The votes have been counted.

Andy Burnham won.

But when Nick Hubble, editor of The Fleet Street Letter, and I caught up late last night, the result wasn’t out yet.

That’s OK. Our conversation is arguably more important today than it was when we recorded it.

Before the results were known, we discuss what a Burnham victory could mean for Britain, Keir Starmer, the Labour Party, and investors.

Now we know the answer to the first question.

Burnham won convincingly, immediately intensifying speculation about a potential challenge to Starmer’s leadership and raising fresh questions about the future direction of British politics.

What makes our conversation so valuable though is that we weren’t reacting to headlines. We were thinking several moves ahead.

Inside this discussion you’ll hear:

  • Why Burnham’s rise matters far beyond Westminster politics
  • The growing divide between what voters want and what Britain’s political establishment is offering
  • Why the outcome of this election could have consequences for energy, industry, infrastructure, and investment policy
  • The overlooked trend I believe most commentators are missing
  • And what investors should be watching next as the political landscape shifts

Most political commentary focuses on who won.

This conversation focuses on what happens next.

That’s where the opportunities usually emerge.

If you want to understand what Burnham’s victory could mean for Britain over the next 12 months, this is 20 minutes very well spent.


Chat later,

Sam Volkering
Investment Director, Southbank Investment Research

PS Nick and I will be having a live discussion on 9 July to answer the question: If you had £10,000, where should you invest it right now. If you’d like to sit in on that conversation, simply click this link and we’ll make sure to remind you to join at 3 pm that Thursday.