Starmer’s future hangs in balance after Burnham’s Makerfield election win

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Starmer’s future hangs in balance after Burnham’s Makerfield election win​

Ashton-in-Makerfield, a town few knew of until recently, has potentially chosen the UK’s next prime minister.


Former Labour MP Josh Simons reacts as outgoing Greater Manchester Mayor and newly elected Makerfield MP Andy Burnham addresses members and supporters of the Labour Party after he won the Makerfield by-election, at the Bartons Group Stadium in Ashton-in-Makerfield, Britain, June 19, 2026. REUTERS/Temilade Adelaja TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

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UK By-Election: Andy Burnham Secures Key Win as Labour Party Faces Leadership Questions
https://www.aljazeera.com/author/simon-speakman-cordall
By Simon Speakman Cordall
Published On 19 Jun 202619 Jun 2026
Ashton-in-Makerfield, United Kingdom – Sue Hailwood has felt exhausted since May, when the date of a critical by-election in her town was announced.

For weeks, Ashton-in-Makerfield, the suburban northern ward whose by-election looks set to determine the UK’s next prime minister, has been visited by swarms of activists and journalists.

Political party volunteers have been busy knocking on doors, while protesters have been arguing with one another.

It’s been “absolutely horrendous”, said Hailwood, a charity shop worker.

Vinyl record shop owner Peter Thompson said the attention on the area nestled between the post-industrial northern town of Wigan and the glass skyscrapers of nearby Manchester was “stupidly hectic”.

“There have been Americans, a French magazine, a TV crew from Sweden and a TV crew from Denmark,” he said. “It’s the most important by-election in the history of this country.”

The stakes were high, and in the end, Andy Burnham easily won Thursday’s vote, viewed as a prelude to a Labour leadership contest.

Sue
Charity shop worker Sue Hailwood said she is tired of the media attention on her town [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
Burnham, 56, has said he plans to challenge 62-year-old Prime Minister Keir Starmer. On Friday, the premier said he will stand in any race and will not “walk away”.

How the next few days and weeks play out remains to be seen.

Under the Labour Party’s rules, an MP who wants to challenge a leader must secure nominations from 20 percent of Labour MPs. In Burnham’s case, this means he would need 81 Labour legislators to nominate him. He would also require the backing of a few local party branches and organisations such as trade unions.

If Starmer continues to dig his heels in or if others throw their hats into the ring, the process would be slower.

Burnham, until recently the Labour mayor of Manchester and nicknamed the “king of the north” by his supporters, tried unsuccessfully for the job of party leader in 2010 and 2015.

In a speech early on Friday, he said “people here have voted for change. They have voted for more power for the north and everywhere forgotten by Westminster.”

The Starmer problem​

Starmer won a wide but shallow victory in the 2024 general election, which saw Labour gain the most MPs, but each winning by narrow majorities. Since then, his shine has dimmed.

He has been beleaguered by missteps and embarrassing U-turns and stalked by constant pressure from the right-wing Reform Party, led by former city trader Nigel Farage. According to most polls, Starmer is the most unpopular leader in the UK since surveys began.

In the by-election, Burnham won 24,927 votes, beating his main competitor, Reform candidate Robert Kenyon, by more than 9,000 votes.

For many Labour voters, the vote was about their party’s survival and choice of leader.

Cameron Graham, a 31-year-old factory worker and dedicated trade union member, said his vote for Labour in 2024 was to back the party, not the leader.

“I’d definitely prefer Burnham to Starmer,” he said.

Makerfield local Cameron Graham voted for Andy Burnham in the key by-election, hoping he will replace Keir Starmer as Labour leader and prime minister [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
Makerfield local Cameron Graham voted for Andy Burnham in the key by-election, hoping he will replace Keir Starmer as Labour leader and prime minister [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
Howard Bond, a recently retired sales manager, told Al Jazeera that he and his family are lifelong Labour voters, but he has felt unsure of Starmer.

