Politics
Burnham Vows 'Biggest Change To Way Country Is Run' As He Sets Out His Vision For Britain
Andy Burnham, UK lawmaker, delivers a speech at the People’s History Museum in Manchester, UK, on Monday, June 29, 2026. Andy Burnham has vowed to bring about “the biggest change in our lifetimes to the way the country is run” as he unveiled his vision for the future of Britain.
The man who is set to become prime minister next month said he would put “hope in every heart” when he takes over from Keir Starmer next month.
He said his government will “do things differently” by ushering in a huge shift in power away from Whitehall towards local communities and regions, as part of a 10-year mission to improve the lives of ordinary people.
Burnham confirmed that he will set up a so-called “No.10 north [to] be the nerve centre of a rewired Britain”.
Its job will be “to make power flow into the Midlands, into the South West, into the East of England and yes, into London”, he said.
Burnham also unveiled plans for the biggest boost in council house building since the Second World War, and major reforms to education to boost technical education for pupils who do not want to go to university.
In a speech at the People’s Museum in Manchester, Burnham said: “I am going to do things differently. I am going to break with the ‘more of the same’ approach that has got us here.
“I am going to give Britain the circuit-breaker it needs by building a more collaborative politics in Westminster, by taking power out of the centre and putting it in the hands of the people and places who can use it best.
“And in so doing, creating a new sense of agency, possibility and hope flowing around the country.
“We will make politics work for you and the place where you live.”
He added: “The change will be the biggest change in our lifetimes to the way the country is run and it is consistent with the 2024 manifesto.
“We will create a more streamlined state with a clearer purpose to power up all parts of the country and put a laser-like focus on growth and regeneration, good growth.”
Burnham said his job will be to give “hope” back to those who have suffered due to years of rising prices and stagnating wages.
“If people in 1844 could form the co-operative movement in Rochdale to lower the price of food, then why can’t we act now with similar courage to make life better?” he said.
“Imagine what things could be like if we succeed. Imagine what it would feel like to live in a country wired to work for ordinary people in all local areas, rather than against them.
“Imagine if all local areas could build homes people could afford, to the point where they could guarantee one for everyone. Imagine if we could bring down the cost of energy for people and businesses, and the good things that would come from that.
“Imagine good growth in every postcode and hope in every heart. Well imagine no more, let’s make it happen.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Gracie Abrams Opens Up About Boyfriend Paul Mescal
Singer Gracie Abrams has opened up about her relationship with actor Paul Mescal in an interview with The New York Times’ Popcast.
Rumours that the pair were dating began in 2024. They have since been photographed together at this year’s Bafta Awards, which some called their first “hard launch”.
They were also seen at the 2026 Golden Globes and the most recent Oscars.
The singer, whose partner helped to write song Imaginary Friend for her upcoming album Daughter From Hell, was asked whether the collaboration might invite more prying into their previously private relationship.
“I don’t like the feeling of hiding,” she shared on the podcast.
That’s not to say she doesn’t want to maintain some boundaries – “I also love privacy where it feels like the right thing,” she stated.
On the topic of public scrutiny about her private life, she said: “I always try to assume the absolute worst-case scenario of everything, and then anything else is pleasant”.
After all, she continued: “If you know how happy your experience was making something or how much you learned about yourself or your partner or whatever the thing is, it’s like, no amount of hate or trolling or whatever could take that away.”
She described her relationship as “a part of my life that brings me so much peace and joy… I’m not going to pretend like that’s not true, but I also think it’s not like an open-door policy.”
She added that working with partner Paul on an album wasn’t as huge a leap for the couple as some might expect.
“That was so fun to write together… That wasn’t some groundbreaking event for us”, she said on the episode.
“We have a very creative home with friends who are so good at what they do and everyone feels happy to share that with one another.”
Daughter From Hell will be released on July 17. You can watch the full Popcast interview here.
Politics
The Best Austen Adaptation Of All Time Is On Disney+
If you’re looking for something to fill the void between now and September’s very promising-looking Sense and Sensibility release, it might be time to give an underappreciated Lady Susan adaptation a go.
As a committed Austen fan, my top two on-screen period versions have long been the basically-perfect 1995 BBC Pride and Prejudice series and 2016′s Love And Friendship.
But while I think a lot of fans are with me on the BBC take, I’ve seen a lot less buzz around Whit Stillman’s masterpiece – despite its 96% Rotten Tomatoes score and multiple awards.
