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Will Andy Burnham change Britain, or preserve the status quo?

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak* 
Working people in Britain should be cautious about expecting a fundamental political transformation if power shifts from Sir Keir Starmer to Andy Burnham. Over the past two decades, British politics has been characterised less by ideological contestation than by continuity. Governments have changed, but the underlying political and economic assumptions have remained remarkably consistent.
One of the earliest indications of what a Burnham administration might represent is the appointment of James Purnell as Chief of Staff. Purnell's career—spanning government, academia, media, and, most recently, the corporate lobbying firm Flint Global—signals continuity rather than change. His appointment sends a reassuring message to corporations and financial interests that a Burnham government would remain committed to the prevailing economic consensus. It sends a far less reassuring message to Britain's working people.
Different political leaders often pursue remarkably similar policies, producing familiar outcomes: stagnant living standards, widening inequalities, and growing insecurity for ordinary citizens. Successive governments have embraced an economic model that seeks to extract ever greater revenue from working people while protecting the interests of capital. It resembles the old saying about trying to squeeze jaggery from a red ant—an impossible and ultimately self-defeating exercise. Yet this has become the governing logic of Britain's political establishment.
Britain has long been described as a "nation of shopkeepers," a phrase popularly associated with Napoleon and often linked to Britain's commercial culture. Whether coined by Napoleon or not, the expression captures an enduring political mentality in which commerce, profit and market calculation increasingly dominate public life. Human welfare, social justice and democratic empowerment are too often subordinated to the demands of business and finance.
Seen in this context, Purnell's appointment is politically significant. Few Chiefs of Staff have brought such extensive experience across government, corporate consultancy and public institutions. For business leaders, he represents familiarity and continuity. For organised labour and the working class, however, there is little evidence that their interests will enjoy comparable influence within the centre of government. This reflects a broader transformation of the Labour Party, whose political direction has increasingly converged with that of the Conservatives on many core economic questions.
The British establishment continues to bind together elements of finance, corporate power, sections of the petty bourgeoisie and increasingly reactionary political forces. Within this settlement, meaningful alternatives are marginalised while neoliberal assumptions are treated as common sense. Labour and the Conservatives now occupy much of the same ideological terrain, sustaining a broad Thatcherite consensus that has endured long after Margaret Thatcher left office.
This consensus extends beyond economics. It has encouraged an entrepreneurial culture centred more on small-scale commercial aspiration than on productive innovation or industrial transformation. It has also reinforced conspicuous consumption, individualism and market competition while neglecting collective welfare and democratic participation. The result has been a fragmented society marked by deepening inequality, declining public services and growing political alienation.
As inequalities widen, socialist alternatives are increasingly portrayed as unrealistic, while protest movements and acts of political dissent are frequently criminalised or delegitimised. Democratic space narrows as demands for structural reform are dismissed in favour of managerial solutions that leave existing power relations largely untouched. Meanwhile, sections of the political class and media cultivate exclusionary narratives of national identity that normalise racism, xenophobia, sexism and other forms of discrimination in the name of protecting supposedly indigenous interests.
If Andy Burnham were to become Prime Minister, the early indications suggest that his government would consolidate rather than fundamentally challenge this political settlement. Britain's deeply embedded structures of economic inequality, corporate influence and institutional privilege are unlikely to be dismantled through incremental managerial reform alone. Instead, they risk being reproduced under a different political leadership.
The politics of petitioning for modest reforms has reached its limits. Britain requires a democratic transformation that redistributes economic power, revitalises public institutions and places collective wellbeing above private profit. Such change will not emerge solely from Westminster. It will depend upon the independent organisation of working people and the rebuilding of movements capable of challenging the political and economic consensus that has dominated Britain for more than four decades.
Without such a politics, changing governments will continue to mean little more than changing managers of the same unequal system.
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*Academic based in UK

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