Europe Jun 27, 20262Add to bookmarks

The Catholic identity of Manchester's mayor, a frontrunner for the leadership of the Labour Party, is now under the spotlight of the British political scene. A phenomenon revealing a religious recomposition in Europe.
The race to succeed Keir Starmer as leader of the British Labour Party—and potentially future Prime Minister—has seen an unexpected figure emerge from a confessional angle: Andy Burnham, Mayor of Manchester since 2017, known for his positions on social justice and public health. CNA/EWTN reports (27 June 2026) that his Catholic identity is now "in the spotlight" in the leadership campaign. In a country where Anglicanism remains the implicit religious horizon of power and where Tony Blair waited until leaving Downing Street to formally convert to Catholicism, the public visibility of a declared Catholic at this level of British politics is a signal not to be ignored.
Catholic faith is not a political program, and recent history in Europe shows that figures claiming Catholicism can defend positions contrary to Church teaching on decisive issues—abortion, euthanasia, the definition of the family. Burnham’s case is no exception to this risk: his policy positions will need to be examined carefully, regardless of his declared affiliation. What is nevertheless notable is the recurrence of this phenomenon across Europe: after a period of relegating religion outside the public sphere, political leaders are once again openly identifying as Catholic in democracies where such a stance carries real media and social costs. This is a cultural shift that warrants discernment—neither naive enthusiasm nor contempt.
"You are the light of the world. Let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven." (Mt 5:14,16). The presence of Catholics in political life is a form of witness—provided that faith truly informs their choices, and not merely their cultural identity.
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Un catholique à la tête des travaillistes, ça change des anglicans habituels ! Ça me fait penser à ces familles anglaises qui gardent leur foi discrètement depuis des siècles.
Ma grand-mère aussi allait à la messe en cachette dans le Lancashire, ça me touche de voir ça remonter jusqu’à Westminster.
Un catholique à la tête des travaillistes, ça change des anglicans habituels ! Mais est-ce que sa foi va vraiment peser sur ses choix, ou c'est juste un argument de campagne ?
Ecosse : la justice ordonne le retrait des detenus masculins des prisons feminines