I have not, as regular readers will have noted, commented much on the Makerfield by-election. I expect the reason is clear. There has been relatively little to say.
We knew that this would be a contest between Andy Burnham, rather than Labour, and Reform. Perhaps the only surprise has been that the Restore candidate is supposedly winning around 8% of the vote, which is more than the margin between Labour and Reform in the latest opinion polls.
Lessons from the by-election
From the by-election itself, whatever the result, three stories emerge.
The first is that Andy Burnham has a brand in Manchester which everyone else in Labour must stand in awe of. But, the point has to be emphasised, it is personal and almost certainly non-transferable. In other words, significant as it is at this moment, it will not work for Burnham again. If he wins here, he is thereafter a national politician. And if he loses here, his brand is broken in Manchester. This is, therefore, a one-off event. It will not be repeated. It is not available to anyone else. There is no national lesson for Labour to learn as a consequence, therefore.
Second, Reform is a force in British politics, yet it is apparent that they have not run a good campaign and did not select a good candidate. Their weaknesses are as apparent as any strength they have as a result of the alienation of people from Westminster government, whether run by the Tories or Labour.
Thirdly,, there is an openly racist and deeply neo-fascist factor in this election. We cannot pretend otherwise. It might just let Burnham win by splitting the far-right vote, but the reality is that it exists, and we cannot pretend otherwise. On this occasion, the existing political parties do not know how to deal with it. Its rise does signal the need for what I call a politics of care. There is no sign at all that those existing political parties understand that.
The after effects - proporrtional representation
That, then, is the scene in Makerfield. What will the scene be tomorrow morning? There are, in many people's eyes, only two scenarios to consider, but I think that is wrong. I think that there are at least four.
The first thing to note, the reality of which will become clear in the morning, is that the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats and Greens have hardly featured in this election, whether by choice or not, although they are very clearly capable of winning seats elsewhere. The message is obvious, and is that people are not voting for candidates they want, but are instead voting against candidates they dislike.This is not a secure foundation for democracy in the UK. Democracy is about representation, and when people are forced to vote against candidates by voting for those whom they can tolerate but would not otherwise choose, democracy in the UK is in a very poor place. We need proportional representation, and we need it now.
The after effects - political funding
Secondly, whatever happens, Restore has proved that it can have a national presence in this by-election and, given the enormous amount of funding that Rupert Lowe's party appears able to depend upon, much of it seemingly emanating from Elon Musk, the extreme toxicity of this party might be a factor in elections to come.
However, the fact that Restore is being funded by far-right individuals from outside the UK again indicates that our democracy is in a deeply dangerous place. The same is also true of Reform. They, too, rely exceptionally heavily on foreign-based billionaires with toxic products to sell.
The message from this election, then, is that donations from people outside the UK must be banned within UK politics. In addition, donations from all companies and from individuals above an agreed low limit must also be banned, whilst it should become a criminal offence to take part in an arrangement that disguises such flows of funds. If our democracy is to be representative, which is essential, the distortions within it that these donations create must end, for good.
The after effects - Reform
The third scenario to consider is what happens if Reform wins, and it might.
Ignore, for a moment, that a deeply unsavoury person, with attitudes that will be considered offensive by many people across the UK, will have been elected to Parliament. He will not have been the first, or the last, of his type. After all, Lee Anderson is already in Parliament, representing Reform.
Ignore, too, the issue around money just mentioned.
And ignore as well the fact that Nigel Farage has been so reluctant to appear during this campaign because of his lack of willingness to address questions around his own personal donation of £5 million prior to his return to politics in 2024, meaning that he did not participate in this campaign to the full, and that it was lacklustre as a result.
Ignore, as a consequence, as well the fact that the limitations of Reform as an electoral machine without Farage are exposed as a consequence.
Consider instead that, despite all these noted facts, Reform will have secured the support of a very large number of people in Makerfield. This will be despite the fact that it has revealed its own incompetence. This will also have happened despite the fact that the policies that it is promoting are highly likely to be detrimental to the best interests of most of those people who will have voted for the party.
Three questions arise, then, whether or not Reform wins.
The first requires that serious consideration be given as to why this alienation exists, with an associated demand that the causes be addressed.
The second is why racism is now such a powerful rallying call inside UK politics, and to ask what can be done about it.
The third is to consider why people, and most especially men, are so willing to vote against their own best interests at this moment, knowing that they, or people they know, might suffer as a consequence.
