Native World News

Josh Simons stood down for Burnham as Labour 'imploded'

Josh Simons stood down for Burnham as Labour 'imploded'

The MP who will step down to allow Andy Burnham a chance to challenge the prime minister has said it "was too big an opportunity to miss".

Josh Simons, the Makerfield Labour MP, told BBC Radio Manchester the Labour Party had been "imploding" over the last week.

On Thursday. Simons announced his intention to give up his seat in the Commons, allowing the Greater Manchester mayor to put himself forward as a parliamentary candidate.

He won the seat by 5,399 votes at the last election, with Reform UK candidate Robert Kenyon coming in second.

The 32-year-old father-of-three. who has only been an MP for two years, said stepping aside was the "most difficult decision of my life".

Simons said: "It was a decision I took with my wife. We decided as a family.

"We've been speaking about this for a few days. It's been incredibly fast, if I'm honest.

He added: "We were heading for a leadership election with the Labour Party split into different factions,. there was no hope, no energy that anything would change…"

He said that Makerfield was "where Andy Burnham has lived for 25 years" and that he was "coming home".

"Labour needs to change and the whole government needs to change," he said.

Simons' decision came as Labour MPs began calling for Sir Keir Starmer to set a timetable to quit his job following Labour's disastrous showing in the local elections last week. growing backbench discontentment with his leadership.

On Thursday, Health Secretary Wes Streeting resigned from the government, signalling a future intentions to challenge Starmer on the same day another possible candidate, former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner, claimed an investigation into her tax affairs by His Majesty's Revenue. Customs was over.

Burnham. who has been metro mayor of Greater Manchester since 2017, needs to be an MP again to lead the party.

Bury-born Simons said he thinks Burnham can win the seat in an area where Reform swept the board in last week's elections.

He added: "It's gonna be a really, really, really tough fight. That's the truth.

"Sometimes in history, when people take risks. they say, 'I think this is the right fight to have, but I don't know if we're going to win it', that's what changes the story. That's what changes the course of things.

"I do not know what will happen in that by-election."

Simons said he had not been promised any new job.

"There's some mad chat going around that I'm running for mayor of Manchester now,. I can tell you live right now, I'm not doing that," he said.

"The first thing I'm going to do is spend some time with my three-week-old son.

"It's been a bit of a whirlwind since he was born, and now this. I'm going to spend some time with my wife and my three kids and my newborn son.

"And most importantly, I'm going to be helping to win this by-election."

Listen to the best ofBBC Radio Manchester on Soundsand follow BBC Manchester onFacebook,X, andInstagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgz04drwxko

Discussion

Sign in to join the thread, react, and share images.