Dominic
932 posts

Dominic retweetledi

@mearchiavelli @BenABrittain I think he means call a short election during honeymoon period but yea the context is slightly different
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@BenABrittain Not comparable at all though. Carney inherited a minority government and an election was mandated in a few months anyway. Burnham is not required to call one for a few years and he has a landslide majority.
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I did say a few weeks ago, Burnham will likely adopt the Carney strategy
Kate Ferguson@kateferguson4
EXCL: Andy Burnham is considering holding a snap general election if he becomes PM. thesun.co.uk/news/39262450/…
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🚨🇧🇩 NEW: An albino buffalo nicknamed “Donald Trump” will not be sacrificed for Eid al-Adha after the Bangladeshi government intervened
The buffalo will now be moved to a zoo in Dhaka due to “security concerns”
[@SkyNews]

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Dominic retweetledi

🚨 NEW: Andy Burnham's allies say he will back Shabana Mahmood’s changes to the immigration system
[@guardian]
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Dominic retweetledi

The chief whips response to me today after I raised the smears and briefings against me on mental health. Remember @Samaritans are there for you. If you are finding this difficult please don’t think that you are alone. They don’t judge, they just listen.

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Dominic retweetledi

Dominic retweetledi
Dominic retweetledi

Andy Burnham unveils plans for reindustrialisation, taking stronger public control of essentials, and also calls for a council house building programme on a scale not seen since after World War II
mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
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Dominic retweetledi

Always good to see Bee Network buses in the background.
I heard someone brought them under public control, capped fares at £2, and got free travel for pensioners anytime.
Oh yes. @AndyBurnhamGM.
Nigel Farage MP@Nigel_Farage
Reform activists out campaigning in the Makerfield by-election today.
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Dominic retweetledi
Dominic retweetledi

I can confirm that I will be requesting the permission of the NEC to stand in the Makerfield by-election.
I grew up in this area and have lived here for 25 years. I care deeply about it and its people. I know they have been let down by national politics.
Ten years ago, I decided to leave Westminster. Why? Because, after 16 years, I came to the conclusion that our national political system does not work for areas like ours. I learnt this fighting its failure to invest in the Wigan borough, for justice for the Hillsborough families and against its treatment of Greater Manchester during the pandemic.
Over the last decade, I have been challenging this failure from the outside and building a new and better way of doing politics. We have built Greater Manchester into the fastest-growing city-region in the UK and put buses back under public control, introducing a £2 fare cap to help people with cost-of-living pressures.
However, there is only so much that can be done from Greater Manchester. Much bigger change is needed at a national level if everyday life is to be made more affordable again. This is why I now seek people’s support to return to Parliament: to bring the change we have brought to Greater Manchester to the whole of the UK and make politics work properly for people.
Millions are struggling and they need the Labour Government to succeed. It has already made changes to make life better for them in its first two years. After this week, we owe it to people to come back together as a Labour movement, giving the Prime Minister and the Government the space and stability they need as the by-election takes place.
I want to recognise the difficult decision taken by Josh Simons and the sacrifice he and his family are making. I have worked closely with him as Mayor on issues like flooding and illegal waste dumping and have seen first-hand how effective he has been. He has put the communities of Makerfield first, made a real difference for them and should take great pride in that.
Finally, I truly do not take a single vote for granted and will work hard to regain the trust of people in the Makerfield constituency, many of whom have long supported our party but lost faith in recent times. We will change Labour for the better and make it a party you can believe in again.
ENDS
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Dominic retweetledi
Dominic retweetledi

@Nassreddin2002 Burnham will get in, hes extremely popular in Manchester like extremely popular
People will also vote for Bunrham knowing it will get rid of Starmer as well
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So... this is the seat where Burnham may run
Next to Gorton and Denton
The Greens will try to take him down, especially as they got twice as many votes in Manchester Rusholme in 2024

Jane Merrick@janemerrick23
NEW: Andy Burnham allies claim the Manchester mayor has found an MP to step aside so he can return to Parliament and challenge Starmer for leader - and will announce it tomorrow - by @cazjwheeler @theipaper inews.co.uk/news/politics/…
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Dominic retweetledi
Dominic retweetledi

Why I have decided to back Andy Burnham for Labour leadership camdennewjournal.com/keir#.VXsVkoEg…
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Dominic retweetledi

Our party has suffered a historic defeat.
Many good Labour colleagues have lost their seats despite working hard for those they represented. We have lost good Labour administrations and lost the chance for more.
What we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change. This may be our last chance.
The Labour Party must now live up to our name: we must be the party of working people.
We’ve heard the same on the doorstep as we’ve seen in the polls - the cost of living is the top issue for voters of all parties. People have turned to populists and nationalists because we have not done enough to fix it.
Living standards are barely higher than they were a decade and a half ago. People feel hopeless - that the cost of living crisis will never end, and now they see oil and gas companies use global instability to post record profits.
Once again, ordinary people are paying the price for decisions they didn’t make. It’s no wonder that across the UK, working people feel the system is rigged against them.
Things can be so much better than this. Countries including Spain and Canada have shown that economies can grow and people can thrive when governments stay true to labour and social democratic values and put people first. We need to learn from that.
In London, we lost young people who fear they will never afford a home. In my patch and across the north, we lost working people whose wages are too low and costs too high. In Scotland and Wales, people do not currently see Labour as the answer.
We are in danger of becoming a party of the well-off, not working people.
The Peter Mandelson scandal showed a toxic culture of cronyism.
Decisions like cutting winter fuel allowance just weren’t what people expected from a Labour government.
For too long, successive governments have allowed wealth and power to concentrate at the top without a plan to ensure the benefits of economic growth are shared fairly. The result is an economy that does not work for the majority, with wealth concentrated in too few hands. This level of inequality, alongside squeezed living standards, is the outcome of a model built on deregulation, privatisation, and trickle-down economics.
But we have the chance to fix this.
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