“I think Burnham would do a better job,” he said outside a polling station during his third media interview of the day. “We got a leaflet through the door from Reform saying (Burnham) doesn’t live around here… That’s nonsense. His house is just over there. His kids went to school here. He plays at Ashton Football Club.

“He knows what he’s doing. He’s very articulate and I think he genuinely means well for the community.”

Howard
Howard Bond, who believes Burnham would be a ‘better’ prime minister than Keir Starmer, lamented Reform’s anti-immigration campaign [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
Bond, who is married to an expatriate, said he “can’t stand” anti-immigration Farage.

Reform and Restore, a far-right party backed by Elon Musk, bused in activists from across the country. A few had even flown in from overseas.

Reform makes noise but Makerfield voters reject the hard right​

Immigration has long been a through-line in British politics, especially on the right. In recent weeks, it has dominated headlines as agitators in Belfast and Southampton collectively punished ethnic minority communities for crimes they did not commit.


Across from the polling station, 74-year-old John Van Dusen sat on his lawn chair, a flask of tea in his hand and a Reform flag flying overhead.

“Mass immigration is not good for this country. Illegal immigrants coming over on boats are not being stopped, and the French are helping them come across,” he said, from a ward where statistics show 97 percent of residents had been born there.

While Reform lost in Makerfield, several polls have suggested that if a general election were held tomorrow, it would win.

Van Dusen said he believes Labour and the Conservatives “have done nothing” to stem undocumented migration.

Restore
A group of Restore activists failed in their bid to secure the vote [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
While Labour has put forward stricter migration rules and offered a policy on legal immigration that is expected to reduce numbers later this year, Starmer is a “poor communicator, and one who messed up his first few months in office”, said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. “He also doesn’t appear to have a vision that he can use to inspire either his MPs or the public.”

Burnham, in contrast, “can connect with the public and appears to have a clear sense of where the country needs to go”, he added. “He’s proven that he can beat Farage in a seat that, under normal circumstances, would have fallen easily to Reform.”

The rise of Reform has alarmed many in the UK’s more traditional political sphere.

Reforme
Reform came second in the race, while Restore was in a distant third place followed by the Conservatives, Green Party and Liberal Democrats [Simon Speakman Cordall/Al Jazeera]
However, the direction of travel is not only to the right.

Under their newly elected leader, Zack Polanski, the Greens have enjoyed strong gains on the left, including handing Farage a setback when they won the Gorton and Denton by-election against Reform’s candidate in February.

“The UK has really become a five-party country, with each drawing between 17 and 27 percent of the vote share, meaning they’re all essentially minority parties,” the respected pollster Professor Sir John Curtice told Al Jazeera before Thursday’s vote.

Those five parties are the right-wing Conservatives, leftist Greens, centrist Liberals, centre-left Labour and hard-right Reform.

“There are two things driving this. Firstly, we saw demography – race, social class and age – detach from typical voting choices after the Brexit vote. Secondly, we’ve seen culture-war issues reach equal prominence to traditional political and economic issues. So, the socially conservative are likely to be drawn to Reform, irrespective of their economic offering.”

Back in Makerfield, a woman watched on as the cavalcade of activists, camera crews and journalists buzzed around the high street.

“Well, at least we’re going to get our town back after this,” she said with a laugh.
 
Starmer is a little shit and part of a Jew project. Good to see he is toast.
His wife is a Jew. His chief of staff until recently was Mcsweeny who dropped out of uni and was an israeli settlor in his teens.

We often hear how well starmer did in getting Labour elected 2 years ago but in reality in UK people were so fed up with the tories after 14 years of misrule that they would have elected donkeys with a red flower. In fact imo Starmer reduced the number of mps labout could have had. They were partisan chased out left wingers for dubious reasons.

