SNP claims ‘nothing of substance for Scotland’ from likely PM Andy Burnham

WorldPolitics
29 Jun 2026 • 9:22 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

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SNP claims ‘nothing of substance for Scotland’ from likely PM Andy Burnham

Andy Burnham, the likely next prime minister, offered “nothing of substance for Scotland” as he set out his vision to transform Britain, the SNP has insisted.

While the new Makerfield MP – the frontrunner to replace Sir Keir Starmer – promised there would be “new opportunities to extend devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland”, his speech failed to include details of what these changes could be.

SNP Westminster leader Dave Doogan claimed afterwards that the former Greater Manchester mayor was “making the same empty promises” to Scotland “while keeping all of Westminster’s most damaging policies – Brexit, austerity cuts and Tory spending rules”.

Mr Doogan said: “The SNP has been calling for meaningful devolution for years but there is nothing of substance for Scotland in these proposals – and nothing that will fundamentally improve people’s lives.”

His comments came after a speech where Mr Burnham pledged to set up “Number 10 North” – an outpost of 10 Downing Street based in Manchester to drive his plans to rewire the British state.

In what was his first major speech since Sir Keir Starmer announced he would be leaving Downing Street, Mr Burnham promised: “The days of Whitehall fighting the devolution of power into the regions and nations are over, for good.”

Adding that people in Dundee and Bangor “feel just as distant from Holyrood and the Senedd as they do from Westminster”, he said his new “Number 10 north will be the nerve centre of a rewired Britain” and would be “the conduit through which we redistribute power and resources across the UK”.

But Mr Doogan accused the Makerfield MP of setting out “top-down, England-centric plans without even involving the devolved governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the conversation”.

Speaking about Mr Burnham, the SNP MP added: “He seems to think Manchester is the north of the UK, when it’s barely the north of England.”

The SNP Westminster leader insisted: “If Andy Burnham was serious about devolution then he should start by devolving the energy powers the Scottish Parliament has already voted for – instead of keeping control over Scotland’s energy at Westminster.

“And if he genuinely believes people should have more control over their future, then he must explain why he wants to block people in Scotland from having any choice over ours – by denying Scotland’s democratic right to choose our own future with independence.”

Meanwhile Scottish Greens’ local government spokesperson, Kristopher Leask, said that Mr Burnham’s speech was “big on rhetoric but short on policy, leaving people in Scotland with more questions than answers”.

The Green MSP stated: “Burnham is right that the UK is far too centralised, but this was clearly a speech aimed at the English regions, with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland treated as an afterthought.”

Mr Leask argued there was a “clear case” for decisions on energy, employment and workers’ rights to be taken in Scotland – but said the likely future Labour leader had “offered no meaningful detail” on if this would happen.

He added: “One of the biggest and most immediate tests will come in how he responds to our pro-independence Scottish Parliament calling for the power to hold the referendum that Scotland just voted for.

“If Labour wants to distribute power but refuses to trust the people of Scotland with a choice over its future, then its commitment to devolution rings hollow.”

Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay also said that Mr Burnham “needs to flesh out what new powers he’s actually talking about”.

But he added: “Scots will be instinctively alarmed at the SNP government being handed even more control, given their astonishing record of failure.

“Social security spending is just one area where the SNP demanded more powers only to create a system that is worse value for taxpayers and wide open to abuse.”

Mr Findlay added: “Weak Labour politicians seem incapable of understanding that they’ll never pacify the SNP by constantly extending devolution.

“John Swinney doesn’t want devolution to work because his only interest is his lifelong obsession of taking Scotland out of the United Kingdom.”

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