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

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

ReutersThu, June 25, 2026 at 6:33 AM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves leaves 11 Downing Street on the day she is to deliver the Mais Lecture, in London, Britain, March 17, 2026. REUTERS/Isabel Infantes/File Photo

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) - 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.

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"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.

(Reporting ​by Sam Tabahriti, Editing by Paul Sandle)

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