Three weeks before he could enter Downing Street, Andy Burnham is making the Andy Burnham devolution plan the core test of whether Labour’s next government can move power, money, and accountability out of London without losing fiscal discipline.
June 29 in Manchester: Burnham turns a leadership bid into a power argument
Burnham’s first major policy speech since launching his bid for No 10 is set for 11.30am in Manchester, where he will pledge “good growth in every postcode” through a major transfer of power from Whitehall to local communities, according to Guardian World.
The timing matters. If no other Labour MP stands, Burnham is expected to become prime minister on 20 July, three weeks after this speech. That makes Monday’s address more than a campaign marker. It is the first real sketch of a governing method.
His diagnosis is clear: Britain’s growth problem is also a power problem. Decisions sit too far from the places affected by them. Budgets run through Whitehall. Local leaders are asked to deliver national missions with limited control over the tools.
Burnham is expected to promise “good growth in every postcode” and propose a “No 10 North” as part of a wider push to move decision-making away from London.
XOOMAR analysis: that phrase is politically useful because it sounds national, not sectional. It lets Burnham speak to towns, cities, and regions beyond the north while still drawing on the Greater Manchester brand that made him a national figure. The risk is just as obvious. If the offer sounds like a mayor asking for more mayoral power, opponents will frame it as process dressed up as renewal.
For context on the proposed northern prime ministerial operation, see XOOMAR’s Manchester No 10 Plan Pits Burnham Against London Power.
Early 2024 gave Burnham the blueprint, Head North now looks like a governing manual
The intellectual base for the Andy Burnham devolution plan is Head North, the book Burnham published in early 2024 with Steve Rotheram, the Liverpool city region mayor. Their argument was blunt: the north of England has lost out because power in the UK is concentrated in the south, and rebalancing requires devolving decision-making and spending away from London.
The book included a 10-point plan. The Guardian notes that some parts will almost certainly be dropped, while others are expected to sit at the centre of the Burnham project. The supplied material does not establish exactly which points will survive, so any detailed ranking would be guesswork.
What is clear from the speech previews is the direction of travel:
| Burnham theme | Source-backed policy direction |
|---|---|
| Devolution | Push decision-making to regions and local communities |
| Growth | Deliver “good growth in every postcode” |
| Living standards | Commit to a “10-year mission” to raise them |
| No 10 North | Move part of the prime ministerial operation to the north |
| Local powers | Give regional mayors more control over areas such as social housing, welfare, and post-16 education, according to supplied related reporting |
| Fiscal stance | Stick to Labour’s fiscal rules, including current borrowing limits |
One niche reference matters. The Guardian says Burnham and Rotheram’s book refers to a “Basic Law”, drawing on a German post-reunification law requiring states to have “equivalent living standards”. In UK terms, that signals an ambition to make territorial fairness a structural obligation, not a slogan.
Burnham and Rotheram also ended the book with an “Epilogue to our Grandchildren”, saying they hoped to “help build a movement of people over the next 25 years which will eventually change Westminster from the outside”. The irony is sharp. Burnham may now get the chance to attempt it from inside No 10.
The missing regional numbers are now Burnham’s problem, not a think-tank footnote
The previews supply few hard regional indicators. There are no sourced figures here for productivity gaps, household income divergence, transport investment, health inequality, skills shortages, or business formation outside London and the south-east. That absence matters.
If Burnham wants the Andy Burnham devolution plan to survive first contact with the Treasury, he will need numbers that prove more than unfairness. He will need to show that devolving power can raise national growth, not just move money around the map.
The source-backed numbers already on the table are political and fiscal:
- 20 July: the date Burnham could become prime minister if no other Labour MP runs.
- 10-year mission: the stated horizon for raising living standards.
- 2029-30: the end-of-parliament point by which Labour’s fiscal rules require debt to be falling as a share of national income.
- 3.5% of GDP by 2035: the defence investment level Admiral Sir Tony Radakin urged Burnham to commit to.
