‘I’m not a Labour fan but I like Burnham’: relief in Makerfield among left, right and centre
The Guardian World ·

The morning after Andy Burnham secured a landslide byelection victory in Makerfield, returning him to Westminster after nine years as Greater Manchester mayor, it is hard to avoid the large, red …
The morning after Andy Burnham secured a landslide byelection victory in Makerfield, returning him to Westminster after nine years as Greater Manchester mayor, it is hard to avoid the large, red placards bearing his face. But Burnham’s win was not just thanks to Labour loyalists. Instead, it appears that a coalition of voters from the left, centre and even the right united to back him at the ballot box. Burnham achieved his victory with a majority of 9,231 votes over the Reform UK candidate, Robert Kenyon – bigger than that enjoyed by his predecessor. Labour won 55% of the vote to Reform’s 35%, while the hard-right party Restore Britain secured 7%. Turnout was 59%, six percentage points up on the general election, with 45,510 votes cast. The Liberal Democrats and the Green party ran subdued campaigns, allowing Labour to absorb a broad range of voters, while the rightwing vote was divided between Reform UK and Restore Britain. “Two years ago, the Liberal Democrat and Green candidates won 11% of the Makerfield vote,” the veteran pollster Peter Kellner noted in his analysis of the byelection result. “Yesterday they won just 1%, setting new records for vote-shedding while they helped to ensure that Burnham beat Kenyon.” At Orrell waterpark, three friends – Mal, 64, Peta, 48, and Barb, 64 – said they were all Green supporters usually but had backed Burnham on Thursday as they believed he had the best chance of defeating the “divisive” politics of the right. …
Original source: The Guardian World
Mentioned
Democratic · Westminster · Andy Burnham · Greater Manchester