Back in 2017, Andy Burnham had spent 16 years as the MP for Leigh, climbing through Labour ranks to roles like Health Secretary under Gordon Brown.

But frustration built as he watched Westminster grind on issues like Hillsborough justice and austerity cuts that hammered the North. He called the whole setup a “crisis,” structurally unable to fix deep problems facing places like Greater Manchester.

The tipping point came with devolution talks. Officials approached him about running for the new mayor gig, and he saw it as a chance to grab real power outside the capital’s bubble. Burnham announced he would step down as Shadow Home Secretary and resign his seat to focus on the race, even as a snap election loomed.

In his victory speech after winning 63% of the vote, he promised to shift politics away from London, letting the region call more shots on transport, housing, and jobs. Labor insiders noted this was no rash move; he had eyed mayoralty for months, viewing it as a fix for the detachment he felt in Parliament.

Critics called it opportunistic, especially after his second-place finish in the 2015 leadership race against Jeremy Corbyn.

Yet Burnham framed it as putting place over party, a line that stuck as he delivered his final parliamentary act: a fiery speech on the contaminated blood scandal, accusing officials of a massive cover-up. That exit cemented his rep as a fighter who would rather lead locally than chase shadows in SW1.

Mayor King Of The North: Building A Legacy Beyond The Commons

Taking the mayor’s chair unlocked moves Parliament never could. Burnham pushed free buses for under-21s, stood up to Boris Johnson over Tier 3 lockdowns during COVID, and poured funds into green projects and housing.

Re-elected twice, with 67% in 2021 and 63% in 2024 under first-past-the-post, he earned the nickname “King of the North” for clashing with the central government while boosting the area’s economy.

His pitch worked because he targeted everyday gripes: transport links, skills training, and regional pride. Reports from think tanks like the Centre for Cities highlighted how his shift exemplified politicians seeing mayoral roles as stronger platforms than backbench seats.

What Happened to Burnham? Why He Left Parliament for Manchester Power - 1

Andy Burnham (Credit: BBC)

Under him, Greater Manchester gained more control over police, fire services, and adult education, proving devolution’s pull. Labour stayed quiet on any regrets, with its 2024 win showing voters valued its independence.

Personal drive factored in, too. Burnham spoke of falling out of love with Westminster’s games, preferring boots-on-the-ground impact over distant debates. That choice reshaped his career, turning a national figure into a regional powerhouse who could critique Labour from afar without party whip constraints.

Comeback Dreams Blocked: Party Drama In 2026

Fast forward to January 2026, and the Gorton and Denton by-election after MP Andrew Gwynne’s resignation sparked fresh buzz. Burnham applied to run, assuring Keir Starmer he wanted to back the government, not rock the boat, but Labour’s National Executive Committee shot it down 8-1.

The block came from fears of a costly mayoral by-election, plus whispers he eyed a leadership run against a slumping Starmer. Burnham called himself “disappointed” but refocused on his mayoral duties through 2028, defending his record against Reform UK’s rise.

Party sources left the door open for a future Commons return post-term, while MPs split: some saw him as a threat, others as a needed voice. Coverage in Reuters, BBC, Sky News, and The Guardian framed it as internal Labour tension, with Burnham’s northern appeal clashing against London control.

His 2017 exit now looks prescient. Burnham proved you can wield more clout running a city-region than voting in futile divisions. Picture queuing for a free young person’s bus or watching Manchester’s skyline sprout new builds; that is his tangible win.

Even as Westminster beckons again, his path shows local power can outshine national noise, especially when the old system’s cracks keep widening.

Markies Conway, known as Yella Beezy, dropped a 20-slide Instagram carousel on January 18, capturing his unbreakable bond with mom Kim.

One shot shows him gripping her hand in a hospital bed, her tattoo of his name stark against pale skin. Throwbacks mix family laughs, FaceTime calls, and kid-filled moments, painting a picture of his rock through every storm.

He poured out the void: daily talks gone, reels unspoken for, and arguments that kept them tight now silent. Born fighting side by side, they faced the world as a unit, her fierce protection unmatched. Beezy wrestled with faith too, hurt she left when he needed her most, yet sure God welcomed her home with open arms.

No word on what took her, just the raw ache landing days before a Dallas court date. Videos surfaced of a January 19 balloon release in her honor, with friends gathering to lift memories skyward. Her funeral wrapped midweek, Beezy laying her to rest amid fresh pain. ​

Court Chaos Meets Family Tragedy

Beezy’s absence from a January 16 pretrial hearing confirmed the loss, with lawyers citing grief and a flood of prosecution evidence.

Judge Chika Anyiam bumped the capital murder trial from February 2 to August 24, giving time to sift through the massive discovery on the 2020 Mo3 killing. Prosecutors claim he paid Kewon White to gun down the rising Dallas rapper on I-35E during rush hour.

What Happened to Burnham? Why He Left Parliament for Manchester Power - 2

Yella Beezy (Credit: CBC)

Out on a $750,000 bond since March 2025 after a cut from $2 million, Beezy stays under house arrest with an ankle monitor. Bond rules let him hit the studio weekly for up to five hours, fueling tracks like September’s “Blame It On Me.” The delay eases short-term pressure, but the cloud lingers over his career.

Online chatter spiked, some dubbing it karma for Mo3 ties, others slamming the cruelty of such talk during mourning. Beezy’s post racked up thousands of reactions, with celebs like Porsha Williams and Tommie Lee dropping prayers.

Fans Rally, Doubts Linger in Shadows

Yet speculation brews in corners, with YouTube clips questioning the circumstances around her passing and the timing being too neat before the trial. No medical report out, just unconfirmed rumors fueling debate about whether it’s a coincidence or a curse. Beezy stays quiet on details, focus locked on healing and family. ​

Through it all, his music grind persists from home base, a thread holding him steady. Kim’s spirit, tattooed and tattooing lives, pushes him forward into whatever August brings. Dallas hip-hop watches closely, rooting for the fighter she raised, one reel at a time.