King of the North (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

If Manchester’s ultra-mayor Andy Burnham really is King of the North — as Labour’s bobble-hatted folklorists believe — then Steve Rotheram, metro mayor of Liverpool, is his regent and champion. These two old Scouser pals have a lot in common: they’re mad for them Manchester bands and they love their footie. In fact, they adore their version of the North-West so much they’ve jointly written Head North, an odd chapparal of memoir and manifesto, in which tales about growing up proper end in head-shaking disillusionment with Westminster, and are followed by a shopping list of solutions to the North-South conundrum.
Like many on the Left who live in the North, I admire Burnham, I genuinely do. He manifests his inherited Christian principles by donating 15% of his salary every month to a homeless charity. He helped fight for a second, thorough inquiry into the Hillsborough disaster, and got it. He’s performing the ultimate act of socialist civic alchemy by bringing Manchester’s bus service back into public ownership, which puts him well to the Left of Keir Starmer, let alone this month’s Tory transport secretary, whoever he is. Burnham’s instincts on renationalisation, regional devolution, and creating a new green industrial age for the North chime exactly with mine and are therefore entirely correct. And yet. It’s always been far too easy to mock Burnham’s Mayor-of-Munchkinland bumptiousness — so let’s begin.
Head North is extremely earnest. Better still, it’s exhilaratingly unedited. Take Burnham’s account of a Christmas party in 2015, at “a popular late-night watering hole for MPs”. Steve and Andy “found to our surprise that our names were down on the door as VVIPs”. I mean, there’s your first flashing light, mate. You’ve just been clattered out of the park by Jeremy Corbyn in your second Labour leadership bid, now suddenly you’re what — watering hole royalty?
Anyway, there they are, the VVIPs. Knocking back a few, minding their own business, when “a chocolate fountain of all things arrived on the table, a bucket of champagne and four flutes”. Two young women “unexpectedly sat down with us”. Andy “was thinking how nice of them”. Of course you were, you gormless fanny. Luckily, Steve twigged what was going on, whacked him on the kneecap, and pointed out “the unmistakable circular outline of a camera lens”.
The image of a baffled Burnham being hoicked from tabloid peril is an oddly endearing one. Was he really an innocent abroad in the fleshpots of SW1 though, or just hopelessly, stupidly naive? There’s a case to be made for the latter. As he reminds us approximately 8,000 times in the book, he’s an Everton fan — he has nursed a visceral hatred of the Sun for its disgusting coverage of the Hillsborough tragedy since 1989 — but he still tumbled into a photocall in a London taxi plastered with Sun ads during his 2015 party leadership campaign.
Blame the shark-infested Westminster bubble, I suppose, a phrase that makes several appearances. Indeed, no cliché is left unturned in the memoir section of Head North. Here’s Rotheram, on his political ascent: “It did feel like different worlds colliding when you saw me, a lad from a building site in Kirkby, working with people who had every opportunity handed to them on a plate.” The whole book’s like this, the two of them taking it in turns to say the same things in often identical language, a sort of platitudinous leap-frog, until they’ve both run out of puff.
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