Whitehall was said to be in a state of mild, beige panic last night after reports that Andy Burnham moving Downing Street to a Manchester Greggs following leadership speculation had advanced from “utter nonsense” to “being looked at by a working group”.
By Our Political Correspondent: Polly Ticks
Civil servants were reportedly asked to consider whether Number 10 could function from a branch opposite a tram stop, provided the hot counter remained operational and the front two tables were reserved for constitutional matters.
Sources close to the Mayor of Greater Manchester insist no final decision has been taken, but admitted a relocation package is being discussed in which the Cabinet would meet between the steak bakes and the Yum Yums, with the Chancellor expected to deliver the Budget by tapping the glass and asking who ordered the vegan sausage rolls.
Why Andy Burnham moving Downing Street to a Manchester Greggs almost makes sense
In the kind of sentence that causes Westminster correspondents to sit down and remove their glasses, one senior figure said the proposal had “authenticity”. That, in modern politics, can mean anything from wearing normal shoes to standing near a pie. Burnham, who has long cultivated an image somewhere between practical northern dad and man about to complain to a bus company with some justification, is understood to believe the country would benefit from a government that smells faintly of pastry.
Supporters say the move would symbolise a decisive break from the London bubble. Critics say the London bubble may be annoying, but at least it has enough chairs. The Greggs option, they warn, would require ministers to perch on those tiny metal stools while discussing defence, inflation and whether somebody has nicked the brown sauce sachets again.
Still, the political logic is not entirely daft, which is always a dangerous place for satire to begin. Burnham has spent years presenting himself as the acceptable face of regional frustration – not so furious as to frighten the Home Counties, but cross enough to look useful on breakfast television. Leadership speculation follows him around like a local radio presenter after a flood, and this latest story appears to have emerged after aides allegedly found a map of Westminster with the words “too far south” written across it in red marker.
The proposed Manchester Greggs Downing Street plan
According to briefing notes that definitely were not written on the back of a receipt, the new Downing Street would be established inside a suitably symbolic Manchester Greggs, with a brass plaque installed near the napkins. Number 10 would occupy the window seats. Number 11 would take the bit by the refrigerated drinks. The Cabinet Office would be wherever the intern managed to put the laptops without blocking the queue.
A mock-up seen by officials includes a lectern made from stacked crates, a secure red phone beside the sugar dispenser, and a sign reading “Prime Ministerial toilet code available on request”. The famous black door would not be moved north in full, but recreated as a vinyl wrap over the staff entrance. This is said to have reassured traditionalists who had feared the loss of constitutional continuity, although one former minister said it looked “less Churchill, more soft play centre”.
The plan also addresses transport. Rather than fleets of ministerial cars clogging central London, advisers want a more grounded image. Senior ministers would arrive by tram, with latecomers forced to explain on live television that they missed a stop while reading hostile coverage of themselves. The Deputy Prime Minister, whoever that may be by the time this fantasy hardens into policy, would be entitled to one orange seat and a travel cup.
Security experts have raised one or two concerns. It is apparently difficult to maintain a sterile perimeter when a scaffolder from Salford is trying to get in for a bacon roll and has no patience for constitutional ceremony. But insiders insist the public-facing nature of the site is actually the point. “A government should be accessible,” one ally said. “Also, if people can stare through the window while ministers are arguing, that may improve standards.”
Cabinet by meal deal
The atmosphere of government would, naturally, change. Gone would be the clipped whispers of Whitehall corridors. In their place, the soft hiss of ovens and a repeated announcement that the next batch of sausage rolls will be ready in four minutes. Officials believe this could shorten meetings dramatically. No one wants to still be discussing fisheries when a builder in hi-vis is giving them a look because he just wants his lunch.
There are practical advantages. Greggs already understands the needs of the British public better than several departments. It can deliver warm reassurance, predictable pricing and a menu that respects the national appetite for beige. If anything, critics say, this puts unfair pressure on ministers to perform at a level normally associated with pastry professionals.
One source claimed Burnham had become convinced after observing that more serious policy conversations now happen in bakery queues than in Parliament. “You hear more honesty in ten minutes waiting for a chicken bake than you do in a week of political interviews,” they said. “Plus people are less likely to answer every question with ‘look’.”
Westminster reacts with horror, envy and hunger
Reaction in London was swift and magnificently self-serving. Several MPs denounced the reported move as a dangerous assault on centuries of parliamentary tradition, before quietly asking whether expenses would cover a northern flat and a festive bake. One peer described it as “mob rule by pastry”, which many voters are expected to find more attractive than current arrangements.
Labour figures were careful not to confirm anything outright. Publicly, they called the story speculation. Privately, some admitted it had undeniable appeal. A party that has spent years trying to sound less metropolitan could scarcely ask for a clearer message than relocating the seat of power to a place where the coffee comes in a cardboard cup and nobody says “curated” unless discussing a bargain freezer aisle.
Conservatives, meanwhile, sought to mock the proposal while accidentally explaining why it might work. One former adviser sneered that government could not be run from a high street bakery. This was widely interpreted by the public as a challenge. By mid-afternoon, a flash poll suggested many Britons would actually prefer a lunchtime queue to the current constitutional settlement, provided there was still a chance of affordable snacks.
What Manchester makes of it
In Manchester itself, reaction was broadly positive, if not wholly surprised. Residents have seen enough grand announcements to know that any plan involving national prestige, local pride and carbohydrates has legs. There was some debate over which Greggs branch should become the political nerve centre. City centre loyalists argued for visibility. Suburban voices demanded fairness. One elderly man in a paper shop said the whole thing should be based in Bolton if the country wanted plain speaking and proper parking.
Local businesses are already preparing. Estate agents are advertising “minister-friendly” flats with room for a fold-out intern. Nearby pubs anticipate a boom in journalists pretending to understand the North after two pints of bitter and a train ticket. A souvenir trade is also expected, with mugs, tea towels and novelty aprons bearing the slogan “Government by Greggs – you couldn’t make it up”.
The only note of caution has come from Greggs customers worried that politics might ruin one of the last places in Britain where a person can still point at a thing and receive that thing without a consultation document. They fear special advisers hanging about the counter, focus-grouping doughnuts and referring to steak bakes as “delivery mechanisms”. It is a fair concern. Once government gets involved, even a sausage roll can end up in committee.
What happens next
Officials are said to be drawing up contingency plans, though that may simply mean somebody has been told to price up branded napkin holders. If the leadership speculation around Burnham grows, expect more such stories, each slightly madder than the last and therefore slightly more plausible by current standards. British politics has reached a stage where moving Downing Street above a bakery in Manchester feels less like a constitutional rupture and more like a sensible pilot scheme.
For now, the public can only watch, wait and imagine the first great moments of the Greggs era – the Prime Minister stepping out to reassure markets while a delivery bloke reverses over a bollard, the Home Secretary trying to look stern beside the vegan options, and a nation discovering that it has never loved government more than when it can smell fresh pastry from the dispatch box.
If nothing else, the story has reminded politicians of a truth they spend fortunes trying to avoid. People don’t want theatre dressed up as reality. They want reality, preferably warm, cheap, and handed over in a paper bag.