Perhaps that’s because the wild late-teens writing it’s based on is rarely read, though that, too, should be rectified IMO.
The Love and Friendship movie is based on Lady Susan. I’m not really sure why it’s got the name; there is a story by Austen called Love and Friendship, but though it also features grasping, scheming women, the movie’s plot is clearly based on the “little-known novella”.
Still, the only thing that matters is our Suze. Played by Kate Beckinsale, she’s a ruthless, conniving, cruel and self-serving manipulator – who gets absolutely everything she’s ever wanted.
The Regency marriage market, after all, had all of those traits too.
The book (well, epistolary novella) comes from the young, cynical mind of an Austen who isn’t as concerned about mass-market appeal as she is making her friends and family laugh. The movie feels similar.

You will not swoon as Sir James Martin (Tom Bennett) brainlessly squawks the words “Church” and “Hill” around a terrified teen. Your knees won’t buckle when Susan’s friend, Alicia (Chloë Sevigny) sneaks around her older husband (Stephen Fry).
Nor will you sigh longingly when you watch the recently-widowed Lady Susan backstab her way to that sweetest of lovers: solvency.
But you will howl laughing at the absurdity of all of this – the brutal weaponisation of manners, gentlemanly duty, and less-than-gentlemanly urges.
That’s because at her heart, Austen knows love is stupidly simple and very complex. It’s the silliest and most serious topic in the world, and in both her and Stillman’s hands, it becomes the funniest, too.
Love and Friendship is available on Disney+.
Politics
Piers Morgan Says Nigel Farage Is Dead In The Water
Nigel Farage is “dead in the water” and will have to quit as Reform UK leader, according to Piers Morgan.
The broadcaster said Farage is “rattled” by questions about the £5 million he accepted from a Thailand-based crypto billionaire and did not publicly declare.
The Reform boss has insisted the money, which he received months before becoming an MP in 2024, was a “gift” which he would spend on his personal security.
He has also described it as a “reward” for campaigning for Brexit, and last week even suggested he could spend it on Ferraris.
Parliament’s sleaze watchdog has launched an investigation into the issue, which is expected to report back soon and could see Farage suspended from the Commons if he is found to have broken rules on the declaration of donations.
On the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg show, Morgan said Farage’s failure to shut down the row meant time was now running out for him.
He said: “Nigel Farage, I think, is dead in the water.
“I think this £5 million bung he took from this crypto tycoon in Thailand, he still can’t get his story straight about why.
“Originally it was about security, then it was a reward for Brexit. Now he says it was just a gift and he can spend it on Ferraris, like all men of the people would say.
“You can see how rattled he is by the questions he’s getting [and] they’re not going to go away.”
He added: “Reform, I think, are in real trouble. I think their leader’s going to have to go.”
In a car crash BBC interview last week, Farage insisted that “no one cares” about his £5m gift.
He said: “Let’s be clear: it’s a personal gift, I can spend it on cars if I want to. It’s entirely up to me.
“But there is a specific reason for this. I have been physically the most attacked and endangered politician for now well over a decade.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Get Ready, London: The Surprise Date A Major Summer Heatwave Is Set To Blast The Capital
After the UK set a new maximum temperature record for June over three consecutive days last week, many of us are now enjoying the cooler weather.
The week-long heatwave – which saw red and amber heat health alerts in place across much of England and Wales – culminated in a high of 37.3°C at Santon Downham in Suffolk on 26 June (the hottest temperature recorded for this time of year).
Multiple schools across southern England closed or allowed pupils to head home earlier than normal due to the extreme temperatures. Public transport was also disrupted in some areas.
While this week’s generally looking a lot more settled on the weather front, it seems another heatwave is making its way to London sooner than many might’ve hoped.
When is the next London heatwave?
Friday 3 July will see highs of 27°C in London, with the same again forecast for 4 July, climbing to 28°C on 5 July and 30°C on 6 July, according to BBC Weather.
From 7-12th July, the capital is expected to remain hot with temperatures floating around the 30°C mark.
The Met Office’s long-range forecast for 3-12 July suggests “high pressure will dominate across England and Wales … bringing dry and warm conditions with plenty of sunshine for most”.
“Temperatures will rise through the period, perhaps becoming very warm or hot in places,” it added.
