
A Lancashire By-Election Holds the Key to Downing Street’s Future
With Andy Burnham seeking a path to challenge Keir Starmer, and a new hard-right party threatening Reform UK, the Makerfield vote has become a microcosm of Britain’s political turmoil.
The steady drizzle over Hindley, a former mining town in Lancashire’s Makerfield constituency, belies the electoral storm gathering here. On Thursday, 76,000 voters will cast ballots in a special election that could redraw the contours of British politics. Manchester’s metro mayor Andy Burnham, long styled the “King of the North” for his popularity in the dynamic urban core nearby, is standing for the vacant Westminster seat. His declared ambition is to use it as a springboard to challenge Keir Starmer for the Labour leadership and the premiership. Swedish correspondents describe a landscape of shuttered pubs and for-sale signs in this Brexit-voting heartland, a place far removed from the footballing and financial glamour of Manchester, yet now improbably positioned to decide the nation’s immediate political fate.
Burnham’s manoeuvre is unfolding against a backdrop of accelerating internal Labour strife. Wes Streeting, the former health secretary, has told the BBC he is ready to trigger a formal leadership contest, claiming the support of the requisite 81 MPs and urging a swift end to what he calls “uncertainty and paralysis.” Starmer, speaking from the G7 summit in Evian, retorted that he would fight any challenge and that a contest would not serve the national interest. The pressure is compounded by voices from outside Westminster: billionaire John Caudwell, a former Conservative donor who switched to Labour in 2024, has publicly demanded “radical change,” citing sluggish growth, collapsing poll ratings, and bond yields at multi-decade highs. London financial circles note that the Makerfield result will be read as a proxy for the party’s appetite to replace a leader who, after nearly two years in office, has failed to deliver the stability he promised.
The by-election is further roiled by a schism on the populist right. Rupert Lowe, a businessman and former football chairman who entered Parliament in July 2024, has broken with Nigel Farage’s Reform UK to found Restore Britain. The new party, backed by tech billionaire Elon Musk, advocates an even more uncompromising anti-immigration line. Hong Kong-based reporting suggests Restore Britain could siphon sufficient votes from Reform to deny Farage a breakthrough in Makerfield, inadvertently smoothing Burnham’s path. The fragmentation illustrates a broader realignment: the post-Brexit right is simultaneously ascendant and fractious, its energies divided at a moment when the Labour establishment appears uniquely vulnerable.
Viewed from European capitals, the spectacle of a sitting prime minister forced to contemplate a leadership challenge triggered by a single by-election underscores the fragility of Britain’s political settlement. Italian and Arabic media highlight the paradox of Starmer insisting on continuity while two distinct threats—one from a popular regional figure, the other from a former cabinet ally—gather momentum. If Burnham secures the seat, the pressure on Starmer will become acute, with a leadership ballot likely within weeks. Streeting’s camp, already counting its numbers, would seize the opening. Should the right-wing vote split decisively, the arithmetic of any future general election could shift, emboldening both Labour centrists and a fragmented populist bloc. For now, the rain-soaked streets of Hindley are the unlikely stage on which the next chapter of British governance will be written.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
In a rainy former mining town in Lancashire, the Makerfield by-election could determine the UK's political future. Manchester's popular mayor Andy Burnham aims to enter parliament and eventually challenge PM Starmer, but first he must overcome a strong far-right threat. The story casts a Brexit-supporting, economically struggling area as the stage for a thriller-like contest.
A new far-right party, Restore Britain, led by Rupert Lowe and backed by billionaire Elon Musk, is threatening Nigel Farage's Reform UK. With an even tougher anti-immigration stance, it could split the right-wing vote in a crucial special election, potentially allowing Labour to hold the seat. The report highlights the fragmentation of the British right and the role of a tech billionaire.
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