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Makerfield divided on whether the Burnham effect will see King of the North return to Westminster

News RoomBy News RoomMay 15, 2026
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In the heart of Ashton-in-Makerfield, the Sir Thomas Gerard pub has become a microcosm of a national political reckoning. Over pints and afternoon coffees, conversations weave between local pride and profound disillusionment. The topic is Andy Burnham, the current Mayor of Greater Manchester, who has just announced his audacious bid to return to Parliament by contesting the imminent Makerfield by-election. For residents, his candidacy is more than a local contest; it feels like a direct channel to the highest office, with many speculating about his potential future as Prime Minister. Yet, this hope is tempered by a hard political reality. While Burnham’s personal popularity, forged during the pandemic when he was dubbed the ‘King of the North’ for defiantly championing the region, remains a significant asset, the ground has shifted seismically beneath Labour’s feet. In recent local elections, Reform UK stormed to victory, capturing a staggering 50.4% of the vote in the Wigan borough, leaving Labour trailing at just 22.7%. Burnham’s journey begins here, in a constituency Labour held by 5,399 votes in July, but which now feels like hostile territory.

The division on the streets is palpable, reflecting a nation wrestling with its political identity. Inside the pub, lifelong Labour voter John McDonald confesses he switched to Reform, citing Keir Starmer’s broken promises. Yet, for him, Burnham is the lone exception, the only figure who could lure him back. His friend, Bill Addison, believes Burnham will win “hands down,” praising his honesty and even voicing a desire to see him as Prime Minister. This personal connection is Burnham’s great strength. Mark Smyth, a paramedic, recalls a recent radio conversation with the Mayor about ambulance queues, impressed that Burnham not only listened but acted. These sentiments highlight a reservoir of goodwill built over decades, first as the neighbouring MP for Leigh and now as a visible, campaigning Mayor. People feel he is one of them, a local who understands their struggles and isn’t afraid to fight their corner.

However, stepping outside into the afternoon sun on Gerard Street, a starker, more entrenched frustration emerges. Cath Jones is unequivocal: she will vote Reform. Having felt betrayed by Labour, she cites the cost-of-living crisis and a perception that workers are carrying those who do not. For her, no politician, not even Burnham, can repair that breach. Brian Sherman echoes this, arguing that Labour has become a party of the middle class, neglecting post-industrial towns like Ashton-in-Makerfield. He sees Burnham’s candidacy not as a genuine homecoming but as a tactical response to Reform’s “drubbing” of Labour. His critique points to a deeper decay: a landscape of vape shops and barbers that symbolise a lack of investment and ambition. This is the formidable challenge Burnham faces—he must convince voters that he represents a decisive break from the very national politics they blame for their decline.

The by-election itself is fraught with high-stakes complexity. Burnham’s path is not a simple coronation. First, he must be formally selected by Labour’s National Executive Committee, which previously blocked his attempt to stand elsewhere. Should he become the candidate, he will face a formidable opponent in Reform UK, with Nigel Farage vowing to “throw everything” at the contest to secure a flagship victory. Winning the seat is only the first hurdle. His broader ambition, whispered in every pub conversation, involves a return to Westminster with the ultimate goal of challenging for the Labour leadership. Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s authority is critically weakened after disastrous election results, cabinet resignations, and rumblings of a party revolt. Burnham’s entry into Parliament would instantly make him a focal point for this discontent, positioning him as the potential standard-bearer for a party in search of renewal and reconnection.

In his official statement, Burnham frames his return as a necessary escalation of his life’s work. He argues that a decade away from Westminster, spent building a practical alternative in Greater Manchester—from economic growth to publicly controlled buses—has shown him the limits of regional power. He now seeks a national platform to translate that model across the UK, explicitly aiming to fix a “national political system” he believes has failed communities like Makerfield. Striking a conciliatory tone, he calls for party unity to give the government “space and stability,” while simultaneously pledging to “change Labour for the better” and make it a party people “can believe in again.” This delicate balance—respecting the current leadership while offering himself as the agent of fundamental change—defines his precarious pitch.

Ultimately, the Makerfield by-election has transformed from a routine vote into a gripping political drama with national implications. It is a referendum on Andy Burnham’s personal political capital, a test of whether charisma and local loyalty can withstand a potent tide of national anti-incumbent anger. It is a battle for the soul of the Labour Party, pitting its metropolitan establishment against a northern champion promising redemption. And for the people of Ashton-in-Makerfield, it is a stark choice between a familiar son who promises a louder voice in a broken system and a rebellious alternative that promises to smash the system altogether. As Burnham laces up his running shoes, he is embarking on the most consequential race of his career, one where the finish line could be 10 Downing Street, but where the first hurdle is winning back the trust of a town that feels politics has left it behind.

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