As it stands there are no heat health alerts in place, however this may well change as the week progresses.
When is a heatwave officially declared?
Heatwaves are declared when a location experiences at least three consecutive days where it meets – or exceeds – a ‘heatwave temperature threshold’.
These thresholds vary across the UK. In London, for example, the temperature threshold is 28°C.
The Met Office previously said that hotter summers are becoming more likely in the UK in general.
Politics
The Good Life Star Dame Penelope Keith Has Died Aged 86
The Good Life actor Dame Penelope Keith has died aged 86.
In a statement, her family said: “We are deeply saddened to announce that Dame Penelope Keith died peacefully whilst living with cancer at her home in Surrey, where she had lived for more than 50 years.
“The family is grateful for the care and support she received throughout her treatments, and ask that their privacy be respected at this time.”
Aside from playing Margo Leadbetter in The Good Life, the actor also starred as Audrey fforbes-Hamilton in To The Manor Born.
Speaking of her To The Manor Born role with The Guardian in 2013, she said: “I loved it because we had to do all our own stunts.
“I am a country girl at heart, and I got to ride horses again, to learn about bee keeping, to drive a two-tonne Rolls-Royce with impossible gears; I scaled a five-bar gate with a picnic hamper to flee a bull.”
On X, fans have already begun expressing their grief at her loss.
“So very sad, a wonderful actress,” a reply to the BBC’s post about the news reads.
“She was so unique: loved her,” another said.
She was so unique: loved her.
— Yvonne Wilson (@YvonneWils53911) June 29, 2026
Writer James Hogg, who interviewed Dame Keith for his biography of Good Life co-star Richard Briers, said in an Instagram post: “She was one of the first people I interviewed for my biography of Richard Briers and, as expected, she was incredibly charming, witty, and generous. She was truly a remarkable actress.
“Richard himself was so impressed by her and Paul Eddington’s performances as Margo and Jerry Leadbetter in The Good Life that he encouraged the writers to expand their roles and focus the show more on the four of them, which they did to great success.
“She will be greatly missed.”
Dame Keith was awarded a CBE, OBE, and damehood throughout her life.
She also won two BAFTAS and an Olivier award.
Politics
Kemi Badenoch Calls Andy Burnham’s Female Allies His ‘Handmaidens’
Kemi Badenoch has been criticised after comparing the female allies around Andy Burnham to his “handmaidens”.
The Tory leader said they were merely “window dressing” as Labour once again prepares to make a man its leader.
Burnham is widely expected to succeed Keir Starmer after the PM announced he was resigning last Monday.
The new MP for Makerfield is currently the only person to formally announce his intention to run to be the next Labour leader and de facto prime minister.
If he gets into No.10, as expected, it means Labour will have missed another opportunity to appoint its first female leader.
At a press conference on Monday, Badenoch – the Conservatives’ fourth female leader – tore into Labour for still not choosing a woman to lead the party.
Asked about comments reported by the Spectator that some in Labour think Burnham would be the party’s first female leader in all but sex, Badenoch replied: “I don’t know what to say.
“The idea that Andy Burnham is Labour’s first female prime minister shows that that party still doesn’t know what a woman is.”
The Tories have often accused Labour of not “knowing what a woman is” amid culture wars around transgender people’s rights.
Badenoch continued: “But I’ve also found it very interesting how Labour women have been so much in a hurry to carry his bags and be his handmaiden and be at the front of his, of his, his photo pool.
“Why would you allow yourselves to be used as window dressing in this way?”
Her use of “handmaiden” likely refers to Margaret Atwood’s dystopian hit novel and the TV series, The Handmaid’s Tale, where women’s rights are completely eroded.
Burnham has been pictured surrounded by female aides on a handful of occasions, and is expected to appoint women MPs to key roles in government to counterbalance Labour’s lack of female leaders.
He has a strong body of support from influential women in the party, including ex-deputy prime minister Angela Rayner, former transport secretary Louise Haigh and deputy Labour leader Lucy Powell.
In response to Badenoch’s speech, key Burnham ally Anneliese Midgley wrote on X: “Stay classy, Kemi.”
A female Labour source told HuffPost UK: “Is she for real? Does she just say this stuff to attention seek, or does she actually genuinely think that women in senior political roles are just there to be exploited by men. She’s grim.”
The Conservative leader also used her speech to compare energy secretary Ed Miliband, the soft-left MP who could be appointed as Burnham’s chancellor, to “Nigerian military dictators”.
