New No 10 North plan will rebalance power in Britain, Burnham promises
PA MediaA new Downing Street team based in Manchester and labelled 'No 10 North' will "oversee the biggest rebalancing of power our country has ever seen", Andy Burnham has said in his first speech since launching a bid to be the next prime minister.
Speaking in Manchester, he vowed to "redistribute power" across the UK in an effort to "drive good growth in every postcode".
He also promised the "biggest council house building programme" since the post-war period; a "complete rethink" of education and cuts to welfare in a "fair and lasting way".
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said Burnham backed devolution because he "doesn't know what to do so he wants to pass the problem to someone else".
Burnham announced his intention to stand as prime minister to replace Sir Keir Starmer last Monday, shortly after being elected as the MP for Makerfield.
So far, he is the only Labour MP to announce, and if he remains the sole candidate he could become the next prime minister as early as 20 July.
Speaking at the People's History Museum, Burnham addressed an audience which included Steve Rotheram, Tracy Brabin and Oliver Coppard - his former mayoral colleagues from Liverpool, West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire.
He provided an overview of the direction his government would take but, unusually for a political speech, did not take questions at the end.
His key message was a commitment to devolving power to local communities away from senior civil servants in Whitehall, which Burnham said had "blocked" progress in Manchester.
"It is time for Whitehall to accept that growth cannot be ordered from the top down - it can only be nurtured from the bottom up."
He did not spell out what would be given to different areas but suggested regions would see "greater public control of essential services" such as water, energy and transport and that London could have more say over education and housing.
He also said there would be "new opportunities to extend devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland by taking power deeper down".
"The people of Dundee and Bangor feel just as distant from Holyrood and the Senedd as they do from Westminster," he added.
One of the biggest rows between Labour backbench MPs and Sir Keir concerned his attempts to cut the welfare bill.
Burnham has previously said he wouldn't be "squeamish" about reducing the bill and his speech in Manchester promised to find cuts in a "way that is fair and lasting", adding: "Where young people need mental health support, that will be provided as part of in-work support."
He also said employment support could be devolved to mayors and that more help should be provided through the grassroots organisations that "people trust... rather than going to places that they fear".
Former Labour minister Alan Milburn, who served alongside Burnham in the last Labour government, is currently carrying out a review into getting young people into work.
Burnham said he was taking his findings seriously" and that there needed to be a "complete rethink of how we support the next generation to succeed" adding: "It has to start with the education system."
He said that the school system should no longer be focused on university, and promised a greater emphasis on technical education.
In a bid to reassure the financial markets, he said his plans would be backed by "the stability that comes from sound public finances", promising a "10 year mission to raise people's living standards".
He acknowledged that "people can't wait forever for change", saying: "I will do my very best to deliver it, and whilst not taking risks the public finances, will seek to give Britain some breathing space as soon as I can."
Speaking before Burnham's speech, Badenoch said: "A lot of politicians hide behind devolution because they don't have any answers.
"So they say 'why don't we let local people take it up' but they don't give them the real tools for power.
"We have seen so much go wrong because right now politicians have outsourced decisions."
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said "People have heard this sort of talk before only to be badly let down because nothing changes – Burnham mustn't repeat that mistake.
"If he's serious about firing up growth and cutting the cost of living, Burnham must ditch Labour's old red lines on Europe and take Britain into the single market."
Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice criticised Burnham's decision not to take questions at the end of the speech.
"No debate in Parliament. No scrutiny from MPs until September. Power without accountability."

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