A few facts:
A sub-group of the Labour National Executive Committee (NEC), effectively the ruling leadership group of the party, met on 25 January 2026 to decide whether Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham could be allowed to seek Labour’s nomination as a candidate in the upcoming Gorton and Denton by-election.
As a directly elected mayor, Burnham was required under party rules to seek NEC permission before being put forward as a parliamentary candidate, hence the vote took place before any member ballot or local selection process. The committee voted 8 to 1 against allowing him to proceed.
The main formal justification emphasised in official statements was:
Avoiding an “unnecessary mayoral election” in Greater Manchester if Burnham were elected MP, which would trigger a separate vote to replace him as mayor. The NEC said such an election would use substantial amounts of public money and party resources at a time when the party wants to focus on the cost-of-living crisis and campaigning in upcoming local, Scottish and Welsh elections. They argued that even if Labour would be confident of holding the mayoralty, risking control of Greater Manchester was not in the party’s best interests.
This was the official, public line given by the party when announcing the NEC’s decision.