She said: “Yes, Ed Miliband is acting like the Nigerian military dictators who ruined a lot of that country’s economic potential and made it so much poorer and in some cases bankrupted the country.”
Badenoch claimed that the UK would be heading for a “summer of chaos” if Burnham became prime minister, too.
“Difficult problems need solving, and difficult decisions must be taken,” she said.
“But the man who will be prime minister in a couple of weeks wants a three-month summer holiday, because he needs some time to work out what he thinks.
“He will spend the next three months with unions and left-wing think tanks demanding policy changes which no one voted for.
“Andy Burnham is already the prime minister in everything but name. He must put an end to speculation, walk into No 10, name his cabinet, and come to Parliament to tell the country what he plans to do.
“Instead, he is allowing speculation and this chaos to run and run. He has clearly learned nothing from the disastrous speculation of Rachel Reeves’ last budget.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Fake Holiday Listing Scams On The Rise: Here’s How To Spot Them
Those looking to book a last-minute holiday this year – whether in the UK or further afield – are being urged to be wary of fake holiday listings.
According to Trading Standards Scotland, there were “a significant number” of consumer issues with holiday bookings reported last year, including fake accommodation listings being shared on social media.
Skipton Building Society said these scams are “especially common” for UK caravan holidays.
Some scammers create fake social media accounts and websites to advertise holiday properties that don’t exist or have already been booked.
Payment service provider emerchantpay also recently commissioned research which found a third of travellers had witnessed a rise in potential travel scams on social media.
Some fraudsters will also promote flights, tickets or tours that aren’t real – often at a discounted price.
What do these scams look like?
One scam saw fake adverts shared on social media promoting caravan breaks at a holiday park in Ayrshire.
Trading Standards Scotland said a woman had paid £250 for a four-night break at the park, only to discover on arrival that the caravan was not owned by the person advertising it.
Another company offering glamping holidays also noticed that some of its accommodation, which was fully booked, was being advertised on fake social media accounts. The adverts contained links to a scam website with a similar URL and appearance as the glamping company.
How to avoid social media holiday scams
Lisa Webb, a consumer law expert at Which?, said the statistics are “sadly unsurprising”.
She said while the onus should not fall on consumers, as social media firms should be doing more to tackle the issue, there are ways to try and avoid being duped by fake holiday listings.
- Using a reverse image search to check for stolen images,
- Checking the property’s location on an online map to see that it exists,
- Booking through official, trusted channels,
- Avoiding paying by bank transfer for anything advertised on social media.
Skipton Building Society urges consumers to check that websites have a padlock symbol before ‘https’ or ‘www’ in web browsers before booking, and to use a credit card for payments. “Never pay directly into an individual’s bank account,” the money experts add.
Lisa Webb ended: “If you think you have lost money to a holiday booking scam, contact your bank immediately and report it to Report Fraud or Police Scotland.”
Politics
School Holidays For Less: Here's How To Save On Days Out At Alton Towers This Summer
Alton TowersWe hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
Not to scare you, but there are about to be a lot of summer holidays to fill ahead of you.
And while it’ll be nice to have the little ones home for the first few days, eventually the thrill of it all will wear off – for both you and them.
If you need something to keep the momentum churning over the next six weeks, we’ve got good news for you.
Just in time for the holidays, Alton Towers has dropped two offers that mean you can experience its rides and attractions for less, whether you’re going for a short stay, or a day trip.
In case you hadn’t already heard, Alton Towers has just opened Bluey the Ride: Here Come the Grannies! and, from 18th July will unveil the Minecraft Meet The Mobs trail.
Fronted by Joey and Bluey dressed up as ‘the grannies’, the Bluey rollercoaster leads you through a day of mischief through Bluey’s backyard, and you’ll have a chance to spot her house in the queue.
The ride is nestled in the UK’s only CBeebies Land, where you can also explore live shows, the Peter Rabbit ride, and take a boat through In the Night Garden.
Meanwhile, the Minecraft trail offers a taste of the game in real life, with a hunt for Mob Babies through Minecraft-inspired settings, meet and greets with characters from the game, and themed snacks everywhere you look.
Not to mention that Alton Towers has over 40 other rides to choose from, so you won’t exactly get bored.
That’s why, for a short time only, the park is offering a second day free if you stay at the Alton Towers Resort.
