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Burnham closes on Downing Street as the Labour contest turns to a coronation

Burnham closes on Downing Street as the Labour contest turns to a coronation

After winning Makerfield, Burnham is the sole declared candidate to succeed caretaker PM Starmer

Leaders· transition Qui décide·Le glissement silencieux ·9 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

After winning the 18 June 2026 Makerfield by-election to re-enter Parliament, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham declared his candidacy hours after Keir Starmer's 22 June resignation and is the sole declared MP candidate; rival Wes Streeting endorsed him rather than standing. Nominations open 9 July and close 16 July — if Burnham is unchallenged he could become United Kingdom PM by about 17 July; a contested race would conclude by 1 September. Starmer remains caretaker PM until the contest ends. The transition follows the defence-spending Defence-spending revolt: Healey and Carns quit, accelerating Starmer's fall and the collapse mapped in Starmer quits, handing Britain its seventh prime minister in a decade, with Reform UK's surge — second in Makerfield — the backdrop pressure.

By the numbers

  • 54.8% — Burnham's Makerfield vote share; Reform UK second on 34.5%.
  • 9,241 — Burnham's majority (20.3 points).
  • 9 July / 16 July — nominations open and close.
  • ~17 July or 1 September — possible PM date (uncontested vs contested).

Why it matters

Britain is on course for its seventh prime minister in roughly a decade, likely chosen by a Labour coronation rather than a contest. Burnham's soft-left instincts put the fiscal rules and the direction of government in play — and Reform UK's rise sets the terms he will have to govern against.

What to watch

  • Whether anyone challenges Burnham before nominations close.
  • His stance on Chancellor Reeves's fiscal rules.
  • How Labour responds to the Reform UK threat under new leadership.