Andy Burnham is rumoured to be ready to attempt a Westminster comeback yet again – and his eye is understood to be on the leadership.
Allies of the Greater Manchester mayor have claimed he has found a Labour MP ready to stand aside so he can re-enter Parliament and challenge Sir Keir Starmer for the party leadership.
This first step is crucial, as Burnham cannot stand in a leadership contest without a Westminster seat. In January, Labour’s ruling National Executive Committee blocked an attempt to secure him a place in the Commons at the Gorton & Denton by-election.
Shorts
Caption: FILE PHOTO: A Jet2 passenger plane is seen on the apron of Manchester Airport in Manchester, Britain, October 15, 2024. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo Photographer: Phil Noble Provider: REUTERS Source: REUTERS
TRAVEL
Higher air fares in Europe are ‘inevitable’
More expensive tickets for air passengers in Europe are “inevitable” due to the surging cost of jet fuel, the head of the International Air Transport Association, Willie Walsh, has said.
An unavoidable price hike
Looking to the future
Walsh told the BBC that airlines would not be able to absorb the extra costs of rising fuel prices over time.
Outgoing IAG chief Willie Walsh has criticised the Government’s rescue deal (Photo: Niall Carson/PA Wire)
German-owned Lufthansa are among the airlines that have cancelled flights (Photo: Michael Probst/AP)
Summer shortages
He added that there was still concern that the UK aviation industry could face fuel shortages over the the summer.
Disruption is inevitable
Even if the Strait of Hormuz reopened tomorrow, disruption may last into next year, he said.
Information on flights displayed on a screen at Tribhuvan International Airport after all evening flights to Sharjah, Doha, Dubai, Kuwait City, Abu Dhabi, and Dammam were cancelled following strikes on Iran. (Photo: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
What to expect
The UK and Europe typically rely on imports from the Middle East, so are now searching for alternatives.
Last week, the EU said there was no regulatory reason for US-grade jet fuel not to be used by European airlines.
The EU’s energy commissioner said there would not be serious short term issues.
But he could not rule out longer-term supply issues.
Walsh said there were still concerns for UK operators, but stressed there is no reason to panic.
An inescapable outcome
“There’s just no way airlines can absorb the additional costs they’re experiencing,” Walsh said.
He added: “Over time it’s inevitable that the high price of oil will be reflected in higher ticket prices”.
Flights could be cancelled due to rising jet fuel prices ((Photo: Craig Hastings/Moment RF/Getty Images)
Exclusive
2 min read
NEWS
Trump will struggle to restart the Iran war
Iran says it is ‘studying’ Tomahwak missiles recovered from the battlefield (Photo: Reuters)
Kieron Monks
Foreign News Writer
The Iran war has depleted America’s weapons stockpile, leaving Donald Trump vulnerable and constraining his ability to resume hostilities, military analysts say.
The US is in short supply
Dwindling supplies
Most advanced and defensive munitions in the US arsenal were burned through in six weeks of high intensity warfare.
Caption: Smoke rises following an explosion in southern Lebanon, as seen from northern Israel, Tuesday, May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) Photographer: Ariel Schalit Provider: AP Source: AP Copyright: Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
Caption: WASHINGTON D.C., UNITED STATES – SEPTEMBER 11: US President Donald Trump attends a ceremony at the Pentagon marking the 24th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in Washington D.C., United States, on September 11, 2025. (Photo by Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu via Getty Images) Photographer: Anadolu Provider: Anadolu via Getty Images Source: Anadolu
Trouble ahead
This could leave the Pentagon short in future conflicts, the Center for Strategic and International Studies found.
Iran remains strong
The majority of Iran’s missiles and launchers are believed to remain intact.
Iranian missiles along the Strait of Hormuz could threaten US warships and oil tankers (Photo: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)
Concern in the US government
Trump has called the shaky ceasefire “unbelievably weak” and on “massive life support”, as negotiations have proved difficult.
Donald Trump will have a major part to play in people’s mortgage bills (Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)JD Vance is having to walk a fine line as he positions himself for a possible presidential run (Photo: Alyssa Pointer/Reuters)
Senior figures in the Trump administration, such as Vice President JD Vance, have reportedly raised serious concerns over weapons depletion.
Cheaper alternatives
The report showed a shift toward cheaper, more plentiful weaponry, requiring US bombers to be closer to their targets and take greater risk.
Democrat Senator Mark Kelly said that classified briefings had raised concerns about the US’s readiness for future conflicts. “It’s shocking how deep we have gone into these magazines,” he said.
How will this impact the war?
The depletion is likely to be a “factor” in whether Trump resumes bombing of Iran, said Mark Cancian, co-author of the study.
“I think it would be a factor because of concerns regarding future conflicts, particularly China and the Western Pacific,” he said.