Whether you’ve been eyeing up a night in the Bluey Suite at CBeebies Land Hotel, or a magical stay at the Enchanted Village, the offer covers one night of accommodation and two days of access to the park from just £79 per person.
Or, if you’re there for a good time and not a long time, you can also book a ticket that gives you access to two parks for the price of one – including Thorpe Park, Chessington Park of Adventures, or LEGOLAND Windsor Resort.
You better get going either way, because the 2nd Day Free sale will only run until 19th July, with the deal applicable on stays until 22nd October.
The Twice The Fun offer ends on 27th July, but once you’ve bought a day ticket you’ll be able to use it at a second theme park until 25th September. Yep, for real life.
Politics
The ‘conversion therapy’ ban is a Trojan horse for trans extremism
Conversion therapy is already prohibited in the UK. Every recognised professional body governing psychologists, psychotherapists and counsellors already bans coercive, unethical or abusive attempts to change a person’s sexual orientation or identity. Accredited therapists can already lose their registration for unethical practice. Assault, false imprisonment, rape, harassment and coercive control are already crimes.
If the Labour government genuinely wanted to improve therapeutic practices, it would start by introducing statutory regulation of the profession. In Britain, almost anyone can call themselves a psychotherapist or counsellor without belonging to an accredited professional body. Yet instead of addressing this glaring problem, ministers have chosen to introduce activist-pandering, rainbow-waving LGBTQIA2S+ legislation in the form of the Conversion Practices Bill.
Politicians have no expertise in psychotherapy. Therapy has always existed to help people change – to reduce anxiety, recover from trauma, overcome addiction, challenge distorted thinking, repair relationships and sometimes reconsider deeply held beliefs about themselves. Change is very often the purpose of therapy. The idea that politicians can legislate which psychological changes are permissible reveals a profound misunderstanding of psychotherapy, the unconscious and the extraordinary ways people use defence mechanisms to protect themselves from emotional pain.
Jonni Skinner, a 23-year-old gay man, was just 13 years old when he entered gender services. In a clear example of chemical conversion therapy driven by homophobia, Jonni was persuaded that he would have a better life as a ‘trans girl’ than as a gay boy. He was prescribed oestrogen and lived as a ‘trans girl’ throughout his teenage years. He has since detransitioned and now speaks publicly about the physical harm done to his body. As a psychotherapist, I have often worked with young people struggling with internalised homophobia. Some years ago, I worked with a teenage girl who insisted she was a boy. As our work progressed, she came to realise that she wasn’t actually a boy. She was a lesbian who didn’t want to be a lesbian. To this young girl, becoming a ‘normal guy’ felt cool, while becoming a lesbian felt like joining a cringy club of middle-aged women with short haircuts. Today, she is a cheerful lesbian who is out and proud.
But, if the Conversion Practices Bill succeeds, would therapists like me be arrested for this kind of therapeutic work? In the down-is-up world we now live in, chemical conversion therapy is encouraged while psychological exploration is due to become illegal. Gay and lesbian people can medically transition, permanently altering healthy bodies in an attempt to escape their sexual orientation, yet therapists risk legal consequences for helping patients explore the psychological origins of that same distress.
The real question is remarkably simple. Should we seek to change our minds or our bodies? As a psychotherapist, I naturally begin with the mind. I believe it is better to help people accept themselves than to change healthy bodies to accommodate psychological distress. Others are more identity-based and they seek to change the body to align with an internal sense of identity. These are fundamentally different approaches and they should be debated openly. Instead, this bill places one approach beyond question and the other under legal suspicion.
The chilling effect is already real. Therapists love their work, yet they deliberately avoid taking on patients who are struggling with their gender identity or sexual orientation because this area is becoming a legal minefield. Why risk complaints, investigations and criminal liability when there are countless other problems to help people with? Never before has the government sought to interfere with ethical, conventional psychotherapy. Yet politicians now believe they are qualified to determine which therapeutic conversations are acceptable.
This bill has consequences far beyond psychotherapy. It reaches deep into families, classrooms, youth work and places of worship. It gives the state unprecedented influence over ordinary conversations about sex and gender between parents and children, teachers and pupils, youth workers and young people, and religious leaders and those in their care. It is a Trojan horse for state regulation of conversations about gender identity.
