In the great British tradition of political theatre, where ambition is dressed up as public service and the electorate plays the role of a sceptical audience armed with rotten tomatoes, one can only admire the latest plot twist involving Andy Burnham, the self-styled King of the North, and Sir Keir Starmer, the man who makes a cardboard cut-out look like a bundle of raw charisma. Burnham, having long ruled Manchester like a benevolent satrap with a slightly better haircut, has decided the time is ripe to descend from his mayoral throne and contest the Makerfield by-election. The local Labour majority sits at a slender 5,000 or so—thin enough to make a bookmaker nervous—and recent council results saw Reform UK gobbling up seats like a man who has discovered the all-you-can-eat buffet after years of rationing. One is tempted to ask: has Starmer, that master of the quiet knife, engineered a subtle trap for his ambitious colleague? Or is this simply politics as usual, where the gods of electoral arithmetic laugh last and loudest?
Sir Roger Scruton, had he still been with us to sharpen his pen on this particular folly, might have observed that British politics has always been at its most entertaining when it resembles a provincial repertory company performing Macbeth with a budget shortfall. Burnham arrives not as a humble servant of the people but as a figure of almost messianic self-regard, the sort who has spent years cultivating the image of the plain-speaking northerner while presiding over a city that, to the less charitable eye, occasionally suggests a municipal experiment in how many problems one can accumulate while issuing press releases about levelling up. His popularity in Greater Manchester is real enough—local boy made good, photogenic in a hi-vis jacket, capable of delivering a soundbite with the weary gravitas of a man who has seen too many trams delayed. Yet Makerfield is not Manchester. It is the sort of constituency where the phrase "left behind" was practically invented, a place where the abstract promises of Westminster meet the concrete realities of post-industrial life, and where voters have begun, in alarming numbers, to flirt with alternatives that do not involve another lecture on net zero or diversity workshops.
The numbers, as the post in question dryly notes, are not encouraging for the aspiring Prime Minister-in-waiting. A majority of 5,000 in these febrile times is less a cushion than a trampoline—liable to launch the candidate skyward at the first gust of anti-incumbent sentiment. Reform's local successes speak to a deeper rot in the Labour coalition: the old working-class base, long taken for granted, has started to notice that the party of Attlee and Bevan now concerns itself more with pronoun etiquette and international climate summits than with wages, borders, or the price of a pint. One pictures the canvassers trudging through the streets, clipboards in hand, encountering not the deferential voters of yore but citizens who have watched their towns stagnate while the metropolitan commentariat clucks about "populism" as if it were a mysterious virus rather than the entirely predictable immune response of a body politic fed up with being ignored.
Here the sardonic mind turns to Starmer himself, that paragon of cautious competence who somehow contrives to make competence look like a mildly embarrassing condition. Could he have deliberately set Burnham up for a fall? The suggestion has the delicious tang of palace intrigue, the kind that keeps political journalists in overtime and the rest of us in popcorn. Starmer's leadership has been defined by a certain ruthless tidiness—clearing out the Corbynites, triangulating with the centre, and maintaining the expression of a man perpetually disappointed by the shortcomings of reality. Burnham, with his northern power base and telegenic profile, represents a rival centre of gravity. What better way to neutralise a potential leadership challenger than to encourage him into a contest where victory is possible but defeat plausible, preferably splashed across the front pages as a humiliating verdict on "Starmer's Britain"? If Burnham wins, Starmer can claim credit for the masterstroke; if he loses, well, one troublesome prince has been bloodied in the provinces. It is the sort of calculation that would have earned a wry chuckle from the more Machiavellian minds of the Blair era, though one doubts Starmer possesses quite that level of feline cunning. He may simply be relieved that someone else is willing to take the risk while he clings to Number 10 like a limpet on a particularly unyielding rock.
Of course, one must not overstate the conspiracy. British politics runs as much on incompetence and accident as on grand design. Burnham may yet prevail, buoyed by residual loyalty, tactical voting, or the sheer inertia that still propels the Labour machine in its traditional heartlands. The bookies, those cold-eyed realists, seem to fancy his chances. Yet the very fact that a figure of Burnham's stature must fight on such contested ground tells its own story: the Red Wall, once thought rebuilt, is showing fresh cracks. Reform channels a discontent that the main parties dismiss at their peril—part economic anxiety, part cultural revolt, part sheer exasperation with a governing class that lectures more than it listens. In Makerfield, the voters will not be choosing between nuanced policy platforms so much as delivering a verdict on whether Westminster still speaks their language.
One is left reflecting, in the best Scrutonian tradition, on the absurdity of it all. Here is modern Britain: a former mayor eyeing the premiership via a by-election in a marginal seat, while the actual Prime Minister navigates scandals and slumps with the air of a man wondering why the script keeps deviating from the focus-grouped version. The electorate, meanwhile, watches with the jaundiced eye of theatregoers who have seen too many revivals. Whoever triumphs in Makerfield, the larger drama continues—the slow, often comic unravelling of certainties that once seemed as solid as the mills and mines that built these towns. Politics, as ever, provides the entertainment. The joke, as usual, is on all of us.