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Related: About this forumGreen Party wins Gorton and Denton by-election with Labour pushed into third by Reform
The Greens' Hannah Spencer becomes the new MP, with Reform's Matt Goodwin in second place and Labour's Angeliki Stogia in third
In her victory speech, Spencer says she is a plumber who never grew up wanting to be a politician
The vote was triggered by the resignation of former Labour MP Andrew Gwynne on health grounds - it had been considered a safe Labour seat
"It's not just that Labour have lost, they've lost badly," says polling expert Sir John Curtice

Here are the results (% change from previous election in parentheses):
Greens: 40.7% (+27.5)
Reform UK: 28.7% (+14.7)
Labour: 25.4% (-25.3)
Conservatives: 1.9% (-6.0)
Liberal Democrats: 1.8% (-2.1)
muriel_volestrangler
(105,965 posts)who got a significant 10.3%, with no equivalent standing this time. So there was a bit of a swing from left parties to right, when you add them up.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gorton_and_Denton#Elections_in_the_2020s
Turnout was about the same as the 2024 general election.
Emrys
(9,016 posts)I think it's not a stretch to see a pattern of tactical voting here, which mirrors some earlier by-election results, e.g. in Wales.
The presence of the Greens seems to have given an option to people who aren't inclined to support Labour, but want to keep Reform from gaining a majority. I'd hoped to see that pattern continue after Caerphilly last year, where Plaid Cymru were the beneficiaries.
Although turnout was the same as 2024, it would be interesting to see some polling breakdown of changes in who actually voted - e.g., were they new voters, or as a superficial reading of the percentage swings might suggest, folks who jumped ship to the Greens from Labour?
I also wonder how things would have looked if Andy Burnham hadn't been excluded so clumsily and controversially by Labour.
Given how by-elections and council elections (the rough UK equivalent of US midterms in terms of serving as bellwethers) tend to pan out for the party in government, an anti-incumbent swing might not be unexpected, though perhaps not to this extent.
If nothing else, it's another example of Reform underperforming compared to some of the fantastical and depressing polling that's been doing the rounds. Runners-up don't get prizes.
T_i_B
(14,888 posts)...to electoral defeat has been painful to watch. It's clear that they expected to win simply out of a sense of entitlement. And they've turned remarkably unpleasant and (inevitably) very racist when they've realised that their schtick isn't going to cut it in Greater Manchester.