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World

UK's Reeves backs Burnham for prime minister, defers on own role

  • Reeves, a close ally of Starmer, said no one ​could doubt her commitment to the outgoing prime minister, adding that she had worked alongside him for six years
Published June 25, 2026 Updated June 25, 2026 11:47am
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

LONDON: British finance minister Rachel Reeves said on Thursday she was backing Andy Burnham to be the next prime minister, brushing off reports ​she could lose her role and be moved to a more ‌junior post if he took over the Labour Party.

“I’m supporting Andy to be prime minister,” she told the BBC, after Burnham emerged as the only declared candidate to ​replace Keir Starmer, who announced his resignation on Monday.

Starmer said he would ​oversee an orderly transition after bowing to pressure over weak poll ⁠ratings and poor local election results, triggering a leadership contest set ​to begin on July 9.

Reeves, a close ally of Starmer, said no one ​could doubt her commitment to the outgoing prime minister, adding that she had worked alongside him for six years.

Burnham, who is the only candidate to have put his ​name forward, is widely expected to be installed without a challenge, meaning ​he could become prime minister by mid-July. If appointed, he would be Britain’s seventh leader ‌in ⁠a decade.

Asked about reports she could be demoted, Reeves said cabinet decisions would be a matter for Burnham.

“I’m not going to pre-empt the decisions that the new prime minister will make. I’m backing Andy. I think he’d ​be a great ​prime minister, but ⁠those are his decisions, not mine,” she said.

She said she stood ready to provide targeted, temporary support on energy ​bills later this year.

Reeves said the next leader should ​stick to ⁠her fiscal rules, including balancing day-to-day spending with tax revenues and reducing debt as a share of output.

Burnham has previously signalled he would keep current ⁠borrowing ​rules in place.

“I know that whoever is prime ​minister and chancellor in the future will inherit a stronger economy than the one I ​inherited two years ago,” she said.

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