Unless these lessons are learned and acted upon, the far right will remain a force in British politics, and a Reform victory in this situation will only confirm that and increase the possibility of a far-right government in this country in due course.
I stress that I am not saying that a Reform victory here guarantees Reform's continued progress. We know that opposition party by-election victories do not indicate this in the UK political environment. But support on the scale now being indicated for Reform does demand that the issues I note be addressed.
The after effects - Labour
And then there is Labour. This is the fourth situation to be considered.
Let me deal with the easy option first. If Labour lose, the party is over. With the best available candidate, extraordinary resources being thrown at the campaign, and no hiccups of note during the course of it, if Labour cannot win this seat now, it does not matter who its leader is, everyone in the party will know that its time is up, and that it will be time-serving until it faces an election in 2029 at the latest, when almost all of its MPs will be rejected. A loss in this election would signal the end of a century of Labour in government. I find it incredibly hard to interpret such a possibility in any other way.
In that case, let me turn to the more complex possibility, which is that Burnham wins despite, and not because of, Labour. What then?
This is where the situation gets very confusing, so let me stand back and try to cut through the noise.
The signal would be very clear. Burnham stood in this election to challenge Keir Starmer as leader of the Labour Party. We know that challenge will come. The only question is how that process will be managed.
Will Starmer quit? His inclination will be to stay. He has always been politically tone-deaf, but even so, McSweeney, and maybe others, might persuade him to go despite that fact.
Will his hand be forced by ministerial resignations? Burnham is apparently asking those inclined to create such a situation to hold their fire for the time being to give Starmer the room to resign. My suspicion, however, is that the signals of resignations to come will be sent, and not very quietly.
Will the likes of Wes Streeting give up their own leadership aspirations? I suspect so. His performance since his resignation has been weak, at best, and incoherent in general. If he is lucky, he, like Angela Rayner, will return as a minister under Burnham. He would love a high office of state, although Burnham would be unwise to give it to him.
I expect, then, that Burnham will face a coronation, and not an election, and become Labour leader sooner than most people expect. In that case, the question to ask is: so what? What is it that Burnham might offer that Starmer has not, excepting just a little more personality and a hint that he might support proportional representation? The answer, so far, is very clearly nothing at all.
He is neoliberal.
He does not understand economics.
He has no clear left-of-centre instincts.
He says he is aware of the need for fiscal rules and embraces a commitment to them, meaning we can expect no major change in domestic policy.
He is, like Starmer, a long-term supporter of Zionism and, therefore, unlikely to change any foreign policy stance.
Is there, given all this, any chance that the necessary lessons that I have suggested this by-election requires to be learned by Labour and others will happen in a Labour Party under Burnham's guidance? My answer is that I cannot see that happening. In that case, Burnham is as likely, in the event of his winning, to be the last Labour Prime Minister as Keir Starmer is today.
The end - and what happens next
This is a seismic by-election. However, the reality is that the fact that it might deliver a new Prime Minister is not the reason why that is the case. It is seismic for indicating the potential end of Labour, and for raising questions with regard to our democracy which neither Keir Starmer nor Andy Burnham is likely to answer. That is why this election matters.
In itself, it will not provide answers. What it does do is indicate a democracy in a state of flux and raise questions about what happens next.
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I remember a UK based political pundit writing this on the 9th May “Andy Burnham has no chance of getting to Parliament in a by-election now. Manchester has turned against Labour.”
Well that political pundit isn’t writing that now.
Has he won yet?
As you would say, much to agree with.
But really, things are simple. Voters are very angry with austerity. So – why not stop it? And put the money taken away back in an ordered fashion? The reason why this does not happen is either because our reps in parliament are just so out of touch or that the real ‘deep state’ intention is the privately funded Thatcherite one – to roll back the state and let capital run our lives. Probably both I would say. We can criticise people for falling for Reform and Restore quite rightly. But I don’t think you can criticise folk for feeling angry in the first place at all.
I agree.
They have every reason to be angry
Of course today there also are two by-elections in Scotland, in Aberdeen South and Arbroath and Broughty Ferry. I’m hopeful, but not over confident, that the S.N.P can retain both seats, proving once again that Scotland is on a very different political path to our neighbours South of the border.
I am hoping they do.
I found it quite hard to find out about the 2 by-elections which are not Makerfield. Nothing easy to find in Guardian, Times. No comments anywhere I can see. If this doesn’t support the SNP viewpoint, it’s hard to see what would.
