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‘No other plan comes close’: how Labour MPs turned to Burnham with Starmer on the brink

1 day ago
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When the eyes of Westminster were on the committee rooms and voting lobbies of parliament this week, Keir Starmer’s political future was being decided elsewhere,Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner were buttering up Labour MPs in the Strangers’ Bar in parliament as colleagues spoke of their “existential” fear about the crucial elections next week,Starmer, meanwhile, tried to calm backbenchers’ nerves as he did the rounds in the members-only smoking room and his private office behind the Commons chamber,One former minister said the mood was so dark that several MPs refused to meet the leader, saying: “We don’t want to be seen with him,”Andy Burnham was 800 miles away in Madrid as Starmer’s future dominated Westminster.

But allies of the Greater Manchester mayor were ramping up his leadership campaign and said his return to parliament – and become the next prime minster – could happen “within weeks”.Burnham has been quietly preparing his manifesto.Those close to the mayor said he would launch an explicit programme for government when he fights his eventual parliamentary byelection campaign, with several possible seats identified in Greater Manchester and Merseyside.Pledges would include sweeping reforms to the electoral system – backing the introduction of proportional representation across the UK – as well as a decade-long vision to transform local services, higher defence spending and an overhaul of inheritance tax to pay for Britain’s creaking social care system.Sources close to Burnham told the Guardian he had identified more than one seat that could become available soon after the 7 May elections – and that an “impressive” candidate was lined up to replace him as Labour’s Greater Manchester mayor.

It is understood this candidate is not a sitting MP but is believed to have the pedigree to win a high-stakes mayoral election against Reform UK.Bev Craig, the leader of Manchester city council, is tipped for the candidacy and is understood not to have ruled herself out.She declined to comment.“We could get a very good candidate over the line in Greater Manchester.Andy feels confident that can happen,” said one Burnham ally.

“There are very strong possibilities of this happening within weeks, but certainly months and over the summer.”Starmer’s team suggested this week that any attempted Westminster return would be fiercely resisted.Those close to the prime minister have said the prospect of losing the mayoralty is a risk not worth taking – though it is possible that changes to the electoral system in the forthcoming elections bill would give Labour a better chance against Reform in a more proportional voting system.Members of Labour’s national executive committee, which blocked Burnham from standing in February’s Gorton and Denton byelection, told the Guardian there was no route for the mayor through that committee.Some allies of Burnham are believed to have been attempting to convince union general secretaries to change their views, with Unison the key target.

Others, like GMB, have ruled out supporting Burnham because of his closeness with Ed Miliband, who is at odds with the union over oil and gas licences.“It would only happen if Keir effectively gave up and said: ‘OK, we’ll let Andy in so I can step down,’” one said.The chances of that happening, according to those close to Starmer, is close to zero.Yet a growing number of Labour MPs believe this position to be completely unsustainable after a fortnight of damaging headlines over Peter Mandelson and the battering many expect in elections across England, Wales and Scotland next week.Their fears grew after projections from Robert Hayward, an elections expert, that Labour is expected to lose more than 1,600 seats across England as well as bruising defeats in Wales and Scotland.

Several MPs involved in persuading their colleagues said they believed, with the right numbers, that Burnham would be in place by the autumn.Some have raised the possibility of Burnham – or another candidate – appointing Starmer as foreign secretary in the next phase to demonstrate consensus.That would be a highly unlikely outcome, given Starmer’s anger at moves to oust him, and particularly at Burnham’s conduct.“It would allow him to build on his legacy on Iran, on Ukraine, Europe,” one supportive MP said.The plan, which is said to have the support of some cabinet ministers, would be to issue a statement calling for Starmer to prepare for an orderly departure.

MPs expect at least 100 MPs to endorse that after 8 May,“We need to avoid a major internal Labour party row as far as we possibly can, and present it as a fait accompli,” said one MP, optimistically,“The reason this feels different is because it’s not factional,” one frontbencher said,“It’s not soft left, or SCG [Corbynites] – it’s actually lots of people now coming to make the same point to No 10 that, on 8 May, he needs to set out a timetable to go,”Another said: “Andy’s standing among Labour MPs is extremely strong.

