Andy Burnham used his first major leadership-bid speech, in Manchester on 29 June, to pitch 'No. 10 North', a second prime ministerial base outside London, telling the audience 'Westminster is broken' 1.
Burnham has been mayor of Greater Manchester since 2017 and built his profile on a devolution argument that power and money sit too heavily in the capital. The 'No. 10 North' idea turns that pitch into a governing proposition: a prime minister who would spend part of his time running the country from the North of England.
The speech reads as an attempt to convert a regional record into a national mandate before the contest is even formally his, months after a Labour MP stood aside to clear his route back into the Commons . Whether a second base is logistics or symbolism, it sets Burnham apart from the Westminster establishment he is asking Labour to replace him into.