WORLD
5 min read
Analysis
4 min read
One third of weight lost after jabs is ‘from muscle and bones’
People using drugs such as Wegovy and Mounjaro are losing weight from muscle and bones instead of fat, a study has found.
Caption: EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY JANUARY 2
File photo dated 28/6/2025 of 5 mg Mounjaro KwikPen injections. Almost one in 10 people in Britain say they would buy weight-loss drugs from platforms such as Facebook and TikTok if they could not get a prescription from their doctor or pharmacy, a survey has found. It comes as health chiefs sounded the alarm over the risks associated with buying jabs on social media as pharmacists predict a surge in demand for the medication in the new year. Issue date: Friday January 2, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire Photographer: Peter Byrne Provider: Peter Byrne/PA Wire Source: PA
A clear difference
The study, published at the European Congress on Obesity, found that for people using exercise and diet control, muscle and bone loss accounted for 14 per cent of the weight they dropped.
Caption: A medicine distributor stores Mounjaro (tirzepatide) self-injecting GLP-1 prefilled pens and vials in a fridge at his office in Thane on March 20, 2026. A deluge of weight-loss drugs is set to transform the global fight against obesity as India prepares to unleash low-cost generic versions of injections like Ozempic after a key patent expired on March 20, 2026. (Photo by Indranil MUKHERJEE / AFP via Getty Images) Photographer: INDRANIL MUKHERJEE Provider: AFP via Getty Images Source: AFP Copyright: AFP or licensors Caption: EMBARGOED TO 2330 WEDNESDAY JANUARY 7
Picture posed by a model. File photo dated 03/03/14 of someone using a set of weighing scales. People on fat loss jabs need ongoing support, researchers have said, after a major study found they put all the weight back on much faster than traditional dieters. Researchers from the University of Oxford discovered that people on drugs including semaglutide (Wegovy) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro) lose weight during treatment but, on average, regain it within 20 months of stopping the jabs. Issue date: Wednesday January 7, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Chris Radburn/PA Wire Photographer: Chris Radburn Provider: Chris Radburn/PA Wire Source: PA Wire
In comparison, the figure was 32 per cent for those using weight-loss jabs.
What can be done?
Women are less likely to do strength training than men, but their need is arguably higher (Photo: FatCamera/Getty Images/E+) Copyright: Kaspi Creative Inc.
Strength is key
People using weight-loss jabs should do strength training, researchers said.
Risks for old age
If they don’t, they face a heightened risk of frailty, fractures and osteoporosis in later life.
Nurse and female senior patient with rollator on walk in autumn nature. Elderly care and home caregiver concept. – stock photo. (Photo: Getty)
Close up of male athlete gripping heavy green kettlebell during strength training exercise in cross training gym – stock photo. (Photo: Getty)
Time to head to the gym
“It is vital to incorporate structured exercise into all weight-loss approaches to help preserve that mass,” researchers said.
A closer look at what the study found
The study’s authors said that people who lost a significant amount of muscle were at a higher risk of regaining the weight after stopping the use of the drugs.
This is because muscle is “more metabolically active” than fat.
MONEY
3 min read
LIFESTYLE
5 min read
Caption: BRIGHTON, ENGLAND – MAY 13: Members of a search and rescue team are seen on Brighton beach on May 13, 2026 in Brighton, United Kingdom. Police say the bodies of three women have been recovered from the sea in Brighton, after emergency services received calls for concern over their welfare around 5:45 this morning. Police are working to identify the women and investigate the circumstances of their deaths. (Photo by Charlotte Coney/Getty Images) Photographer: Charlotte Coney Provider: Getty Images Source: Getty Images Europe
NEWS
Three young women found dead in the sea at Brighton beach
Sussex Police believe they have identified three women who died in the sea off Brighton on Wednesday morning adding investigators have “a number of hypotheses” about how they died.
It is believed the women may have entered the water from the beach near where they were found, before getting into difficulty in the early hours.
What happened?
It is not yet clear how the women came to be in the water, but the coastguard has ended its search and is not looking for any others.
Emergency teams were first called at about 5.45am on Wednesday.
This was after a report of a single person in the water near Black Rocks car park in Madeira Drive, which goes along the beachfront.
Two more bodies were then recovered from the sea nearby.
The women were reportedly about 20 to 30 years old and were first seen at Brighton Palace Pier before drifting to the marina.
A tragedy for the city
It is probably the most devastating news that I’ve received in this city for a very long time. I can’t think of anything more tragic or more horrendous really.
Bella sankey, Brighton & Hove city council leader
Caption: Bella Sankey, leader of Brighton & Hove City Council (Photo: Supplied) Photographer: Justine Desmond
Police call for information
Sankey said that the women had not yet been identified and their loved ones were still to be informed.
Sussex Police are exploring several lines of inquiry, and have asked anyone with information to get in touch.
OPINION
3 min read
But with over 90 MPs calling on Starmer to go following a historically bad set of local election results, pressure on the Prime Minister is growing.
