Andy
Burnham wins huge majority in Makerfield byelection, paving way for Starmer
leadership challenge
Greater
Manchester mayor says result represents Labour’s ‘final chance to change’,
after soundly beating Reform UK and Restore Britain
Josh
Halliday North of England editor
Fri 19
Jun 2026 06.10 BST
Andy
Burnham has won the crucial Makerfield byelection by a huge majority, paving
the way for a challenge to Keir Starmer’s premiership.
The
Greater Manchester mayor beat the Reform UK candidate, Robert Kenyon, by 9,231
votes, and the new hardline Restore Britain party came a distant third.
Labour
won 54% of the vote to Reform UK’s 35%, while Restore Britain secured 7%.
Turnout was 58.75%, six percentage points up on the general election, with
45,510 votes cast.
In his
victory speech, Burnham said the result “could be a turning point” and that
people had “voted for change, they have voted for more power for the north and
everywhere forgotten by Westminster”.
He said
this was Labour’s “final chance to change”, adding: “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
politics of the kind we see in the United States.
“We must
now take this up and put this country back on the right path and bring people
back together and get things working properly.”
After the
most consequential byelection in modern British history, Burnham is widely
expected to mount a bid for No 10 if a formal leadership contest is triggered
in the coming days.
However,
his allies believe Starmer should be given time to set out a timetable for his
departure, the Guardian revealed on Thursday, with some in his team having
talked ministers out of resigning as soon as this weekend to stop the
government falling into chaos.
The fact
that Burnham secured 6,100 more votes than both Reform and Restore combined
will hugely burnish his credentials for No 10 among Labour MPs and members.
Starmer
congratulated Burnham on his win, saying: “Voters chose Labour’s campaign of
hope and optimism over division and hate”.
The
former health secretary appears to have won the support of an anti-Reform
coalition of voters from across the spectrum, with the Conservatives, Liberal
Dems and Greens winning only 3% of the vote between them. In 2024, the three
parties collectively won 22% of the vote in this constituency.
The “King
of the North”, who was first elected to parliament almost exactly 25 years ago
and served in the governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, will return to
Westminster nine years after he left.
Addressing
hundreds of supporters, who cheered him into the Life convention centre in
Wigan, Burnham said Makerfield would “never be a stepping stone to me – but
instead will be my touchstone: A Makerfield test at the heart of British
politics will ensure the places that Westminster has neglected will now get
fairness.”
Voters
had told him they felt “neglected” and that “the country works for other people
and other places but not for here”, he said.
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“That
changes tonight. This result changes that. This result will bring about a
country that works fairly for everyone. People here have voted for change, they
have voted for more power for the north and everywhere forgotten by
Westminster. Now let’s give that back to them.”
His win
means Labour faces another gruelling contest against Reform UK, this time to
retain the Greater Manchester mayoralty. The byelection of 2 million voters
will be one of the biggest in British political history, and is expected to be
held on 30 July.
The
Makerfield byelection was triggered when Josh Simons, the then Labour MP,
agreed to stand down last month to allow Burnham to contest the seat and mount
a challenge to Starmer’s ailing leadership.
The prime
minister has faced calls for his resignation over the disastrous appointment of
Peter Mandelson as the UK ambassador to the US, followed by elections in which
Labour lost more than 1,200 local councillors and control of the Welsh Senedd
in May.
Starmer
has said he will not walk away from his post and that he intends to fight any
challenge.
The prime
minister is also facing a threat from his former health secretary Wes
Streeting, who has indicated he is prepared to trigger a Labour leadership
contest as early as next week.
The
cabinet minister and Wigan MP, Lisa Nandy, described the victory as “history in
the making”.
“What
Andy’s shown here is that there is something that he brings, a willingness to
go out and fight for the change that people need, to take on any system and any
person who stands in the way and to be bold and to wear his heart on his
sleeve, and people have responded.
“I think
that with him back in the top team, at the top table, helping to drive that
change, I think we’ll be in a really strong position.”

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