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UK Local Elections 2026
22MAY

Burnham pitches a 'No. 10 North'

1 min read
10:09UTC

In his first major leadership-bid speech, Andy Burnham proposed a second prime ministerial base outside London and declared 'Westminster is broken'.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Burnham's first leadership speech pitched governing partly from the North and called Westminster broken.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Andy Burnham is the directly elected mayor of Greater Manchester and the frontrunner to become the next Labour leader and prime minister. In a speech in Manchester on 29 June, he floated the idea of 'No. 10 North', a second base for the prime minister outside London, arguing that 'Westminster is broken' and too disconnected from the rest of the country. Unlike some past pledges to shift power away from London, Burnham already runs a real regional government with its own staff and budget, which gives the idea more institutional weight than a slogan alone would carry.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Metro mayors have accumulated growing resources, staff and direct electoral mandates through a decade of devolution deals, giving figures like Burnham an administrative machine, the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, that predates and is independent of his Westminster ambitions.

That existing machinery is what separates 'No. 10 North' from a purely rhetorical pitch: Burnham already runs a functioning regional government with its own budget and staff, unlike previous 'rebalancing' agendas that had no institution to anchor them once the sponsoring minister moved on.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Farage to quit Clacton to force by-election

ITV News· 8 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Burnham pitches a 'No. 10 North'
Burnham's pitch to relocate part of the premiership north signals how he would try to govern differently from the capital he is bidding to lead from.
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