Parents and children disagree every day. Parents question their children’s beliefs, challenge their decisions, set boundaries, refuse requests and sometimes tell them they are mistaken. The continued diminishment of parental rights and authority, coupled with the expectation that parents be more intensively involved in their children’s lives, is not going well. We all know that parenting teenagers can become very fraught. If parents aren’t free to guide their children according to their own values and beliefs, then what is the point of it all? Am I raising my children to be part of my family or to be good citizens of the state?
This bill creates an extraordinary moral inconsistency reminiscent of the Soviet Union, where it didn’t matter whether you were correct, only whether you were politically correct. Last week in the House of Lords, Hilary Cass described parents who socially transitioned their two-year-old son, affirming him as a girl and setting him on a pathway that has left him, aged 11, with ‘weak bones’ as a result of being largely confined to his bedroom. According to the logic of this bill, those parents should be applauded. Yet parents who question a child’s transgender identity, encourage psychological exploration, or simply ask their son or daughter to wait before embarking on irreversible medical treatment may find themselves jailed for being politically incorrect.
The evidence for this extraordinary expansion of state power is remarkably weak. Ministers repeatedly cite a report from Galop, an anti-abuse charity, as justification for banning what it calls conversion practices. Yet after reviewing around 13,500 client records over three years, researchers found just 371 potential cases, only 195 of which contained enough information to analyse. The report’s most serious examples involve assault, rape, forced marriage, deprivation of liberty and coercive control – all already criminal offences that should be prosecuted vigorously. On such flimsy evidence, the government proposes to redraw the boundaries between the state and the family.
This bill encourages therapists to practise defensively, teachers to avoid difficult safeguarding conversations, and parents to fear that their recalcitrant teenager may set the law against them in a fit of pique.
Stella O’Malley is the director and founder of Genspect.
Politics
Analysis: Andy Burnham's Big Speech Left Big Questions He Refused To Answer
Burnham leaves after his speech without taking questions from waiting journalists.Andy Burnham today showed exactly why Labour MPs are desperate for him to replace Keir Starmer as prime minister as he laid out his vision for the country.
The former mayor of Greater Manchester was pretty much everything the current PM is not.
From the smart-casual clothes he wore to the easy charm with which he delivered his speech, this was clearly a man who – unlike Starmer – is very comfortable in his own skin.
His remedy for the UK’s ills also stand in marked contrast to the man who he will replace in 10 Downing Street in less than a month’s time.
Burnham was clear that he wants nothing less than the complete “rewiring” of the way Britain is run, with a huge shift of power away from Westminster to local communities and regions across England.
That, he said, would lead to the biggest council house building programme since the post-war period, economic growth “in every postcode”, lower energy bills and prices coming down in the shops.
He also signalled a massive change in education policy, with a greater focus on technical qualifications rather than the drive to get more young people to go to university.
“I am going to do things differently,” Burnham declared. “I am going to break with the ‘more of the same’ approach that has got us here.
“I am going to give Britain the circuit-breaker it needs by building a more collaborative politics in Westminster, by taking power out of the centre and putting it in the hands of the people and places who can use it best.”
A bit like motherhood and apple pie, there was little in the speech that any reasonable person could, in good faith, take exception to.
But for all the soaring rhetoric about putting “hope in every heart”, it lacked one important thing: an explanation of how it will all work in practice.
Burnham failed to explain how putting more power in the hands of local politicians rather than those in Whitehall will magically improve the lives of everyone in the country.
It was therefore unfortunate, to put it mildly, that the many journalists who had been invited to watch the speech were not then given the opportunity to ask him questions about it.
Because let’s not forget, this is a man who was not even an MP a month ago, and yet stands on the threshold of assuming the highest office in the land without even having to go to the trouble of winning a leadership contest, let alone a general election.
What’s more, he is a man who – for all his previous ministerial experience from 20 years ago – has not even been an MP for the best part of a decade.
If this is not the time for him to answer detailed questions about what exactly he plans to do with the reins of power, then when till it be?
How does he plan to stop the small boats crossing the English Channel, for instance, or get to grips with the ballooning welfare bill?
And that’s before we even come to how he plans to deal with the threat posed by Vladimir Putin or repair the UK government’s relations with Donald Trump’s White House.
Which brings us to another – more worrying – difference between Andy Burnham and Keir Starmer.
For all his faults, the soon-to-be-former PM would not have made a speech like that and then refused to take any questions on it.
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
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