Starmer actions practically drove lots of Muslims out of the labour party and independent MPS got elected taking away MPS from Labour

One of the worst Tories of all, a former party leader who helped give us the Iraq war, kept his seat because Keir Starmer's Labour Party decided to deselect their Muslim candidate for liking a Jon Stewart video critical of Israel, and split the anti-IDS vote.

Mcsweeny on starmers behalf ran the British government, relations for right-wing, pro-Israel lawmakers,

Starmer is also a dishonest person when he stood for Labour leader he put forward progressive policies so people like me Labour members voted for him soon he got in he changed and became a little shit and started trying to outflank right wing extremists on immigration and the Tories on economy.

Lastly he treats Muslims as idiots.

Despite being a lawyer and someone who should know human rights law he stated on biased jew owned radio

Israel 'has the right' to withhold power and water from Gaza,​


later we got this when he got the backlash

A Labour spokesperson has denied that Keir Starmer said Israel ‘has the right’ to cut off power and water in Gaza, saying the Labour leader’s comment had been in response to a previous question on Israel’s right to defend itself.



In a May 2025 speech on immigration, Starmer stated the UK risked becoming an "island of strangers" without strong migration rules. The remark sparked immediate controversy, with critics drawing comparisons to Enoch Powell's 1968 "Rivers of Blood" speech.

once again after the backlash Starmer later admitted he deeply regrets using the phrase

Labour continued the Conservatives’ policy of spying on Gaza despite stopping some arms exports to Israel over war crimes concerns.

Initially Starmer pretended that he wouldnt allow America to use its bases against Iran later it transpired that they were allowed to and that it was defencive meusure.

Simply a dupliticous Jew puppet.

Many muslims left labour altogether as a direct result of his actions. Some like me reduced our donations to a minimum for a membership and started voting for greens but kept membership so that we can vote this little shit out
 
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cow urine drinker has already been rejected by us British people

He got kicked out because of his similarity to Starmer


A tragic mistake thd british people are deeply regretting. I have so many white caucassian friends who are crying and and saying dark days started when rishi was removed.
 
I think Rishi Sunak must step in and take vontrol of UK. Time for a capable man to lead britain back to greatness.

Utterly useless idiot who let immigration from India run riot.

Oversaw massive fraud in covid subsidies.

Took U.K. debt to stratospheric levels.

And was rightly humiliated in the General Election.
 
cow urine drinker has already been rejected by us British people

He got kicked out because of his similarity to Starmer

Labour needs someone who can consolidate the left’s vote instead of bending to the extreme right.

But someone who is also tough on immigration.

Tories let in far too many riff raffs especially from India and Nigeria.

Tories failed to control immigration because of the Indians in their party.
 
A tragic mistake thd british people are deeply regretting. I have so many white caucassian friends who are crying and and saying dark days started when rishi was removed.

I have those friends too. They told me that they are going to find sunak and all together move to india and live in the hare prashad/bakhtivedanta temple and bath in the river ganges each morning.
 
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I have those friends too. They told me that they are going to find sunak and aall together move to india and live in the hare prashad/bakhtivedanta temple and bath in the river ganges each morning.
Sarcasm isnt gonna help with real understading you know. I dont think you understand how UK works. White people lkke him. That matters the most in UK.
Indians like him because he is meritirious. I dont see how he will nit return with a solidmandate.
 
Sarcasm isnt gonna help with real understading you know. I dont think you understand how UK works. White people lkke him. That matters the most in UK.
Indians like him because he is meritirious. I dont see how he will nit return with a solidmandate.

EXACTLY!.........They like him so much but they forgot to vote for him which is why Labour won......... :ROFLMAO:
 
Rishi flooded the UK with thousands of Indians.

Not thousands but millions.

Second rate doctors who struggle to speak English whilst highly qualified U.K. grads are overlooked.

Thanks to Rishi we now have thousands of British unemployed doctors.

Why do Indian doctors emigrate? Stay in India!
 

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