- 25 June: the date Rachel Reeves urged Burnham to stick with her economic approach, saying it was “beginning to bear fruit”.
That creates the real constraint. Burnham wants deeper local power while also signalling that he will keep Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules. Those rules limit day-to-day borrowing and require debt to fall as a share of national income by 2029-30. Devolution may shift who decides. It does not automatically create money.
XOOMAR analysis: the first serious test will be whether Burnham can define devolution as a productivity strategy. If not, it becomes a constitutional argument at the exact moment voters and markets will ask about wages, bills, jobs, and public services.
From mayoral proof to national machinery, Burnham must avoid sounding local
The supplied sources do not support a full history of English devolution from earlier regional assembly plans through later government slogans, so the relevant source-backed history is narrower: Burnham built his national pitch from metro mayor experience, especially in Greater Manchester, while Rotheram did the same from the Liverpool city region.
That matters because their critique is practical. As mayors, they had enough power to build a case for local delivery, but not enough to escape dependence on central government decisions. Burnham’s planned No 10 North is therefore symbolic and operational. It says power should move physically as well as administratively.
The challenge is national credibility. Burnham cannot appear to be correcting only a northern grievance. His slogan, “growth in every postcode”, is designed to avoid that trap. The phrase includes the south, devolved nations, coastal towns, cities, and rural areas. It also gives Labour MPs outside the north a way to support devolution without looking like they are conceding priority to Manchester.
For more on Burnham’s personal positioning since returning to Westminster, see XOOMAR’s Andy Burnham Stakes 15% of His MP Pay on Local Causes.
June 29 will sound different to mayors, markets, MPs, and Whitehall
Different audiences will hear different risks in the same speech.
Mayors and local leaders will hear an opening bid for deeper powers. The supplied reporting points to more local say over social housing, welfare, and post-16 education, plus a wider commitment to move decision-making to regions and communities.
The Treasury will hear fiscal exposure. Burnham has signalled support for existing fiscal rules, but deeper devolution raises hard questions about who controls budgets, who carries risk, and who gets blamed when delivery fails.
Business may welcome clearer regional pipelines for housing, infrastructure, skills, and reindustrialisation, all areas named in the previews. But XOOMAR analysis: if powers vary heavily across mayoral areas, firms will want clarity on rules, funding cycles, and accountability.
Opposition parties already see an attack line. Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said Burnham’s “big idea is to shuffle power between politicians” rather than make welfare reforms, cut taxes, or fund defence. A Reform UK spokesman called the previews “a lot of words for no actual concrete changes”. Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey warned Burnham has a “very short window to turn this government around”.
Those criticisms point to the same vulnerability. Devolution sounds serious to policy insiders, but voters judge delivery. If buses, homes, apprenticeships, and local jobs don’t change, the structure will not save the story.
July 20 is the first deadline, the Treasury fight comes next
If Burnham reaches Downing Street on 20 July, early symbolic moves could come fast. A No 10 North announcement is easier than redesigning fiscal power. A speech can promise a 10-year mission. Multi-year settlements, new local powers, and deeper fiscal devolution would require negotiation, legislation, and direct conflict with departments used to holding the pen.
The most important near-term signal will be his choice of finance minister. Supplied reporting says Burnham is expected to replace Rachel Reeves, with Ed Miliband, David Miliband, Wes Streeting, or Shabana Mahmood reported as possible successors. That appointment will tell markets and MPs how seriously to take his promise to keep the rules while changing the machinery.
XOOMAR judgment: Burnham’s project succeeds only if devolution becomes a delivery machine, not a constitutional mood. The evidence to watch is concrete: longer local funding settlements, clearer mayoral powers, credible spending control, and measurable links between local decision-making and living standards. If those do not appear quickly, “growth in every postcode” will become another phrase Westminster liked more than the country felt.
Impact Analysis
- Burnham is framing Labour’s leadership contest around who controls power and public money.
- The plan could reshape how national growth policy is delivered across towns, cities, and regions.
- Its success will depend on balancing local autonomy with fiscal discipline.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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