Labour's National Executive Committee set a timetable requiring leadership contenders to gather nominations from 81 MPs, a fifth of the Parliamentary Labour Party, between 9 and 15 July 1. If only one candidate clears that bar, a Special Conference installs the leader on 17 July and the members' ballot that would otherwise run to 29 August never happens 2.
The National Executive Committee (NEC) is Labour's governing body, and a Special Conference is an emergency gathering of the party rather than a vote of its roughly 400,000 members. Only Andy Burnham has emerged as a serious contender. Wes Streeting, Douglas Alexander, Darren Jones and David Lammy have endorsed him rather than stand 3.
The endorsements do more than signal loyalty. Each senior figure who backs Burnham rather than stands is one fewer source of the 81 signatures a rival would need to force a ballot. The near-even PLP split that preceded Starmer's fall has resolved, for now, into a single-candidate field.
