Just 25.8% of voters turn out for Stretford and Urmston by-election

Freezing temperatures contributed to voters staying at home in the Stretford and Urmston contest, where Labour is widely expected to hold the seat.
Only a quarter of voters eligible to cast a ballot turned out for the Stretford and Urmston by-election in bitter December weather (Danny Lawson/PA)
PA Wire
David Hughes16 December 2022
WEST END FINAL

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Only a quarter of voters eligible to cast a ballot turned out for the Stretford and Urmston by-election in bitter December weather.

Temperatures in Manchester remained below freezing on polling day and the expectation of a comfortable Labour victory did little to inspire voters to go to polling stations, with an official turnout figure of 25.8%.

Votes are being counted after the contest was called in response to former Labour frontbencher Kate Green stepping down to become Greater Manchester deputy mayor.

Labour held the constituency with more than 60% of the vote in 2019, when the turnout was 69.2%.

Labour’s Trafford Council leader Andrew Western is expected to become the next MP.

Ms Green had a majority of 16,417 in 2019 and had been MP since 2010.

The Tories came in second at the last vote, with the Lib Dems in third.

Ms Green, a former shadow education secretary, formally resigned in November to take up the role as Andy Burnham’s deputy for policing and crime.

It marks Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s second by-election test at the ballot box and comes amid a cost-of-living crisis, soaring inflation and a growing wave of industrial action across the UK.

The last by-election, in the City of Chester two weeks ago, saw Samantha Dixon hold the seat for Labour after a contest was triggered by the resignation of Labour MP Christian Matheson after complaints of serious sexual misconduct were upheld by the Commons standards body.

It was the first by-election since Boris Johnson’s dramatic exit from No 10 and the market chaos that came to define Liz Truss’s short stint in the top job.

The other most recent by-elections, which took place on the same day in June, were a disaster for the Conservatives – with Labour snatching Wakefield and the Liberal Democrats securing a historic victory in Tiverton and Honiton.

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