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‘Turning point’: Starmer braces for showdown after potential challenger aces byelection

Labour Mayor Andy Burnham has won the Makerfield byelection with 54.5% of the vote, defeating a candidate from the populist right-wing Reform UK party. Burnham emphasized the result as a potential 'turning point' for the Labour Party and a challenge to Prime Minister Keir Starmer amid declining government support and internal disputes.

Updated June 19, 2026 — 4:54pm, first published 1:10pm

London: Labour Mayor Andy Burnham has won a British byelection that clears the way for him to challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer and set a new course for the government after a plunge in its support and bitter argument about its direction.

Burnham defeated a candidate from the populist right-wing Reform UK party to win the seat of Makerfield, in the country’s north between Liverpool and Manchester, by a comfortable margin with 54.5 per cent of the vote.

Labour party’s Andy Burnham stands beside candidate Count Binface (left) and a candidate for Protect British Wildlife as he waves after winning the Makerfield byelection. AP The outcome demonstrated Burnham’s ability to tackle the right-wing party at a time of agonising national debate about Starmer’s performance and the resignation of top cabinet ministers.

Speaking after the votes were counted, Burnham said voters knew politics was not working and that he offered change.

“Everyone can feel that the country isn’t where it should be,” he said.

“Tonight could – just could – be the turning point. From here on, I will give everything I have got to make it so.”

Reform and its leader, Nigel Farage, have soared in public opinion polls and campaigned hard to win Makerfield, but candidate Rob Kenyon emerged with only 34.3 per cent of the vote.

The Conservative Party, which held government two years ago, gained only 2.2 per cent. The Greens received a tiny 0.7 per cent, suggesting that voters swung behind Burnham to shut out Reform.

Burnham has been touted by his Labour supporters as a future prime minister, but has been out of parliament for the past nine years, serving instead as the mayor of Greater Manchester. He was a minister in the Labour government led by Gordon Brown until it lost office in 2010. He rose to become health minister in the last 11 months of that government.

Despite being out of parliament, he has won popular support as a “straight-talking” Labour figure when Starmer is widely criticised for his cautious approach in public remarks and political strategy.

“I do say to my own party, this is a final chance to change,” Burnham declared at the formal announcement of the votes.

“This is what people said directly to me on the hundreds of doorsteps that I stood on. We must hear it. We must act upon it, and we must get it right.

“There will be no second chance, but it is a chance now from this result tonight to build a new politics based on unity and hope, turning away from the path that takes us to a divided, dark politics of the kind we see in the United States.

“We must now take this path and put this country back on the right path, and bring people back together, and get things working properly again.”

Despite months of media attention about his prospects as a future prime minister, Burnham has yet to set out major policy ideas and has spoken only in general terms about whether he would make hard decisions on spending cuts, defence outlays, welfare reform or the environment.

Because voting centres stay open until 10pm in most UK elections, the count continued until after 2am on Friday (11am AEST) and the declaration of the result took place before dawn.

In a typical display of British election humour, a candidate known as Count Binface appeared on stage alongside Burnham after receiving 95 votes.

Burnham appears to be the least unpopular of the potential candidates for the prime minister’s office, with a YouGov survey earlier this week finding that 41 per cent of voters had an unfavourable view of him and 30 per cent were favourable.

That compared to 69 per cent with an unfavourable view of Starmer (24 per cent favourable). Farage was seen as unfavourable by 67 per cent and favourable by 26 per cent.

The next step could be a formal declaration of a Labour leadership challenge, but Starmer tried to fend off the threat earlier this week by arguing the priority should be finding a replacement as the Manchester mayor. He also suggested he could bring Burnham into cabinet, but Burnham played down this prospect.

The moves follow Starmer’s steep slide in the polls since he took Labour to power at the July 2024 election, after his government suffered backbench revolts over welfare and spending policies and lost its deputy prime minister , Angela Rayner, over a tax scandal.

Former health minister Wes Streeting has said he will enter a contest for the leadership, after quitting the cabinet last month , and former defence minister John Healey and former armed forces minister Al Carns resigned this month in a dispute over defence funding.

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer has suffered a steep slide in the polls since taking Labour to power at the July 2024 election. Pool Photo via AP The Labour leadership rules require a challenger to gain endorsement from 20 per cent of Labour MPs – which means 81 of the 403 in the House of Commons – in a written application to the secretary of the party to sta…

Read the full article at The Age
Source document: Makerfield Byelection Results

4 reports

The AgeParty-alignedCenter8 hr. ago
UK PM Starmer ‘ready to resign’

Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is considering challenging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the leadership of the Labour Party, following reports that Starmer may be prepared to step down.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report without overtly biased language or selective sourcing. It mentions the possibility of a leadership challenge and Starmer's potential resignation but does not take a stance or emphasize one side over the other.

The Sydney Morning HeraldParty-alignedCenter8 hr. ago
UK PM Starmer ‘ready to resign’

Manchester mayor Andy Burnham is considering challenging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the leadership of the Labour Party, following reports that Starmer may be prepared to step down.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report without overtly biased language or selective sourcing. It mentions the possibility of a leadership challenge and Starmer's potential resignation but does not take a stance or emphasize one side over the other.

The AgeParty-alignedLeft2 days ago
‘Turning point’: Starmer braces for showdown after potential challenger aces byelection

Labour Mayor Andy Burnham has won the Makerfield byelection with 54.5% of the vote, defeating a candidate from the populist right-wing Reform UK party. Burnham emphasized the result as a potential 'turning point' for the Labour Party and a challenge to Prime Minister Keir Starmer amid declining government support and internal disputes.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the victory of a Labour candidate as a 'turning point' and highlights his challenge to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, suggesting a shift in political momentum. The emphasis on Burnham's call for change and the defeat of a right-wing candidate implies a positive outlook for the left.

Official sources cited

The Sydney Morning HeraldParty-alignedCenter2 days ago
‘Turning point’: Starmer braces for showdown after potential challenger aces byelection

Labour Mayor Andy Burnham has won the Makerfield byelection with 54.5% of the vote, defeating a candidate from the populist right-wing Reform UK party. This victory positions Burnham to challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer and potentially shift the government's direction following a decline in Labour's support and internal disputes.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the election results factually without overtly favoring either side. It includes direct quotes from Burnham and mentions Reform UK's campaign efforts, providing balanced context about the political landscape.

Official sources cited

  • government Labour Mayor Andy Burnham
  • organisation Reform UK

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