Starmer leadership rival Burnham blocked from seeking return to UK parliament

ReutersReuters

Starmer leadership rival Burnham blocked from seeking return to UK parliament

By William James

Sun, January 25, 2026 at 1:57 PM UTC

2 min read

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FILE PHOTO: Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham talks at the 'Convention of the North' conference in Manchester, Britain, January 25, 2023. REUTERS/Phil Noble/ File Photo

By William James

LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - British Labour Party politician Andy Burnham was on Sunday blocked from trying to return to parliament, in what was seen as a political move by Prime ​Minister Keir Starmer and his allies to keep out a potential leadership rival.

Burnham, one of the ‌party's most high-profile politicians and an elected mayor in the northern English city of Manchester, said on Saturday he wanted to become Labour's ‌candidate to replace a lawmaker who resigned on Thursday.

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Labour is trailing in opinion polls to Nigel Farage's right-wing populist Reform UK ahead of bellwether local elections in May and has so far struggled to deliver on promises of a stronger economy, better public services and tighter borders.

In a decision likely to bring simmering tension within Labour to a fresh ⁠boil, Burnham was refused permission to stand ‌by the party's National Executive Committee on Sunday, losing a vote of senior officers, including Starmer himself, by 8 to 1.

Blocking Burnham's candidacy denies him the chance of winning a ‍platform from which he could have formally challenged Starmer, because only members of parliament can trigger a leadership contest.

"Andy Burnham is doing a great job as Mayor of Greater Manchester," the Labour Party said in a statement.

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"We believe it is in the ​best interests of the party to avoid an unnecessary Mayoral election," the statement added, citing the cost to ‌taxpayers - and Labour's own campaign funds - of carrying out an election to replace him.

Burnham did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the decision.

CRITIC ACCUSES STARMER OF COWARDICE

Such is the sensitivity over Starmer's future that the lawmaker's resignation last week triggered a brief selloff in British government bonds, as investors speculated that Burnham - viewed as favouring looser fiscal policy - could rejoin parliament and position himself for a leadership challenge.

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Labour's popularity has plummeted since ⁠a landslide election win in July 2024 and the party is ​split over the best strategy to restore confidence.

Left-wing Labour lawmaker John ​McDonnell posted an open message to Starmer on X after the NEC's decision: "If you think it strengthens you I tell you it will simply hasten your demise. You could have shown ‍magnanimous leadership but instead it’s ⁠cowardice."

Burnham criticised Starmer's leadership last year but said on Saturday he had assured the prime minister he wanted to "support the work of the government, not undermine it".

Burnham ran unsuccessfully to become party leader in ⁠2015, when he was beaten by Jeremy Corbyn. He left parliament to become Greater Manchester Mayor in 2017 but has remained an influential ‌figure for some centre-left groups within Labour, particularly those critical of Starmer's more centrist stance.

(Reporting ‌by William James; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Susan Fenton)

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