Crypto World
Could Keir Starmer’s Exit Open the Door to Britain’s Most Crypto-Friendly Labour Leader?
Andy Burnham’s landslide by-election win has handed Labour’s most crypto-friendly figure a clear route to challenge Keir Starmer for the party leadership.
The Greater Manchester mayor will be sworn in as an MP this week, removing the last barrier to a leadership bid. His enthusiasm for Web3 sits awkwardly beside Starmer’s recent crackdown on crypto.
Burnham’s Win Reopens the Leadership Question
Burnham took the Makerfield seat on June 18 with 54.8% of the vote. He beat Reform UK by a majority of more than 9,200, on a turnout that climbed to almost 59%.
By-election turnouts usually fall, so the result reads as a genuine mandate.
He is due to be sworn in within days. On Polymarket, the crypto-settled prediction market, traders have wagered more than $11 million on the succession and make Burnham the clear favorite to take over.
Starmer insists he will fight any challenge.
Weekend reports suggested the prime minister was weighing his future, though his office dismissed talk of an imminent exit.
Cabinet ministers, union leaders and party donors have all joined talks about the timing of a handover.
A Pro-Web3 Voice Against a Crypto Crackdown
Burnham ranks among the few senior Labour figures to openly back digital assets. He told about 100 Web3 founders at a Stand With Crypto event that he was “bought in.”
“Manchester was the home of the Industrial Revolution. Let’s make it the home of the web3 revolution,” Andy Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester, in remarks to crypto founders.
That tone clashes with the national party. In March, Starmer’s government imposed a moratorium on crypto donations to political parties.
The independent Rycroft Review had warned that crypto’s anonymity could mask foreign money entering UK politics.
Even so, Burnham’s support looks regional and pragmatic, tied to Manchester jobs rather than markets.
Reform UK is Britain’s most crypto-forward party, and one of only three that had agreed to accept crypto at all.
Its leader, Nigel Farage, has bought Bitcoin (BTC) himself and pitched a national reserve.
Markets Watch the Handover
The political risk has already reached bond markets. The 10-year gilt yield rose to about 4.8% on Friday.
Investors are weighing a Burnham government they expect to borrow and spend more freely, and sterling weakened alongside it.
For crypto, the signal is fainter. Bitcoin traded near $63,900, up less than 1% on the day but down about 17% over the month and 38% on the year.
It sits well below its October record near $126,000, so the turmoil has produced no clear safe-haven bid.
Any read-through also depends on a retail base that is shrinking. Crypto ownership among UK adults has slipped to about 8%, down from 12% a year earlier, the FCA found.
A Burnham premiership could still soften the tone toward Web3 after a year of tighter UK crypto rules, though bond investors look more worried about his spending than his digital-asset views.
His swearing-in and any leadership timetable this week will set the near-term direction. A warmer crypto stance surviving Britain’s fiscal squeeze is the real question for a shrinking crypto electorate.
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