Burnham’s record in government, his mayoralty in Manchester, and a string of high-profile disagreements with Downing Street give a clearer picture than most of what his premiership might look like.
Welfare and disability benefits
Burnham has been among the most vocal Labour figures to oppose the Government’s welfare cuts.
Speaking on BBC Radio Manchester in March 2025, following Rachel Reeves’s Spring Statement, he said the package – which targeted personal independence payments, carer’s allowance and universal credit – felt like “the wrong choice.”
He added that he struggled “to believe there will be no detrimental effect that further makes the lives of disabled people harder”.
However, Burnham stopped short of calling for a full reversal at the time.
The Mayor told the BBC that “the system does need fundamental reform and we have a large amount of agreement with the Government on that” – but he argued the pace and scale of the cuts went too far.
Burnham’s position implies that, while he might seek some reform of the welfare system, he is unlikely to continue the scale of cuts the current Government is pursuing.
The NHS
Health policy is where Burnham – who was health secretary between 2009 and 2010 under Gordon Brown – has the clearest record.
His central argument, developed over more than a decade, is that the NHS and social care must be fully integrated into a single publicly run system, free at the point of use – what he calls a National Care Service.
Burnham has said that forcing hospitals and care providers to compete for contracts is “an alien ideology” that fragments care.
As Mayor of Greater Manchester, he has piloted this model through the city-region’s integrated health and social care partnership, overseeing a £6bn budget.
In March 2026, he secured a deal to appoint the UK’s first health commissioner, jointly accountable to him and the health secretary.
As health secretary in 2009, Burnham introduced the “preferred provider” policy, making the NHS the first choice for new contracts over private firms.
A Burnham premiership would almost certainly look to extend that principle nationally – a sharp departure from Wes Streeting’s willingness to use private sector capacity to cut waiting times.
Taxes and the economy
Burnham’s most consistent economic argument is that Britain taxes work too heavily and wealth too lightly.
Speaking to Sky News in June 2025, he said: “We’ve overtaxed people’s work and we’ve undertaxed people’s assets and wealth and that balance should be put more right.”
His proposed remedies are specific: a revaluation of council tax bands – unchanged since 1991 – land value taxation reform, and replacing inheritance tax with a “care levy” to fund a National Care Service, with the wealthiest contributing the most.
But it is his comments on borrowing that have caused the most turbulence.
In an interview with The New Statesman in September 2025, Burnham said politicians needed to “get beyond this thing of being in hock to the bond markets”.
Burnham at a fringe event at the Labour Party conference in September 2025 (Photo: Paul Ellis/AFP)
Starmer responded the following day, likening his proposals to the Truss mini-Budget of 2022 which he said had been “a disaster for working people”,
The Prime Minister added: “The same would be true if you abandoned fiscal rules in favour of spending.”
Burnham pushed back at an event at Labour’s Liverpool conference, saying he would “stick to fiscal rules.”
He went further in February 2026, telling the Resolution Foundation think-tank that he had “never said Britain should ignore the bond market”, and insisted his words had been “twisted”.
The episode nonetheless points to a vulnerability. His calls for renationalisation, higher wealth taxes and greater public control of essential services could spook financial markets.
Immigration
Burnham has been critical of the Government’s increasingly hardline stance on immigration.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme in November 2025, he said he agreed with Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood that “root-and-branch reform of the system” was needed, but added: “I do have a concern about leaving people without the ability to settle.”
He was particularly critical of Mahmood’s plan to quadruple the length of time asylum seekers must wait to gain permanent residency – from five to 20 years – with status reviews every two-and-a-half years.
Burnham said the policy would leave people “in a sense of limbo and unable to integrate”, and argued it would be “better to stick with the decision of long-term leave to remain.”
His overall position suggests he would pursue lower net migration figures less aggressively than the current administration, placing greater weight on the rights of those already in the country to settle and contribute.
Foreign affairs
Burnham’s foreign policy positions are more developed than his rivals’, shaped partly by his public break with Starmer over Gaza.
In October 2023, the mayor became one of the first senior Labour figures to call for a ceasefire, breaking with the party leadership alongside London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar.
He warned Starmer not to brand MPs who disagreed on the issue “as disloyal or as if they don’t care about innocent lives.”
In June 2025, Burnham joined three other party figures in urging the Government to recognise Palestinian statehood “without further delay or equivocation.” The Government did so in September.
On Europe, he has gone further than any of his rivals. Speaking at a fringe event at Labour’s Liverpool conference in September 2025, he said he hoped to see the UK rejoin the EU in his lifetime – a position well beyond the Government’s current reset – and has repeatedly described Brexit as a financial “disaster.”
As prime minister, that would likely mean a more assertive stance on Israel and Gaza than Starmer has taken, and greater ambition on the EU relationship than the current reset allows for.