Rees-Mogg criticizes Burnham Manchester speech on devolution and Westminster
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The segment features Jacob Rees-Mogg critiquing Andy Burnham's June 29, 2026 Manchester speech. Rees-Mogg calls the address clichéd and uninspiring, focused on Westminster failure and devolution as the solution. He highlights Burnham's refusal to take questions from journalists, including Daily Mail's Quentin Letts, and argues devolution ignores England by creating artificial regions rather than empowering historic counties or nations equally. Rees-Mogg draws on Gladstone-era home rule history, notes Yorkshire's population similarity to Scotland, and favors local councils over new regional bodies. The piece relies on Rees-Mogg's commentary with no additional guests or on-screen graphics referenced in the transcript.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately captures Burnham's devolution emphasis and the press access controversy confirmed by multiple reports. It presents a coherent conservative critique of asymmetric devolution but omits discussion of existing English regional mayors or arguments for further decentralization. Viewer perception may be skewed toward viewing devolution solely as a problem for England without exploring Scotland/Wales perspectives or polling on public support. Claims about speech content and exclusion are substantiated, while the 'more politicians' dismissal remains opinion.
Key Moments
Burnham excluded Quentin Letts and Daily Mail from the auditorium and refused press questions
Confirmed by Daily Mail reporting and multiple outlets noting no Q&A after the People's History Museum speech
Burnham's core message was that the Westminster bubble failed and devolution is the answer
Matches BBC and other summaries of the speech emphasizing power shift from London and 'No 10 North'
Yorkshire population is similar to that of Scotland
Scotland mid-2024 estimate ~5.55 million; Yorkshire and the Humber ~5.5-5.8 million per ONS and NRS data
Devolution has never addressed England as a country, instead chopping it into artificial regions
Reflects longstanding West Lothian question debates but overlooks elected English mayors and combined authorities
Notable Concerns
- One-sided sourcing limited to conservative commentator perspective
Sources Consulted
- UPDATE: Andy Burnham will not take journalists' question after speech
- LITTLEJOHN: Arrogant and entitled. It's all downhill from ...
- Andy Burnham will not take questions after major speech
- Population estimates for the UK, England, Wales, Scotland ...
- Andy Burnham sets out plans to devolve power to regions with new 'No 10 North' in Manchester