Andy Burnham facing Labour backlash over focus on North of England | Politics | News
Andy Burnham is facing a backlash from Labour MPs over his focus on the north of England. Sir Keir Starmer’s likely successor is reportedly planning to set up a โNumber 10 in the northโ if he becomes prime minister.
The former mayor of Manchester will set out plans for a devolution of power on Monday. But some Labour MPs fear that he could alienate voters in rural, coastal and commuter belt seats where the party is already under pressure from Nigel Farage’s Reform UK and Zack Polanski’s Green Party.
One MP told The Times: โWeโve got to have a winning coalition that spreads across the country. Itโs not just the red wall. Itโs seats weโd never won before from the Tories. Itโs metropolitan areas being snapped up by the Greens.โ
Southern MPs have also raised concerns over economic reforms previously backed by Mr Burnham, such as replacing council tax with a land value tax.
One said: โAndy has to be able to prove that his northern focus wonโt cloud his ability to govern for all corners of the UK.”
The so-called King of the North is a fierce critic of the UK’s Westminster-centric politics.
The newly-elected MP, who was mayor of Greater Manchester from 2017 until winning the Makerfield by-election last week, reportedly told staff he expected to be spending plenty of time in the city even if he took over as prime minister.
In 2020, then-prime minister Boris Johnson urged Parliamentary authorities to look at the idea of moving the House of Lords out of London while the Palace of Westminster is revamped.
York was suggested as a possible location, but the idea was turned down by the body in charge of the decision.
A Labour source said: โAnonymous briefings against party staff who have no right of reply only help our opponents.
โThose briefing should spend more time doing what party staff do round the clock: fight for Labour victories across the country.โ
