David Miliband says he is optimistic about potential Burnham government
BBC News ·

The former Foreign Secretary David Miliband has said he is "optimistic" about the prospect of Andy Burnham becoming the next prime minister. …
The former Foreign Secretary David Miliband has said he is "optimistic" about the prospect of Andy Burnham becoming the next prime minister. Miliband told a think tank event in London on Friday that Burnham, who is widely expected to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as Labour leader and prime minister, has "this openness and energy that I think is very attractive and positive". He said the expected appointment of the former Labour cabinet minister James Purnell as Burnham's Downing Street chief of staff was "fantastic". "I haven't lost my youthful optimism," Miliband told an event organised by the Center for Global Development think tank. "Andy Burnham, James [Purnell] and I came into the House of Commons at the same time in 2001 and I think [Burnham has] always had this remarkable ability to listen, to connect, to process data and ideas and information." There has been speculation Miliband, the older brother of Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, could return to front-line politics in a Burnham government. He quit as MP for South Shields in 2023 to take up the posts of president and CEO of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) - jobs he still holds. Usually a prime minister's cabinet is made up of MPs from the House of Commons. But in theory, Miliband could join the cabinet if he is given a peerage in the House of Lords, as former Prime Minister David Cameron was when he became foreign secretary in Rishi Sunak's Conservative government. …
Original source: BBC News
Mentioned
Ed Miliband · Keir Starmer · David Cameron · Downing Street · House of Lords