Burnham on course to be PM, but what would his No 10 operation look like?

BBC News ·

Burnham on course to be PM, but what would his No 10 operation look like?

Attention is therefore increasingly focused on what Burnham in No 10 would look like. On his policy and priorities, there are still a lot of questions in search of answers. …

Attention is therefore increasingly focused on what Burnham in No 10 would look like. On his policy and priorities, there are still a lot of questions in search of answers. We are starting to get some answers on his top team, however. Rachel Reeves will not be his chancellor. That is hardly a surprise for an incoming prime minister vowing to offer change. But it is still a big deal: Reeves has not only been chancellor for two years but spent years in opposition fashioning Labour's economic approach. She is likely to be offered a more junior cabinet position - though it is worth noting how rare it is for a chancellor to move downwards in the cabinet. With the exception of Nadhim Zahawi, who spent a few brief weeks as Boris Johnson's chancellor, you have to go back to 1983 for an example of a chancellor moving into a more junior cabinet job. So who replaces her? The frontrunner is widely considered to be Ed Miliband, the energy secretary. He urged Sir Keir not to block Burnham's first attempted return to Parliament in January and has been seen as supportive of Burnham's ambitions ever since. Miliband's advocates argue that he is exactly the kind of chancellor Burnham would need to make good on his ambitions to transform the British economy. They also argue that - whatever MPs think of his agenda, particularly on the green transition - he has shown in the past two years an uncommon ability to drive the government machine. …

Original source: BBC News

Mentioned

Parliament · John Healey · Ed Miliband · Yvette Cooper · Wes Streeting · Rachel Reeves