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The Pound Just Hit A One-Month Low After Andy Burnham Eyed Parliament

Published May 15, 2026
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Summary:
  • The pound fell to a one-month low on Thursday after Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham said he wants to run for Parliament.
  • Labour MP Josh Simons is stepping down from his Makerfield seat so Burnham can run for it.
  • Sterling's drop reflects worry about a leadership fight inside Labour while Prime Minister Keir Starmer is already under pressure.

Currency markets don't usually move on a mayor's career plans. They moved on this one.

The pound fell to its lowest level in a month on Thursday after Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, said he wants a path back to Parliament. The market read that as the opening shot in a fight for the top of the Labour Party.

That fight would land on a UK economy that is already wobbling.

A Seat Opens For Burnham

Burnham can't challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the Labour leadership without a seat in the House of Commons. He doesn't have one - but he is suddenly close to getting one.

Josh Simons, the Labour MP for Makerfield, said he is stepping down. In his own words, Simons is "standing aside so that Andy Burnham can return to his home, fight to re-enter parliament, and if elected, drive the change our country is crying out for."

The Makerfield seat sits in the Manchester area, where Burnham already serves as mayor. The runway could not be cleaner.

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Why The Currency Market Cared

Starmer is already on shaky ground after Labour lost a big chunk of its "red wall" voters in North West England to Reform UK in last week's local elections. The party's poll numbers have been sliding for months.

Burnham polls better than Starmer outside Westminster, so a real leadership challenge from him would mean months of political fighting for an economy trying to find its footing.

Investors don't like that mix, and they sold the pound on it.

A Quick Read On UK Markets

Sterling has been jumpy all year as UK inflation has stayed sticky and growth has been slow. The Bank of England has been cautious about cutting interest rates - the rates banks charge each other to lend - much further.

Drop a possible Labour leadership race into that picture, and currency traders demand a higher price to hold pounds. That price showed up Thursday as a softer sterling.

What To Watch:

The bottom line: Burnham still has to win a by-election - a special vote to fill an empty seat - to actually get into Parliament. Until he does, his challenge to Starmer is a story, not yet a serious threat.

How quickly Labour either rallies around Starmer or starts moving on from him is what currency traders will watch next, and the pound will follow the same path.

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