A good analysis thanks, with which I mostly agree.
You say Burnham is neoliberal and doesn’t understand economics and you may well be right. He obviously has been neoliberal in the past – and he lost a previous leadership campaign. I hope he may have learned over the past decade, and I think he might. He’s in a very difficult position about what he can say, so I suspect we haven’t heard the true Andy Burnham. Neoliberalism is currently Labour policy. As Labour candidate Burnham can’t openly challenge that. But, perhaps, when elected he can say something different. That is the hope.
Now, I know a lot of Labour supporters thought similarly of Kier Starmer before the election. That was the “ming vase” strategy, say nothing to upset anyone before the election and turn left afterwards. He didn’t do that. I didn’t expect him to. He’s behaviour and U turns before the election made this seem unlikely. But I have not seen such behaviour from Burnham. Perhaps he will better. We can hope.
I accept, we can hope.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jun/17/exclusive-burnham-team-convince-ministers-delay-resignations-avoid-chaos
So, Burnham is worried that if the mass co-ordinated resignation tactics used by Labour Together against Corbyn, are used against Starmer, it might cause chaos?
Pardon my bitter cynicism, as I watch desperate members of Starmer’s cabinet trying to ride the log raft down the rapids and stay afloat no matter who ends up as PM.
I’m half-waiting for the Russians to be accused of trying to organise arson attacks in Makerfield, or land Spetznaz troops on Wigan Pier to kidnap Starmer.
If Burnham becomes PM, then, if his priority is the welfare of the country, then greater love hath no politician than he lay down his own political life, and that of his party, to save his country from fascism – by giving us PR.
After that – who knows, but at least the UK will be harder to capture by minority extreme ideologies such as today’s expansionist genocidal Israeli Zionism, or Fa***e/Lowe/Yaxley-Lenin fascism, and we can continue to build support for an alternative to neoliberalism, an alternative to Israeli influence, and start listening to ordinary voters again.
Much to agree with
If we (irrespective of nation) really would have that kind of control over political funding there would be no right-wing party left anywhere at the end I think.
They’re loud but those, who are essential for those parties, are not a lot.
And they can never be a lot as infighting and being exclusive are brand essences of right-wing parties.
I assume that as a consequence they’d also lose a big part of their means of distribution for their agenda.
Most of those right-wing media aren’t even able to survive financially without rich people’s support.
And then why funding such media when you’ll never be able to get something out of it?
I think if Reform were to win, they would be in trouble, not dead. It might be the kick they need to stop being complacent about the need for electoral reform. Facing being on the losing side of most of the local battles and ‘going Conservative’ with their number of seats next time, they might suddenly pick up proportional representation. That would leave them a meaningful voice and perhaps regain some support as it would mean people’s votes actually do matter regardless of where they live.
If they instead treated it as a by-election protest vote and not a significant warning sign, THEN they’ll walk themselves into the electoral wilderness, deliberately and carelessly.
I read a horrific tweet on X showing Burnhams long history of being funded by Israeli – linked arms producers, and lobbyists<p>
https://x.com/jodymcintyre_/status/2066499275886821715<p>
If Burnham takes over, it seems very difficult to anticipate any improvement over Starmer’s regime . As you say Richard – he seems to have no curiosity about whether we might indeed have money to invest in public services and employ unused resources – including unemployed doctors.<p>
Burnham seems to embody the whole Labour Together factional package – with better communication skills – but absolutely no inclination to question the neo-liberal consensus.<p>
I am now much more of a PSR mindset – and happy to believe that the deep state has decided Burnham is their best bet to retaining power.
I fear you are right
A key factor in change is how far people get to hear alternatives. Because they are different they need more consideration than responding to cliches.
The Toxic Tory Tabloids, including the Telegraph, are determined to support the status quo and protect capital. They are now moving to give support to the Fascist tendency. They are well supported by Oligarch interest.
We need a strong alternative media. How that would work and come about is what we need to examine. PR voting, and curtailment of foreign funding may not deliver without media reform.
A strong alternative media has grown in Scotland out of sheer necessity. Only one of the thirty-seven daily and Sunday papers backs independence despite most polling showing a 50/50 split. Faced with a constant drip-feed of doom from the papers and their colleagues at the BBC, a rich and varied blogosphere and social media presence has grown to counter it.