Burnham claims he is ‘completely committed’ to his mayoral job as poll says Labour would overtake Reform UK under his leadership – UK politics live | Politics

Burnham claims he is ‘completely committed’ to his Greater Manchester mayoral job

Q: What would you do if an MP offered to make a parliamentary seat available to you?

Burnham said he would not answer a hypothetical question.

He went back to his point about wanting to see a plan for the government, and about that mattering more than personalities.

Q: But if Keir Starmer read your comments, he would feel miffed. He would think you were undermining him. What do you say to that?

Burnham said he would say only a few days ago he was working “hard behind the scenes to land the Hillsborough law”, to get the plans in a form that would be acceptable to the families.

He said people do not feel the government is on their side.

That is what the party needs to do, “before you talk about any personality”.

Q: What would you say to people in Manchester who say you are not focused on the city any more?

Burnham said he would say he is here.

I would say to [callers to the programme] I’m here because I’m focused on here, and I’m about to take all of your calls, as I did last week.

And I am working, as I’ve always done, in dealing with the issues that affect people here. And I think that commitment I make to this programme is proof of that.

And I love everything about this job. I love what’s happening here in Greater Manchester. I’m completely committed to it.

Share

Key events

Blair’s thinktank says digital ID could be ‘one of most important steps taken by any government to make lives easier’

Tony Blair has been pushing ID cards for 20 years. One he was prime minister, his government passed legislation for a voluntary ID card scheme shortly before he stood down. But the scheme was only just being implemented when the Conservative/Lib Dem coalition took office, and they scrapped it with glee.

In recent years Blair’s thinktank, the Tony Blair Institute (TBI) has been arguing for a digital version.

Responding to reports that Keir Starmer is about to announced that he is going ahead with this idea (see 4.14pm), Alexander Iosad, the TBI’s director of government innovation, said:

Make no mistake, if the government announces a universal digital ID to help improve our public services, it would be one of the most important steps taken by this or any government to make British citizens’ everyday lives easier and build trust.

How we experience government could be about to transform, for the better. Not only can digital ID help us to tackle illegal migration, but done correctly and responsibly, it can open the door to a whole new model of services that come to you when you need them.

Our polling released just days ago shows that not only do 62% of Brits spanning the whole spectrum of politics want digital ID, but that they want it to do more than just prove who they are. Digital ID can and should be a gateway to government services whether that’s reporting potholes or even voting.

Share

Source link

Hot this week

UK’s Jukebox launches $15m fund to invest in music, culture, tech startups

UK-headquartered PR company Jukebox expanding into the venture capital...

How to Cook Meatballs – NYT Cooking

Our recipe tester called one of them “miraculous.” Source link...

From shotguns to AI missiles: How Europe is countering drone threats — Explained

Following recent drone incursions from suspected Russia,...

Topics

spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img