Andy Burnham has a story. He must also have a plan

Keir Starmer won power but never explained Britain’s crisis. The new MP offers a sharper diagnosis — and one that voters can understand.

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Editorials

June 23, 2026 - 3:59 PM

Andy Burnham, mayor of Manchester, England, won election to Parliament June 19, 2026, and is now poised to run for the Labor Party’s leadership post and the premiership. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Political careers often end when circumstances demand qualities that a politician cannot supply. That seems especially true of Sir Keir Starmer. On Monday, he stepped down as Labor leader, hours before Andy Burnham arrived at Westminster to take his seat as MP for Makerfield.

Sir Keir’s achievements were real. He won a large parliamentary majority in 2024, provided more cash for the NHS (National Health Service) and was steadfast in his support of Ukraine. 

He undoubtedly restored a measure of seriousness after years of Tory psychodrama. 

But the 2024 victory was always more brittle than it seemed: Labor’s vote actually fell from 2019 and Nigel Farage’s decision to stand candidates in 2024 fractured right wing votes. Sir Keir won power; he did not change the political weather.

Although Mr. Burnham is not yet Labor leader, the enthusiasm greeting him at Westminster suggested that many MPs regard his ascent as inevitable. 

If he were to enter Downing Street, Mr. Burnham would become the seventh prime minister of the UK in 10 years. 

The Tory MP who shouted “he’s not the messiah” got laughs because it caught the mood: relief shading into perhaps unrealistic hope. But Mr. Burnham is not Lenin arriving at Finland Station.

Sir Keir’s problem was that he offered incremental repair when the country wanted a moral vision. 

He could not explain what had gone wrong, who had benefited or what needed to change. 

Mr. Burnham has a stronger grasp of the grievances that underpin politics. His enemies are legible and his story is simple enough for voters to repeat: Britain worked better before privatization; London has taken too much power for itself; communities have been ripped off; public control can restore fairness and pride.

Reports that Mr. Burnham wants to break with Treasury orthodoxy are welcome. Cutting budgets of unprotected departments while waiting for interest rates to fall is not a strategy; it is drift. 

The influential think tank Compass, close to Mr. Burnham, published a policy paper — The Productive State — on Monday arguing that the state should lower the cost of essentials through public investment, ownership and coordination of key services so that real disposable income rises without relying endlessly on state subsidies.

The authors, Mathew Lawrence and Alex Williams, say that energy and water should be placed under national public corporations, while housing and transport would be organized at the city-region scale, with care and local services run through municipal providers. 

The political attraction of such a program is obvious: it links the cost of living, growth, fiscal plausibility and public control in a way that mirrors Mr. Burnham’s rhetoric. It also gives him the machinery of civic pride and regional renewal.

No other MP looks able to get the 81 nominations required to enter the Labor leadership race. If Mr. Burnham is to become prime minister without a contest, he should seek the scrutiny that a contest would otherwise provide. A lengthy session before parliament’s liaison committee would be a good place to start. 

The public will not reward Labor for creating a new model of the state. They will reward it for making life cheaper, easier and more secure. 

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