Insisting hope was โ€œin the airโ€, Mr Burnham said: โ€œThis is not more of the same.

โ€œThis is a change by-election. Politics in this country, British politics, is tired. It needs a new script, and over the next four weeks, the people of Makerfield are going to write that script, and itโ€™s great that theyโ€™re going to get that chance.โ€

The Mayor was joined by a string of Labour politicians for his campaign launch. They included Labour MPs Jonathan Reynolds, Kim Johnson, Barry Gardiner, Ian Byrne, Chris Webb and Rebecca Long-Bailey.

Also showing their support were Liverpool metro mayor Steve Rotheram and interim leader of Welsh Labour Ken Skates.

Pollsters have signalled that having Mr Burnham running will significantly boost Labourโ€™s chances of retaining the seat, but it could still prove a tough contest against Nigel Farageโ€™s Reform UK.

Josh Simons, the Labour MP who stood down to make way for Mr Burnham, won in 2024 by just 5,399 votes, while Reform comfortably won every ward in the constituency at this monthโ€™s local elections.

Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats unveiled Stockport councillor Jake Austin as their candidate to contest the seat.

Mr Austin said the people of Makerfield โ€œdeserve so much more than the failing Labour Government or the divisive politics of Reform UKโ€.

On Thursday, the Green Party announced that its candidate, Chris Kennedy, had withdrawn from the race just hours after being selected.

The party said Mr Kennedy had withdrawn for โ€œpersonal and family reasonsโ€, but it later emerged that he had shared posts on social media claiming an attack on Jewish ambulances in north London had been a โ€œfalse flagโ€ operation.

A Green spokesperson said Mr Kennedy had deleted and apologised for the posts, but added the party stood by its previous statement about the reasons for his withdrawal.

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