In a speech on Friday, he will begin to set out his vision for government, before becoming prime minister next week.

Andy Burnham will promise a new path for Britain in a speech as he becomes the new Labour leader on Friday. The Makerfield MP will be confirmed in the role at a special party conference in central London, ahead of taking over from Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister on Monday. In his speech, Burnham will say that when he is in Downing Street, the government will be "unashamedly Labour in our priorities" and have the "courage to fix the big things that politics has neglected". Burnham cemented his status as the sole leadership candidate after being backed by 379 Labour MPs and most trade unions linked to the party earlier this week. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, in her role as the chair of Labour's ruling national executive committee, will announce Burnham as the new leader at the conference. It will mark a rapid rise to power following the former Greater Manchester mayor's by-election win in Makerfield last month. Making the economy work for people across the UK will require a "new path to the one we've been on for the last 40 years", Burnham will say. In his first speech as Labour leader, he will also say that the Labour government will be "focused on driving growth in every postcode and returning power to communities" when he becomes prime minister.