Who is Andy Burnham, the ‘Manchester messiah’?

Andy Burnham's arrival on the national political stage has been hailed enthusiastically by his supporters. But what kind of a man is he?

Andy Burnham: The Manchester messiah
(Image credit: Anthony Devlin/Bloomberg/Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

Andy Burnham's arrival at London Euston, on the authentically late-running 10:43am Avanti West Coast service, reminded some of Barack Obama's “Hope express” from Chicago to Washington in 2008 and others of the secret “sealed train” carrying Vladimir Lenin to St Petersburg in 1918.

As “Comrade Burnham” hurtled south, tracked by helicopters, he made a symbolic reunion with his Westminster past: changing out of his trademark black T-shirt into a suit. He escaped the press scrum at Euston via “a hidden VIP exit”, reports The New Statesman, making off in a black cab. A niggling question – which could be a clue to future policy – is whether he claimed his Delay Repay refund.

Andy Burnham, the son of a BT engineer and a GP receptionist, “is shaped by his lifelong faith”, says The Spectator. He's “a Catholic communitarian”, steeped in the teachings of Derek Worlock, which emphasised “solidarity with the disadvantaged and working-class dignity”. He made it to Cambridge University, where he was “as happy on the football pitch as he was dissecting Middlemarch”, and from there he made a pretty textbook professional progression to Westminster.

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After a spell on trade magazines – including Tank World Management and Passenger World Management – Burnham got his big break in politics in 1994 as a researcher for Labour minister Tessa Jowell, notes the BBC. There followed a spell with the Transport and General Workers' Union and a post with the government's Football Task Force before his own election as MP for Leigh in 2001. He climbed the ladder of the Blair government, making his Cabinet debut in 2007 under Gordon Brown.

In the ensuing decade of party turmoil, Andy Burnham twice stood for the leadership. “I've never met anyone more ambitious in my life,” a senior Labour figure, who worked closely with him in Manchester, told the Financial Times. But back then he didn't stand out. Even a year ago, says The New Statesman, the inaugural mayor of Greater Manchester was “nobody's idea of a premier”. Detractors in the party (a dwindling number now) snipe that he dodged the tough battle to unseat Corbynism and swanned off to Manchester in 2016, where the hard yards of economic revival had already been laid. The city's “spiky” council leader, Richard Leese, took to calling him a “glorified bus conductor” in private – because the reward for having an unwelcome mayor foisted on the council was “the ability to take back control of their buses”.

What can we expect from Andy Burnham?

Andy Burnham has something of a reputation for flip-flopping when expedient, but supporters say there's nothing wrong with pragmatism if it's grounded in solid values: Burnham's are “genuine”. What seems to count for the public is his interpretation of “northern soul” – an offer of hope, playing on a certain nostalgia for the past, that might also find fertile ground in the south. Last year's sell-out Oasis/The Verve tour could be seen as a subliminal Andy Burnham warm-up act.

Critics have dismissed Burnham's speech on “rewiring” Britain as a repurposed version of Boris Johnson's “levelling up” agenda. But for the moment, the lack of policy detail – and his unknown choice of chancellor – confer an everyman advantage. The “northern insurrectionist” espoused by the left is now wooing the very bond market he once vowed not to be “in hock” to, and has appointed a blue-chip team of economists and his old Blairite chum, James Purnell, as chief of staff.

Which Andy Burnham will we get? Aside from “evangelical zeal”, Burnham's great strength over a decade in Manchester was his ability to hold the city's “byzantine system together”, says the Financial Times. In this, his greatest reinvention yet, that might count.


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Columnist

Jane writes profiles for MoneyWeek and is city editor of The Week. A former British Society of Magazine Editors (BSME) editor of the year, she cut her teeth in journalism editing The Daily Telegraph’s Letters page and writing gossip for the London Evening Standard – while contributing to a kaleidoscopic range of business magazines including Personnel Today, Edge, Microscope, Computing, PC Business World, and Business & Finance.