Andy Burnham sparks Labour anger with appearance alongside Greens | Andy Burnham


Andy Burnham’s decision to appear at a progressive rally alongside prominent Green and Liberal Democrat figures has sparked anger among some Labour MPs, who have accused him of undermining their local election message.

The Greater Manchester mayor, who is seen as one of the most likely challengers to Keir Starmer, will be speaking at the Change:Now event this month organised by the left-wing group Compass.

Compass’s founder, Neal Lawson, has long campaigned for a cross-party progressive alliance but is also a prominent supporter of Burnham.

Two other Labour MPs, Clive Lewis, who has offered to give up his seat for Burnham, and Miatta Fahnbulleh, the communities minister, are also due to speak at the event. Other speakers include Caroline Lucas, the former Green party leader; James Meadway, head of the Green-aligned thinktank Verdant; Vince Cable, the former Liberal Democrat cabinet minister; and the Lib Dem MP Roz Savage.

The event is designed to show how progressives can work across party barriers, something Burnham has long advocated. But its timing, just weeks after local elections which are pitting Labour against the Greens in many places, has infuriated many of his colleagues.

Luke Akehurst, MP for North Durham and a supporter of Starmer, said fellow Labour members should not be speaking at an event with Green politicians and campaigners given the recent antisemitism controversies their party has faced. Two Green candidates in London were recently arrested for alleged antisemitic social media posts, while the party is investigating others over what they have posted online.

“Anyone in the Labour party who has been advancing the concept of a progressive alliance involving the Greens should surely be reconsidering this at the moment given the revelations about the extent of antisemitism amongst their council candidates,” Akehurst said.

Another Labour MP said: “Activists and candidates around the country are fighting for Labour seats on councils, now is not the time to talk about coalitions.

“It was bad enough when Andy said he’d ‘work with [Jeremy] Corbyn’ (and Your Party), now he wants to work with another party riddled with antisemitism? It’s unconscionable.”

Burnham did not comment. An ally said, however: “It’s ridiculous to suggest Andy is supporting other parties. He is advancing progressive ideas to help the Labour party. Do people not want anyone sharing ideas or having a debate about where progressives should go?”

Fahnbulleh and Lewis have been contacted for comment.

The event, which takes place on 30 May in east London, will gather thinktanks, politicians and academics for what it says will be “a day of debate, disagreement and deliberation between progressives of all parties”. It is being organised by Compass alongside changes to make the voting system more proportional.

Burnham has championed many of those ideas in recent years, including introducing proportional representation and encouraging more cross-party collaboration. Some on the left believe this is the most rational response to the splintering of the left-wing vote, which has seen the Greens double their poll rating since the beginning of last year.

Others, however, believe that Labour should be willing to take the Green threat head-on, challenging the party over issues including the economy, national security and antisemitism.

They point out that as the Greens have grown in support, they have attracted many of those from the Corbynite wing of the Labour party, from which Starmer wrested control to become leader.

Attention is likely to focus on Burnham in the days after this week’s elections as one of three likely challengers to Starmer, with the former deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, and the health secretary, Wes Streeting, as the others.

Unlike those other two, Burnham would first need to win a Westminster seat, something he was denied the chance to do earlier this year by Labour’s ruling national executive committee.



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