Andy Burnham breaks silence as Labour civil war intensifies | Politics | News
Plotting Labour MPs must get behind Keir Starmer and stop trying to overthrow him, Shabana Mahmood has insisted.
The Home Secretary claimed the embattled leader is โnot goingโ despite rival Andy Burnham allegedly eyeing up a return to Westminster to lay the groundwork for a future challenge.
Mr Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, is poised to run in an upcoming by-election, allies claimed.
Strategists working for the Prime Minister’s arch rival have drawn up a shortlist of potential target seats in the North West, including the Greater Manchester seat currently held by former Labour MP Andrew Gwynne.
But Mr Burnham broke his silence on Sunday morning, claiming: โQuite a lot of rubbish in the papers today. Reminds me why I left Westminster in the first place.โ
While Home Secretary Ms Mahmood admitted โevery single personโ has thought about the top job, she told the BBCโs Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg show: โWell, Keir Starmer is not going.โ
Asked again, she said: โEvery single person has thought about it, of course they have, but that is not the same as plotting to overthrow a Prime Minister for Godโs sake.
โThe Prime Minister is getting on with doing his job. I am a member of his Government. I have a big job of my own to do, and that is the only thing Iโm focused on.โ
And Ms Mahmood, herself tipped as a future leadership contender, said senior Labour figures should โfocus on the day jobโ of delivering for the public.
Commenting on growing discontent within the Labour Party, the Home Secretary said: โI think that all of us in Government and in the Labour Party have a responsibility to focus on the day job and to get on with delivering for the British people.
โI was on your show just a few weeks ago, and I made this point that every single minute you have in government is precious, and itโs a huge privilege and an honour to be the government of your country, and we mustnโt waste a single second of it.
โSo actually, this is on the whole of the government and all of the parliamentary Labour Party and the whole Labour movement to make sure we donโt waste a single second of the time that we have in government.โ
She told Sky Newsโs Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme: โLabour governments donโt come along very often, and every minute that we have in government is precious.
โItโs a privilege to be in government. Iโm focused on the big job that I have as Home Secretary, and my advice to all colleagues everywhere would be that itโs a precious privilege, and we mustnโt waste a single minute of it.
โWe have a big agenda. We have to crack on with delivering.โ
Asked whether that message applied to Labour mayors, she said: โWherever you sit in the Labour family, we all have a role to play in supporting the Labour Government deliver for the people of this country.โ
Many within Westminster believe Sir Keir will face a sustained leadership challenge after Mayโs local election.
Labourโs popularity has plummeted since coming into office, with critics slamming their record on the economy, benefits, immigration and a series of damaging scandals.
On Saturday, a Labour MP who backs Mr Burnham said: “It’s happening. We are on the brink of securing a seat which is likely to come free shortly and where the polls say Andy would beat Reform.”
Health Secretary Wes Streeting was also last week accused of undermining the PM by using an interview with the New Statesman magazine to criticise the “technocratic approach” of the Government, which he likened to a “maintenance department”.
Meanwhile Ms Rayner is understood to be in regular contact with Mr Burnham’s camp, with colleagues predicting she is likely to form a joint ticket with him if he becomes an MP.
She is also backing a growing rebellion against Labour’s plans to reduce jury trials, with her allies saying that she fears Nigel Farage’s Reform UK would ‘weaponise’ the reforms against the Government.
