Burnham's Labour leadership bid has been backed by 322 out of 402 Labour MPs as he remains the only declared candidate
It makes him just one short of the 323 needed before it is mathematically impossible for a rival to run against him. Some MPs say they were not able to vote on Thursday but will back Burnham once they are back in Parliament.
If no one else enters the contest, as expected, Burnham will be declared Labour leader next week before taking office as prime minister on 20 July.
It would mark an extraordinary rise to power following the former Greater Manchester mayor's by-election win in Makerfield just weeks ago.
In a statement, Burnham said he was "deeply grateful" to the Labour MPs who had nominated him to be leader of the party.
He said the support had come from across the party and reflected a "shared belief that Britain needs a new approach to politics".
"That is the circuit breaker I am offering: power out of Westminster, an economy rewired for ordinary people, and good growth in every postcode," Burnham said.
Later on Thursday, he joked about Reform UK leader Nigel Farage's decision to trigger a by-election in his own constituency, Clacton, where he will stand again. Labour and the other main parties are boycotting the vote but serial comedian candidate Count Binface is a candidate.
Burnham's own by-election victory and heavy Labour losses in May's local elections left Sir Keir facing calls from his own MPs for him to stand aside and allow Burnham to replace him.
Sir Keir quit as Labour leader on the same day Burnham was sworn in as an MP, saying in his resignation speech he had heard the answer to the question of whether "I am best placed to lead us into the next general election".
-BBC





