Burnham likely to focus political energy on social carepublished at 11:30 BST
Chris Mason
Political editor
In a social media video shot and edited by his team in Cardiff recently, Andy Burnham brought attention to a massive issue that the country confronts: social care.
He talked of his own family’s experience in England, given his dad has Alzheimer’s, and said he is "going to expend quite a lot of political capital" in this area.
He’s referring to England, because social care is devolved — and so is the responsibility of Holyrood, the Senedd and Stormont in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland respectively.
“Political capital” is Westminster speak for the credit you have with your own side and with the country, that tends to get used up as you do difficult, often unpopular things.
And Andy Burnham knows a thing or two about how difficult and unpopular wrestling with social care can be.
Image source, ReutersHealth and Social Care Secretary James Murray
This week, 17 years ago, as health secretary, Burnham told the House of Commons that “we need to end the cruel lottery of older people facing financial hardship because they happen to get dementia, for example, rather than cancer.”
Labour proposed what they called a “National Care Service” - paid for by a flat 10% fee charged on dead people’s estates.
But Labour’s political opponents branded it a “death tax”, Labour went on to lose the 2010 election and the idea fizzled out.
So Andy Burnham has unfinished business. But how would he sell the idea now. As so often with political choices, there is a central question: who pays for it?














