Andy Burnham has apologised for
Labour’s initial response to
Israel’s military action in Gaza, saying the party “didn’t get it right” and needs to “do better” under his leadership as he signalled a significant shift in the UK’s approach to the
Middle East.The prime minister-in-waiting told the Guardian he would put more pressure on the Israeli government, including through further sanctions on individuals and entities, as well as potentially by banning trade in goods with illegal settlements.Burnham’s intervention starts to address concerns among voters on
Labour’s progressive flank, many of whom have abandoned the party over its position on
Israel and
Palestine.“I know many people feel that at the start of
Israel’s military action in Gaza my party didn’t get it right and I am sorry about that. The response has too often not been good enough. We need to do better,” he said.“We’ve got to do more to put pressure on the Israeli government … Yes, we have taken some important steps … But let’s be honest, the UK was too slow to call for a ceasefire. And we must now do more to strengthen our approach.”However, he stopped short of describing what was happening on the ground in Gaza as a genocide – a central demand of some on the left – saying that while there was “increasing evidence” of
war crimes, it was for the international courts to make that ruling.“I have been absolutely appalled by what I’ve seen and read about the destruction of Gaza. There’s increasing evidence that
war crimes appear to have been committed,” he said. “There must be accountability for the depth of the suffering the people of Gaza have experienced. Ultimately, however, it must be for the international courts to determine, rather than politicians.”His apology may irritate
Keir Starmer, whose interview on LBC radio shortly after
Hamas had launched its devastating attack on
Israel in October 2023, and in which he said
Israel “has the right” to withhold power and water from Gaza, upset many within the party.The
Labour leader then took almost 10 days to clarify his remarks, further angering many Muslim and progressive voters. In 2025, Starmer came under months of pressure, including from his own cabinet ministers, before finally recognising
Palestine as a state.Burnham acknowledged the UK government had taken some significant steps, including formal recognition, sanctions on Israeli ministers and violent settlers, and restrictions on arms licences so no British bombs or bullets could be used by the
Israel Defense Forces in
Palestine.However, many
Labour figures across the party believe Starmer struggled to get a hearing on Gaza after his early missteps and delays, and that as a result the UK government’s subsequent action failed to cut through.Two-thirds of
Labour voters who have subsequently switched to the Green party said the party’s position on Gaza was a factor, according to an Opinium poll for the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign in June.People walking through the ruins of Khan Younis in Gaza in June. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesBurnham sought to reassure Jewish communities that, despite his shift in position, he remained deeply concerned about the rise in antisemitism in the UK and “strongly condemned”
Hamas’s 7 October attacks.“There is no contradiction between a zero-tolerance approach to antisemitism and holding the Netanyahu government to account. I will always take a fair and balanced approach and stand up for what is right,” he said.Burnham said the UK government had to do more to put pressure on the Israeli government, describing the suffering of the people of Gaza as a “scar on our collective conscience”, with innocent Palestinians continuing to be killed, far too little aid getting in and the Israeli military continuing to expand its areas of control.He is likely to come under pressure from the left to ban all arms shipments to
Israel, which still includes spare parts for F-35 fighter jets, as well as to take a different approach to banning
Palestine Action after the court of appeal ruled in June that Shabana Mahmood’s decision to proscribe the direct action group was lawful.Burnham also criticised the large increase in settler violence in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and the continued expansion of illegal settlements that are displacing Palestinian communities, adding that Netanyahu’s government was attempting to make a two-state solution impossible.“That’s why we need to do more, which includes looking at further sanctions, both on those involved in the violence in Gaza but also looking at measures to ban trade in goods with illegal settlements,” he said.Foreign Office ministers are understood to already be looking at ways of preventing goods and services from the settlements making it into the UK, without a knock-on effect for legitimate trade with
Israel.