The so-called “King of the North” is being treated as a ready-made successor.

Andy Burnham arrives in London on Monday (Image: Tolga Akmen/EPA/Shutterstock)
Andy Burnham is set to become Prime Minister in a matter of weeks after a dramatic series of events over the past 24 hours. The former Mayor of Greater Manchester has swept into Parliament following his crushing victory in the Makerfield by-election and is now the overwhelming favourite to succeed Sir Keir Starmer, who announced his resignation as Labour leader and Prime Minister on Monday.
With Wes Streeting quickly endorsing him and momentum building for a swift, largely unopposed transition, Mrt Burnham is poised to enter No.10 as early as mid-July. His allies are positioning the “King of the North” as a ready-made successor offering a distinct, pragmatic agenda tailored to Red Wall and northern voters. This is what pensioners, migrants and benefit claimants could expect under a Burnham premiership.

Sir Keir Starmer announced his resignation on Monday (Image: Getty)
Migrants and asylum seekers: Ending the hotel bonanza
Mr Burnham would act fast to end the costly reliance on private hotels for asylum accommodation. Insiders say he would trigger break clauses in the multi-billion-pound contracts with firms like Serco, Mears and Clearsprings, ending their lucrative arrangements.
In his Makerfield campaign launch and victory speech, he backed the broad direction of Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood’s immigration reforms while stressing the need for a “new script” that delivers tighter border control alongside faster, fairer processing for genuine refugees — avoiding permanent limbo for those with valid claims and swift returns for failed ones.
He has notably stepped back from earlier calls to scrap the “No Recourse to Public Funds” (NRPF) rule, a move designed to reassure voters concerned about pressures on housing and services.
The overall approach aims to slash costs, accelerate decisions, boost integration for approved cases, and prioritise removals.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood (Image: Getty)
Benefit claimants: ‘Live Well’ revolution and council housing push
Working-age claimants face the most significant overhaul. Burnham wants to ditch the DWP’s criticised sanctions-heavy model in favour of a localised “Live Well” framework, empowering councils to deliver tailored support through skills training, practical help and regional job opportunities rather than centralised penalties.
A flagship pledge involves redirecting billions from private developers into a major council house-building programme.
Claimants could look forward to more social housing, personalised employment support delivered closer to home, and a less punitive system overall — while retaining conditionality via local partnerships.
Burnham leaves Euston to become sworn in as MP
Pensioners and care: Local safety nets strengthened
Pensioners may gain from Mr Burnham’s deep experience and focus on social care.
As a former Health Secretary with a strong record in Greater Manchester on integrated services for the vulnerable, he is expected to champion devolved, council-led care models with better funding for home care, dementia support and reliable transport for older people.
He is likely to staunchly defend the pensions triple lock and winter fuel payments while pushing for a joined-up national care settlement to ease NHS pressures.
Northern pensioners in particular would benefit from his levelling-up instincts and preference for local decision-making over Whitehall diktats.
Distinct offer
At its heart, Mr Burnham’s vision represents a form of municipal socialism refreshed for the post-Starmer era: firmer immigration controls, community-focused welfare reform, and robust protections for older people.
His decisive Makerfield win — beating Reform UK by over 9,000 votes — and Sir Keir’s swift exit have turbo-charged his path to power.
Whether this agenda fully delivers will depend on the coming weeks of transition and delivery in government.
However, by outlining bold, concrete changes for migrants, benefit claimants and pensioners, Mr Burnham has already signalled a clear break from the current No.10 approach — one rooted in northern pragmatism and renewed Labour purpose.