There is a clear view that bringing him into our Westminster team would boost our chances of defeating Reform and preventing Nigel Farage from entering Downing Street at the next election,There is no doubt that he would be able to secure the 80 MPs required in the event of a leadership election,”They said Starmer had a “great legacy” and had brought the party back together after the fractious Jeremy Corbyn years: “He’s got the chance now to bring the party back together again with a graceful exit,”Several Labour MPs said the mood had turned “existential” since the Guardian revealed Mandelson had failed security vetting after being appointed as ambassador to the US – a revelation that prompted the sacking of Olly Robbins, the head of the Foreign Office, and two weeks of damaging headlines about Starmer’s judgment,“Before you broke that story, people were saying it would be difficult for Burnham to come back and that Keir would have until at least Christmas.

But that [story] was the straw that broke the camel’s back: now it’s impossible to defend what we’ve seen,” said one MP.They added: “It feels unanimous now that Burnham is the only game in town with the ability to save their seats, even among people you might have thought would be aligned to other candidates.”There is significant support for Burnham growing among new intake MPs – but also among the centrist wing of the party.“We’ve spent the last nine months trying to see if something else works – including Keir – and it doesn’t,” said one frontbencher.“This is it – this is the plan.

No other plan comes close,”The soft-left Tribune group of MPs, led by several former ministers including Louise Haigh and Justin Madders, is expected to set out its own call for a change in direction post-May elections,But MPs who are coordinating the statement demanding an orderly transition say this is a separate endeavour – and reaches all wings of the party,It is also separate to plans to potentially challenge Starmer directly, which would probably shut out Burnham from the contest,“I don’t want the process to damage us,” one MP said.

“I want it to be consensual,He must know things have to change,And, because I support Andy, obviously I think that process should give him a chance to serve then,”MPs said Burnham had been making considerable effort to meet new MPs – including campaigning in London last week alongside ministers such as Ellie Reeves and Miatta Fahnbulleh,The more sceptical MPs, some said, were the old guard who had served with Burnham in government.

“He only knows about 100 MPs in this parliament and most of them aren’t backing him,” one sceptical minister said,Nine years after he left Westminster, having served in the cabinets of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, Burnham could be on the brink of a dramatic return,His team said it was now a matter of “political will” among MPs to bring him back,“The will that he’s got to be allowed to contest stuff is building and at the same time [Starmer’s] position is weakening,” said one source close to Burnham,“MPs are very despondent, they’re very demoralised.

They want an answer to the problems of the existential crisis the party’s facing.”
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Lando Norris wins sprint race at F1 Miami Grand Prix as McLaren roar back

Lando Norris won the sprint race at the Miami Grand Prix with a dominant drive for McLaren, beating his teammate, Oscar Piastri, to secure a one-two for the team and deny Mercedes a win for the first time this season.Charles Leclerc took a strong third for Ferrari, but Mercedes, dominant for the opening three meetings, could manage only fourth and sixth for George Russell and Kimi Antonelli respectively. Antonelli had finished fourth, but was given a five-second penalty for exceeding track limits, a costly error for the championship leader. Max Verstappen was fifth for Red Bull and Lewis Hamilton seventh for Ferrari.Norris, the defending world champion, put in a calm, controlled drive to seal his first win this year in the 19-lap dash, something of a staid affair around the Hard Rock Stadium, but has potentially kickstarted McLaren’s championship ambitions

about 5 hours ago
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Leinster hold off late charge from Toulon to edge into Champions Cup final

