Labour easily holds City of Chester seat in first
byelection test for Sunak
Newly elected MP Samantha Dixon urges general election
after securing huge majority for Labour
Sammy
Gecsoyler and Kiran Stacey
Fri 2 Dec
2022 07.25 GMT
Labour has
easily held the City of Chester following a byelection, winning by a majority
of 10,974 in a brutal first electoral test for Rishi Sunak.
Receiving
17,309 votes with 61.22% of the vote share, Labour achieved its highest
majority and share of the vote ever in the seat. Conversely, the Conservatives
received just 6,335 votes and a 22.4% vote share, their worst result in the
constituency since 1832. The Liberal Democrats came a distant third on 2,368
votes.
Turnout was
41.2%, with 28,541 votes cast in total, a sizeable drop on the 71.7% turnout
and 54,560 votes in 2019. Despite already holding the seat, Labour still
managed a swing of 13.76%.
Samantha
Dixon, the newly elected MP, said in her victory speech early on Friday:
“Tonight the people of Chester have sent a clear message. They have said Rishi
Sunak’s Conservatives no longer have a mandate to govern.”
Asked how
reflective the result was of the national mood, Dixon said: “I don’t think that
the voters in Chester are that much different from those across the country. I
think that it’s time now for a general election and I think Labour will win as
decisively as I have done today.”
Sir John Curtice,
professor of politics at Strathclyde University, told BBC Radio 4’s Today
programme on Friday the result indicated Labour would win a sizeable victory if
a general election were held today.
“This is
the best performance by Labour … since David Cameron first walked through the
door of Downing Street [in 2010]. It is one indication that Labour are in a
stronger position that they’ve been at any previous point when they’ve been
trying to try to challenge the Conservatives over the last dozen years.”
He added:
“A 13-point swing wouldn’t be enough for an enormous majority, but it would
undoubtedly be enough to produce a favourable majority.”
The
constituency has come a long way from being the most marginal in the country in
2015, where Labour won by only 93 votes. In 2017, Labour won by 9,176 votes and
by 6,164 in 2019.
Speaking
after the result, Alison McGovern, the shadow minister for work and pensions
and MP for Wirral South, said the people of Chester were “fed up of Tory rule
and want the change Labour offers”.
“After the
Tories crashed our economy, it’s clear that only Labour can be trusted to help
families across the country make ends meet … The Tories have no mandate to
govern. It’s time for a Labour government.”
The
Conservative candidate, Elizabeth Wardlaw, told local reporters it had “been a
very good experience for me” before swiftly leaving the election count.
This was
the first Westminster byelection since the resignation of Boris Johnson and Liz
Truss and the financial fallout from the mini-budget. While the Tories were not
expected to take the seat, the fall in their share of the vote from 38.3% in
2019 to 22.4% on Thursday night is likely to add to fears among Conservatives
in Westminster who are already facing dismal opinion polls nationally.
The
byelection was triggered by the Labour MP Chris Matheson resigning in October after
allegations of sexual misconduct. Parliament’s bullying and harassment watchdog
and the standards commissioner found he had violated the Commons’ sexual
misconduct policy.
The
constituency’s status as a “safe seat” for Labour is a recent development. In
2010, the Conservatives took the seat from Labour with a 2,583 majority.
This is the
11th by-election held since the 2019 election. Labour has won four of them,
with the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives each having won three.
In terms of
gains, the Liberal Democrats gained three seats while Labour and the
Conservatives have gained one seat each. The SNP also held its seat in the 2021
Airdrie and Shotts byelection.
Dixon
becomes the third Labour MP to represent the City of Chester in its history.
Prior to 1997, the constituency had never elected a Labour MP.
Another
byelection, in the Labour safe seat of Stretford and Urmston, will be held on
15 December following Kate Green’s resignation after being appointed Greater
Manchester’s deputy mayor for police and crime. No date has been set yet for
the byelection in West Lancashire following the resignation of Labour’s Rosie
Cooper to take up a role with the NHS.
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