Wigan Council got so sick of people turning up at its inland town and expecting to see a pier, that it put one up on the canal. And Josh Simons has three small children, so he has not just given up £98,599 per year. He must have been offered something. Was it a peerage once Andy Burnham became Prime Minister? That would enable Burnham to make Simons a Minister straight away, but I very much doubt it.
Today, Wes Streeting welcomed Burnham’s candidacy at Makerfield while saying that he himself would contest any Leadership Election. But the rules have been changed to make a contested Leadership Election extremely difficult unless an incumbent exercised his right to contest it without needing to be nominated. Streeting knows that he cannot beat Burnham, so he is talking about the next time. Burnham is 56. Streeting is 43. Simons is 32. And they all went to Cambridge. The next in line will already have been identified, and not in The Grapes, Heaton Norris. This is a long way from the great traditions of the Labour Party, according to which it should be Oxford. How did Burnham, Streeting and Simons wind up in politics from Cambridge? Did they fail as comedians? I do hope that people still joked about who might be the first ever Prime Minister from Durham.
Look up everything to do with Labour Together, which has changed its name online to ThinkLabour (I ask you), but which remains registered at Companies House under its original name and with the same directors. Burnham, an immensely experienced politician, has made himself beholden to that. No, of course the prospect of his Premiership has not spooked the bond markets. Yields were already even higher than they had been under Liz Truss. That ought not to have surprised anyone, and it will not have surprised regular readers of this site. Labour opportunistically pretended to oppose the abolition of the 45p rate of income tax, the only mini-Budget measure that had not been in Truss’s prospectus to Conservative Party members, but it supported every single one of the others. Had Kwasi Kwarteng’s loony list ever been put to a Commons vote, then the Labour whip would have been to abstain, and any rebellion in favour of it might very well have been larger than any against. The present situation has nothing to do with a by-election that has not yet been held, nor with a politician who dropped none of his current hints, and they are no more than that, when he was Chief Secretary to the Treasury.
That by-election will be on 18 June, the anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, but Burnham is casting himself more as Napoleon III. Maggie Oliver has declined the Reform UK nomination, and one day we may know why, but Reform was in second place at Makerfield in 2024, with 12,803 votes, amounting to 31.8 per cent. Its candidate, Robert Kenyon, became a councillor in the recent Reform landslide. And what luck, he is plumber. Rupert Lowe is dropping hints, but would he call his candidate Makerfield First rather than state Restore Britain’s real name? Ben Habib is taking soundings, no doubt in the hope that unlike at Gorton and Denton, Advance UK might at least manage more votes than the Official Monster Raving Loony Party. Even David Owen’s continuing SDP was only ever beaten by that once, and he responded by dissolving it. But if more than 100 Labour MPs are right that Keir Starmer ought to remain Prime Minister, then will an Independent candidate be fielded in that cause? If not, why not?