Britain is about to have a direct Presidential Election, but the only electors will be in Makerfield. If Andy Burnham won, then he would in very short order become the First Lord of the Treasury, the man who wrote the next King's Speech, the man with his finger on the nuclear button, the man with a seat at the G7 and on the UN Security Council. At the Kinross and West Perthshire by-election, Alec Douglas-Home was already Prime Minister. We have never seen anything like this.
What legitimacy could Burnham claim as Prime Minister? The legitimacy of the victorious 2024 Labour manifesto, which promised to abolish leasehold, to make employment rights begin with employment and apply regardless of the number of hours worked, and to equalise the national minimum wage regardless of age, but not to erode the right to trial by jury, or to end the automatic right of appeal from the Magistrates' Court to the Crown Court, or to impose digital ID, live facial recognition, and access to our NHS data on the part of Palantir.
Will Burnham plant his flag on that ground? No, of course not. For that, you need Amendment F to the Humble Address, defending the right to trial by jury and the right to access public services without digital ID, and tabled by Adnan Hussain with the support of Jeremy Corbyn, Ayoub Khan, Rosie Duffield, Iqbal Mohamed and Shockat Adam. Sectarians obsessed with abroad are such a blight on our polity.
Not that Burnham has won Makerfield. In 2024, second place went to Reform UK 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. Yet the talk is of Maggie Oliver, who on Celebrity Big Brother in 2018, and unlike the subsequent Reform grandee Ann Widdecombe, was highly sympathetic towards India Willoughby in what was supposed to have been an all-female celebration of the centenary of votes for women.
Mention of Celebrity Big Brother calls to mind a rather better potential candidate of a rather better party. And it tells the fortune of Wes Streeting. In 1995, when Michael Portillo pledged his full support to John Major, then it became inevitable that Portillo would end up presenting Great Railway Journeys. The absence of a formal challenge in Streeting's resignation letter was a comparable moment. As to what would happen if Burnham failed to win Makerfield, no one knows.