- Thu Jan 22, 2026 1:00 pm
#104340
Has Andrew Gwynne featured in this thread already?
Once fairly prominent in the Labour rankings, but now in disgrace, sacked from his front bench position and (still) suspended from the Labour Party for some frankly disgraceful comments made on a Whatsapp group, Gwynne has now apparently agreed a “medical retirement” deal with the parliamentary pension fund that will enable him imminently to stand down as the MP for the Greater Manchester seat of Gorton & Denton, where his Labour majority in 2024 was 18,000.
This has, of course, sparked an immediate frenzy of media speculation that this must be some sort of deal/fix to enable Andy Burnham to stand in the by-election, regain a seat in the Commons, and be in a position to challenge Sir Keir Starmer for the Labour leadership/UK premiership.
We’ve been round this track before. It’s not that simple. As an incumbent metro mayor, Burnham would apparently require special permission from the NEC to put his name forward for any parliamentary by-election. Would he get it ? If not, does he really fancy resigning the mayoralty to enable him to have a crack ? Could Burnham be certain of being selected as the candidate in the by-election? I think that candidate selection in by-elections is the remit of the NEC, and is it likely that the NEC would select a candidate with a declared intention to use his new parliamentary seat expressly to challenge the incumbent Prime Minister? Even if he is successful in being able to stand in the by-election, could he, in the current political climate, count on being able to fight off the challenge from Reform UK and hold the seat ?
So many variables in play, all potentially making a Burnham challenge to Starmer somewhat improbable. Yet still, the feverish speculation goes on, and will go on.
It’s crap. To clarify, I don’t want Andy Burnham as PM instead of Keir Starmer. I think that Starmer remains far and away the best Prime Minister that the UK could have right now- and I do realise that that may not be a fashionable view.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.