Andy Burnham will become prime minister on 20 July without a single Labour member casting a vote. Nominations opened on 9 July; he took 322 on the first day and 349 by 13 July, past the point any challenger could gather the 81 signatures the National Executive Committee (NEC), Labour's governing body, set to force a contest . 1
The path ran through one by-election. Burnham won Makerfield on 18 June with a 9,231-vote majority , pitched a 'No 10 North' base in Manchester , and inherits the office Keir Starmer left when he resigned four days after that win .
A special conference on 17 July confirms him as Labour leader, and the premiership follows three days later. No members' ballot, no general election, and a mandate conferred by 349 colleagues rather than by voters.
Not everyone reads the coronation as strength. The Spectator's Charles Moore argues the campaign, a mass Westminster Hall selfie and a helicopter trailing Burnham's train, delivered spectacle without a policy platform. 2
