TL;DR
Andy Burnham is consulting Baroness Sue Gray on forming a future Labour government as he considers a return to Westminster. This comes amid increasing speculation about Keir Starmer's future following disappointing local election results.
Andy Burnham has sought advice from Baroness Sue Gray, Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff, on how to manage a potential transition into Downing Street if he returns to Westminster and succeeds the prime minister.
Gray is understood to have advised Burnham on how a future government could be formed as Labour’s internal succession chatter intensifies before the Makerfield byelection.
The discussions highlight how seriously senior Labour figures are treating Burnham’s path back to Westminster, after weeks of speculation surrounding Starmer’s long-term future after a bruising set of local election results.
Burnham and Gray are understood to have known each other for decades, going back to his time as a minister within Tony Blair’s government while Gray was in the Cabinet Office. It is understood that Gray is not expected to take any formal role in a future government.
Gray resigned from Downing Street in October 2024, after hostile briefings and tensions within Starmer’s operation over her role. Gray was accused of alienating some of her political colleagues, who accused her of “control freakery”, and creating a bottle neck in No 10 that delayed policy decisions and appointments.
Allies of Burnham said he remains focused on the Makerfield byelection, likely to be a pivotal moment for the Labour party’s future direction and Burnham’s political trajectory.
Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, criticised the internal jockeying, telling the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show: “There’s a lot of fantasy politics going on right now inside the Labour party … in terms of who is up, who is down, who will be in what position.”
He said a debate inside the Labour party “has to happen off the back of bad local election results”, but that must not distract from “our primary focus on the country”.
“I’m all up for having a debate inside the Labour party about how we improve our electoral performance in the years ahead, because we don’t want to hand the country to Reform,” Jones said.
Jones, a senior ally of Starmer, called Burnham a “brilliant politician” and confirmed he would be campaigning for him in Makerfield.
But he added: “Irrespective of individual ambitions from any of my colleagues, the big questions the country faces are still the big questions the country faces. There’s no magic answer to any of them, because if there was we would have implemented it.”
The pressure on Labour has intensified with a Survation survey published this week showing Labour remained on course to win the seat, but with Reform UK running very close in what would have once been considered safe Labour territory. The polling put Burnham for Labour on 43%, with Robert Kenyon for Reform UK on 40%.
A More in Common survey published last week put Labour on 30% nationally under Burnham’s leadership, only slightly ahead of Reform UK on 27% and the Tories on 20%.