There are at least two ostensible explanations for the Labour national executive committee’s decision to block Andy Burnham from standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election.
The official narrative was delivered in the form of a lengthy press notice this afternoon. The “statement from the Labour Party” explained that Burnham’s candidacy would have precipitated an “unnecessary” Greater Manchester mayoral election, imposing a “substantial and disproportionate” impact on party campaign resources ahead of the local elections and elections to the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Senedd in May.
The NEC, Starmer-in-council, could not in good conscience have “put Labour’s control of Greater Manchester at any risk.” The statement also cited the need to avoid an unnecessary splurge of “taxpayers’ money and resources” and looked ahead to the Gorton and Denton by-election; the pronouncement promised a “positive campaign”.
There is also the unofficial narrative, which departs markedly from the neutral-sounding language of this statement.
Loyal Starmerite MPs welcomed Burnham’s exclusion in curiously congruous tones. John Slinger, a staunch and sometimes lonely defender of the prime minister, argued that the decision to bar Burnham would allow Labour to move swiftly on from the “introspection and psychodrama of the last week.” Steve Race, the Labour MP for Exeter, welcomed the decision on the grounds that it would “put the psychodrama to bed.” Both Labour MPs respectively looked forward to the “vital” and “important” elections in May – and the prospect of defeating Reform.
From the Labour leadership’s perspective, the administrative and political explanations are difficult to reconcile; taken together, they suggest that Starmer wanted a way to block a psychodramatic rival and found a procedural solution.
It is at the intersection of these two narratives, then, that the truth appears. And it is a revealing truth. Under significant political strain, Starmer found solace in the dual comforts of process and the NEC rulebook.
The landslide 8-1 NEC vote belies a series of cruel realities.
The first problem is the weakness the decision signals. In September 2025, Starmer defused Burnham’s Labour conference challenge with a disciplined, politically thoughtful set-piece speech. The prime minister emerged stronger from his conference battle. But he does not back himself to win a war at Westminster. William Hague, during his ill-fated tenure as Conservative leader, faced a potentially threatening parliamentary comeback of his own. His solution was to appoint Michael Portillo as shadow chancellor.
The Labour leadership simply does not think the party whip, or possibly collective responsibility, would be enough to suppress Burnham. Instead, Starmer – in a crowning moment of centralised control-freakery – has chosen to keep Labour’s prince across the water in the relative wilderness. Critics will argue that this culture of control is now crowding out assets in the battle against Nigel Farage.
Certainly, Starmer’s allies will struggle to waft away the stench of a selection stitch-up; Lucy Powell – the sole non-Starmer ally on the NEC – provided the lone dissenting vote.
The most striking aspect of Burnham’s exclusion is its potential to exacerbate existing divisions within the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) and the cabinet. In recent days, a series of senior Labour politicians have rallied around Burnham; Powell, Ed Miliband and Angela Rayner – the current deputy leader, the former deputy leader, and a former party leader – all signalled their sympathy with the Greater Manchester mayor’s cause.
In a speech to the Labour north west regional conference, Rayner declared: “I know my friend, the mayor, has put his name forward, and I believe the local members should get the choice, no stitch-ups.”
Crucially, the criticism of Starmer’s conduct is not confined to the soft left. Jo White, the convenor of the Red Wall caucus of Labour MPs, had urged the party leadership to let “the North decide who their Labour candidate should be for the Gorton and Denton by-election.”
White added: “A London stitch-up will be a disaster for Labour.”
On top of this, the Blue Labour group has condemned the party’s central bureaucracy for its lack of “clarity and direction”. The faction poured scorn on the use of “administrative and procedural methods” to block Burnham, which they castigated as “a profound mistake”.
The Labour Party’s factions are mostly speaking with one voice – that should scare Starmer far more than the prospect of a Burnham comeback. And the NEC decree will only reinforce and crystallise this unlikely unity – both now and in the coming months as Labour faces Reform in Gorton and Denton.
In repulsing his party’s prince across the water, therefore, Starmer could well have opened the factional floodgates.
Equally telling is the quiet of potential future leadership candidates. Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, conspicuously refused to come out swinging against Burnham on the Sunday morning media circuit. Wes Streeting, the health secretary, spoke positively about the Greater Manchester mayor in his appearance at the Fabians new year conference yesterday. He condemned the anti-Burnham briefings as “disgraceful” and described the upcoming Gorton and Denton by-election as “very critical”.
He added: “We want the best possible candidate for that by-election.”
Compare this line to that taken by Steve Reed, housing secretary and Starmer ally, in the wake of the NEC decision. Reed spoke of the “huge inconvenience to two million voters across Greater Manchester of having a by-election for a new mayor if [Burnham] were to move forward.”
He added: “People voted in Greater Manchester overwhelmingly for Andy Burnham to be their mayor two years ago for a four-year term.”
If Labour loses the Gorton and Denton by-election, the recriminations will be brutal.
Starmer will be squarely in the firing line – the NEC ruling confirms that. Not only would he be blamed for failing to win the seat, but sceptics would argue that he actively undermined Labour’s chances in pursuit of his own survival. That is the political reality that the NEC decision effectively invites.
The timing is fascinating. Starmer has placed a target on his leadership mere weeks before his latest moment of maximum danger, the May elections.
That is the distinct irony of the NEC decision. Blocking Burnham makes a leadership challenger more, not less, likely. And so Starmer’s professed reasoning, to lance the boil of Labour psychodrama, fails on its own terms.
Starmer succeeded at Labour conference because he styled Burnham, credibly, as the source of the psychodrama. The NEC decision reverses this dynamic. The Labour leader’s intervention means he owns the political fallout of Burnham’s exclusion and any by-election setback. He is the most prominent author of any chaos that now follows.
There will come a time when Starmer runs out of procedural solutions to his political problems.
Josh Self is editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here and X here.
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