They made a bit of a meal of it, but Leinster will march on Bilbao in a few weeks for their ninth Champions Cup final. Given that was where they last won this thing, in 2018, for the fourth time, they might consider the omen positive, but this semi-final, their 17th, was not a classic.Which is not to say it was boring. Leinster are not convincing this season, and one telltale sign of a team with a confidence issue is the offering up of hope to a seemingly defeated opponent. The hosts, enjoying a knockout tie at the Aviva for the umpteenth time, went 18 points clear when Caelan Doris scored their fourth with a little more than 10 minutes to play

about 5 hours ago
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Bow Echo’s 2,000 Guineas win a landmark for Loughnane and Boughey – as it happened

Youth was triumphant in the 2,000 Guineas as the 34-year-old George Boughey saddled Bow Echo to win the first Classic of the season with Billy “the Kid” Loughnane, who turned 20 in March, in the saddle.It was a landmark win for trainer and jockey. Boughey was adding the 2,000 Guineas to his win in the 1,000 Guineas in 2022, while Loughnane, who has been seen as a future champion ever since his emergence as a precocious 16-year-old talent in the autumn of 2022, registered his first Classic success with a supremely confident ride, bringing Bow Echo, a 9-2 chance, with a decisive run towards the stands’ side to win by two-and-three-quarter lengths. Gstaad and Distant Storm, the 3-1 joint-favourites, were second and third.“I’ve wanted to be a jockey ever since I could talk, and I’ve put so much work into being where I am today and I’m very fortunate to ride a horse like Bow Echo

about 6 hours ago
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Naoya Inoue retains undisputed super-bantamweight title v Junto Nakatani – as it happened

That’ll do it for our live coverage. Thanks for sticking with us through internet difficulties in Tokyo! Full fight report coming soon.Here’s the official scorecard from tonight’s main event:Inoue was able to turn back a hardy Nakatani rally in the middle rounds to come away with the close but uncontroversial decision.“Thank you, everyone!” Inoue said through an interpreter after the fight.“I would like to show some appreciation for Junto Nakatani for fighting me tonight

about 7 hours ago
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At 41, LeBron James is turning back the clock and taking the Lakers on a storybook playoff run

The veteran star’s days as the No 1 option once appeared behind him. Against the favored Rockets, he put Father Time on the ropes and his team on his backThe date is 12 March, and the Los Angeles Lakers are in the midst of a run that’s garnering a lot of well-deserved attention, in a month that sees them lose just two contests and win 15. The spirit of the locker room is at an all-time high, and it’s clear in talking to LeBron James, the 41-year-old storied veteran and greatest-of-all-time candidate who recently put his ego aside to accept a role as the team’s third option, that he believes what many around the NBA are starting to as well: his Lakers have a real shot at contention.“As you get older, you appreciate the moment more than anything. When you’re younger, you think about what you’ve done in the past, or what’s to come in the future,” he tells me when I ask how he’s been able to be so present of late, in light of the ups and downs of a topsy-turvy Lakers season

about 9 hours ago
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Women’s Elite Rugby enters season two with lessons learned, a pop star investor and ambition for US game

The semi-pro league gets under way with aims of elevating the sport ahead of the 2033 World Cup on American soilDr Jessica Hammond-Graf is president and chief sporting officer of Women’s Elite Rugby, the US semi-professional rugby union competition that kicks off its second season on Saturday in Massachusetts and Illinois. Like most Americans, she did not grow up with the game.An Army kid, she spent a lot of time playing soccer. In the early 90s, at the University of Connecticut, she tried out for the round ball and then played Ultimate Frisbee. Then, one fateful day, a woman on her floor said, “Hey, you should come try rugby, OK?” Hammond-Graf agreed, then found herself starting her very first game at fly-half, responsible for directing a team

about 12 hours ago
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‘I am invoking Martha’s rule’: how a woman saved her father from near death in hospital

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Martha’s rule may have saved more than 500 lives in England since 2024

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Solicitors report late flood of no-fault evictions before ban in England

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Austerity to blame for the fall in healthy life expectancy | Letters

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Why routine cancer tests have age limits | Brief letters

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UK researchers develop tool to identify people most at risk of obesity-related diseases

3 days ago