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Lucy Powell agrees Ed Miliband would be ‘good’ as Andy Burnham’s chancellor

Lucy Powell agrees Ed Miliband would be ‘good’ as Andy Burnham’s chancellor

Ed Miliband would make a “good” chancellor to Andy Burnham. Labour’s deputy leader, Lucy Powell, has said, before the likely next prime minister’s first major speech on the economy since he returned to Westminster.

Powell, who served as Miliband’s chief of staff in opposition. is close to the former party leader, appeared to endorse him to run the Treasury – although some in Burnham’s camp acknowledge such a move could be politically risky.

But with ministers jostling for Burnham’s ear, Powell added that speculation around cabinet posts in a future government was “unedifying”. the focus should be on creating and securing jobs across the country instead.

Asked whether she thought Miliband would be good at running the Treasury, she told the BBC: “Yes I do actually,. actually I think this is a slightly distracting conversation, because I think we’ve all got a really important job to do.”

Miliband remains the frontrunner for the role of chancellor. with a view in Burnham’s team that he has what it takes to smash through Treasury orthodoxy to pursue a more radical economy. But they also acknowledge that Burnham would expend some political capital by appointing him.

Some inside Labour are concerned that putting Miliband in the Treasury could unsettle the markets, while big business is sceptical. several of the big unions are opposed, as a result of his position on the North Sea and relentless focus on the net zero agenda.

In his first big policy speech since Keir Starmer’s resignation as prime minister, Burnham is expected on Monday to announce radical plans to devolve powers. money from Whitehall to England’s regions – but also to do more to reassure the markets.

One ally suggested that Burnham’s focus on fiscal responsibility could indicate. way he was planning to go with his chancellor – with his team saying he had not yet made a final decision. “The more boring the speech is, the more likely it is that Ed will be chancellor,” they said.

Others have mooted Shabana Mahmood for the role – although she is understood to be keen to stay at the Home Office – or the former health secretary Wes Streeting. The senior Labour MPs Yvette Cooper and John Healey have also been touted.

If the energy secretary does make it to the Treasury. Labour insiders suggested he might have to make an early move – perhaps on the North Sea or welfare spending – to prove to his detractors he was serious about fiscal responsibility.

“Ed would also have to do some things we are already doing much louder, make a show of ditching a few unpopular things,. pick a few that are new, one of which has to be a cost of living intervention,” one source said.

In her interview with the BBC, Powell said the cost of living should be her party’s focus. not “tittle-tattle” about Cabinet positions.

Powell also said Burnham, a close friend. now fellow Greater Manchester MP, was “very keen” on changing the culture in the Labour party, which she has previously described as a “boys’ club” beset by too many anonymous briefings to the media.

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“That’s something I’m very keen that we really tackle. change, and I know that it’s the one thing that I have discussed with Andy in recent days and weeks that he also is very keen on changing that culture,” she said.

“It’s about valuing, respecting, and hearing and acting on all the views of all of our colleagues. It’s about building. creating a team where people are not appointed because they’re part of a political faction or because they’re part of a friendship group, but on meritocracy because of their experience, their passion, their commitment,” she added.

Also appearing on the BBC programme, the communities. local government secretary, Steve Reed, said Burnham would stick to the fundamentals of Labour’s 2024 manifesto, including the fiscal rules, but there would be a “shift in emphasis and focus”.

Reed, previously a Starmer loyalist but who has now said he would back Burnham, said the putative prime minister would “want to change some things”, including on devolution. handing more power to communities.

Reed. Powell both ruled out holding a general election now, even though Labour’s deputy leader had called for one when Liz Truss was instated as prime minister under the Tories.

“What people need to see now is us getting on with the job. delivering on the manifesto we were elected on only two years ago,” Powell said, adding that she had called for one after Truss because that was a “particular time”.

“We live in a parliamentary democracy where the prime minister is chosen by MPs,” she said.

Reed said there was no need for an election because the UK did not have a presidential system. the public “want us to get on with the job”. He warned his colleagues to stick together behind Burnham. “Fundamentally, we all hang together, or we all hang separately,” he added.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jun/28/labour-lucy-powell-ed-miliband-chancellor

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