Scottish
Labour wins pivotal Holyrood byelection, beating incumbent SNP and surging
Reform UK
Labour
celebrated the ‘incredible’ win in the central seat of Hamilton, Larkhall and
Stonehouse, as voters rallied around popular local candidate Davy Russell
Libby
Brooks, Rachel Keenan and Severin Carrell
Fri 6 Jun
2025 01.33 BST
Scottish
Labour is celebrating an “incredible” win in a pivotal Holyrood byelection,
beating the incumbent SNP and fighting off Reform UK’s “racist” campaigning, in
a result that confounded predictions and will boost the party ahead of next
year’s Scottish parliamentary elections.
Voters in
the central Scotland seat of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse rallied round
the popular local candidate Davy Russell after a toxic campaign that saw Nigel
Farage launch an unprecedented series of personal attacks on Scottish Labour
leader Anas Sarwar, labelled racist by SNP leader John Swinney.
In his
acceptance speech, Russell told jubilant supporters: “This community has sent a
message to Farage and his mob: the poison of Reform isn’t us, it isn’t Scotland
and we don’t want your division here.”
The
Nationalists had been the clear favourites to hold the seat after a fiercely
contested campaign called after the sudden death of popular SNP MSP Christina
McKelvie from breast cancer, but were beaten into second place, with Reform UK
following closely in third.
As Reform UK
seemingly gained ground from both the SNP and Scottish Labour in recent weeks,
speculation grew that they might push Sarwar’s party into third place.
But in the
end, with a reasonably high turnout for a byelection of 44.2%, Scottish Labour
reaped the rewards of their highly targeted campaigning and well organised
get-out-the-vote operation to pull off an unexpected victory, winning with
8,559 votes.
The SNP’s
Katy Loudon came second with 7957 votes, only narrowly beating Reform UK’s Ross
Lambie on 7888. The Scottish Conservatives were left trailing on 1621 votes.
A buoyant
Sarwar said it was “an incredible night” having proven the pundits, pollsters
and bookies wrong.
He told
reporters that voters had sent three strong messages: “First, people want a UK
Labour government to go further and faster in improving their lives and I think
that’s a clear message to them”.
“Secondly,
they’ve had enough of this SNP government: after 18 years they’ve let
communities around the country down.”
“Third,
they’ve rejected the politics Nigel Farage and Reform and today the people and
Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse have laid the first stone in the pathway to a
Scottish Labour government next year.”
Asked about
the increasingly personal attacks he endured during the campaign, Sarwar said
“Nigel Farage looks at someone like me and it goes against his values and it
makes him angry. What the vast majority of people in Scotland see is someone
who is one of their own, is a Scot and is working hard to change the country”.
Reform UK’s
Richard Tice, who attended the count, insisted that his party was “thrilled to
bits” with the result, and that third place still represented “a massive boost”
for the party, which has gained momentum in Scotland since the general
election.
The SNP
contingent left the count speedily after the results announcement, with party
leader and first minister John Swinney later applauding Loudon for her “superb
campaign” on X, adding “We have made progress since the election last year but
not enough. We still have work to do and we will do it.”
In 2021,
McKelvie won with a majority of 4,582, with Labour winning the corresponding
Westminster seat with ease in last year’s general election, but on the doorstep
voters voiced discontent with both the SNP government at Holyrood and the
Labour government at Westminster.
Scottish
Labour canvassers worked hard throughout the campaign to counter the major
dissatisfaction with UK Labour policies they encountered. “Winter fuel payment
comes up on every door,” said one senior figure mid-campaign.
But speaking
to the Guardian in the final phase of the campaign, senior Labour sources said
that – while their canvassing showed more people were saying they would vote
Reform than ever before – they remained confident in their strong ground
operation with targeted leaflets and targeted ads on Facebook and YouTube. Some
voters have been visited four times by Labour canvassers as well as Westminster
and Holyrood politicians who visited the constituency throughout the campaign.
“I think we
have the better field operation and we’ve been around people’s doors. We’re
hungry for the votes and people see that,” they said.
Sarwar’s
decision to directly accuse Farage of racism – following a Reform UK advert
that incorrectly claimed he had promised to prioritise Pakistani communities
and is now subject to formal complaints to Meta from Scottish Labour and the
SNP – was because he was “really, really angry”, they added.
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