Reform
wins Runcorn byelection by just six votes in blow to Labour
Result will
heighten government’s fears it could lose scores of MPs to Nigel Farage’s party
at next general election
Josh
Halliday North of England editor
Fri 2 May
2025 07.07 BST
Nigel
Farage’s Reform UK has dramatically won the Runcorn and Helsby byelection by
just six votes in a blow to Keir Starmer’s premiership.
The
hard-right party narrowly overturned Labour’s 14,700-vote majority in the first
full-scale electoral test of Starmer’s government.
The result,
which came on a night when Reform UK was expected to gain hundreds of council
seats across England, followed a 17% swing from Labour to Farage’s party.
After a
recount that delayed the declaration by three hours, Reform’s Sarah Pochin won
38.6% of the vote – amounting to 12,645 votes, six more than Labour, making it
one of the smallest margins of victory in recent UK political history.
The
Conservatives slumped from 16% of the vote at last year’s general election to
7% in this contest, narrowly finishing ahead of the Green party in third place.
The closely
watched contest had been billed as the first real test of Farage’s ability to
turn his party’s rising popularity into seats in parliament.
Pochin, a
former Tory councillor and local magistrate, becomes the first non-Labour MP to
represent the Cheshire town of Runcorn in 52 years.
Arriving at
the count centre to declare victory at 6am on Friday, Farage said: “Here and
across the country you’re seeing big swings to us, from Labour in the north and
Conservatives in the Midlands and the south. It’s fascinating”.
He added:
“For the movement, for the party, it’s a very, very big moment, absolutely no
question and it’s happening right across everywhere.”
Farage said
the result sent a clear message that “we are now the opposition” and that if
voters backed the Conservatives then they would “just get a Labour government”.
Despite the
tiny margin of victory the result will heighten fears among Labour MPs that
they could lose scores of seats to the hard-right populist party at the next
general election. Karen Shore, Labour’s candidate, refused to speak to the
media as she was ushered out of the count centre at the DCBL Stadium in Widnes,
Cheshire.
The Cheshire
byelection was triggered by the resignation of Labour’s Mike Amesbury, the
former MP who was convicted earlier this year of punching a constituent.
Farage’s
party sought to make immigration the key issue in this overwhelmingly white
British corner of north-west England, raising fears over small boat crossings,
houses of multiple occupancy and even Turkish barbers.
Reform UK
also attacked Labour’s cutting of the winter fuel payment – an issue repeatedly
raised by voters – as well as its early release of prisoners and the rising
cost of energy bills.
Its tactics
appeared to work, delivering Reform UK its fifth MP and establishing the
fledgling party has a serious challenger to Britain’s two main parties.
In her
victory speech Pochin said: “Enough is enough. Enough Tory failure. Enough
Labour lies. I want to thank every one of you who were brave enough to put a
cross against my name on the ballot paper.”
She said the
result would “inspire the rest of the country to believe that they too can
stand up for what is right and stand up for our British values”.
The result
appears to back up recent opinion polls that suggested the anti-European Union
populists were on course to topple Britain’s historic two-party system at the
next general election.
Despite
Runcorn and Helsby being one of Labour’s safest seats, the party faced a
challenge to win over voters from the beginning given it was sparked by
Amesbury violently assaulting a constituent in a drunken late-night row.
In the first
weeks of the campaign, Shore was criticised for launching a Facebook petition
to close a hotel housing asylum seekers, in what some saw as a cynical attempt
to stem the flow of votes to Reform UK.
Shore, a
former deputy council leader, denied her campaign was “prejudiced” but admitted
“that the tone of it could’ve been slightly different – and the fact it was
exploited by the populists”.
A Labour
spokesperson said: “Byelections are always difficult for the party in
government and the events which led to this one being called made it even
harder. Voters are still rightly furious with the state of the country after 14
years of failure and clearly expect the government to move faster with the plan
for change.
“While
Labour has suffered an extremely narrow defeat, the shock is that the
Conservative vote has collapsed. Moderate voters are clearly appalled by the
talk of a Tory-Reform pact.”
Labour and
Reform UK officials appeared tense as votes were counted through the night at
DCBL stadium, the home of Widnes Vikings rugby league club, just across the
mouth of the River Mersey from Runcorn.
Campaigners
from both parties repeatedly said the result was “too close to call”,
downplaying talk of a decisive victory for either side.
Turnout in
the contest was a higher-than-expected 46.33%, which some on the count floor
attributed to the “Farage factor” – a reference to the Reform UK leader’s
ability to provoke strong opinion on either side.
There were
bizarre scenes at the count centre when Reform UK officials announced that
Farage was expected to arrive imminently about 30 minutes before the result was
expected – a sign they were confident of victory.
But as
camera crews and officials gathered, some holding the door open for their
soon-to-arrive leader, there was no sign of him. Journalists were then told he
was instead waiting in a car near the venue, perhaps as word reached him that
it was too soon to declare a win.

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