UK byelection results: Labour routs Tories in
Selby and Ainsty but falls short in Uxbridge
Keir Mather, 25, is Selby’s next MP, as Labour
narrowly fails to take Boris Johnson’s old seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip
and Liberal Democrats romp to victory in Somerton and Frome
Helen Pidd,
Mabel Banfield-Nwachi and Sammy Gecsoyler
Fri 21 Jul
2023 04.45 BST
The Labour
party has won its biggest ever byelection victory by overturning a 20,000-vote
Conservative majority in Selby and Ainsty, sending a 25-year-old to parliament.
But Keir
Starmer’s party failed to win Uxbridge and South Ruislip, Boris Johnson’s old
constituency. The Conservatives held on to the outer London seat with a
majority of 495, the only bit of good news in an otherwise miserable night for
Rishi Sunak.
The Liberal
Democrats romped to victory in Somerton and Frome, in a contest triggered by the
resignation of scandal-hit David Warburton. Sarah Dyke, the cabinet member for
the environment on South Somerset district council, won with a majority of
11,008 over the Conservatives.
Selby’s new
MP is 25-year-old Keir Mather, a former researcher for shadow health secretary
Wes Streeting who was named after the first leader of the Labour Party, Keir
Hardie. Mather won by 4,161 votes.
Mather will
now become the “baby of the house” as the youngest MP in the Commons. In his
victory speech he said that “thousands of votes were in Labour’s box for the first
time” and declared: “In this campaign we have rewritten the rules on where
Labour can win.”
Starmer
said: “This is a historic result that shows that people are looking at Labour
and seeing a changed party that is focused entirely on the priorities of working
people with an ambitious, practical plan to deliver.
“Keir
Mather will be a fantastic MP who will deliver the fresh start Selby and Ainsty
deserves.”
Labour had
been expected to comfortably win Uxbridge, where Johnson’s majority had
dwindled to 7,210 in the 2019 general election – his first as prime minister.
There was
sufficient disbelief in the Labour camp that they had not in fact won the
byelection that party officials demanded a recount. The second round delivered
the same result: a slim Conservative victory.
Former
postman Steve Tuckwell, the local Conservative councillor who will now take
Johnson’s place in Westminster, had declared the vote a “referendum” on
London’s ultra-low emission zone (Ulez).
In his
victory speech, Tuckwell referenced the mayor of London’s decision to expand
the zone where people have to pay a £12.50 daily fee to drive if their car does
not meet emission standards. “Sadiq Khan has lost Labour this election,” said
Tuckwell.
There was a
6.7-percentage point swing in the share of the vote from Conservative to Labour
in Uxbridge and South Ruislip. Labour needed a 7.6-point swing to take the
seat.
The
byelection was triggered by Johnson’s shock resignation after the Commons
privileges committee recommended a lengthy suspension from parliament for
knowingly misleading parliament about lockdown parties in Downing Street.
In Selby,
the Conservatives blamed the outgoing MP, Nigel Adams, for their defeat. People
were “really disappointed” that Adams quit in a huff because he didn’t get a
seat in the Lords, said Andrew Jones, the scrupulously polite MP for Harrogate
and Knaresborough, who has been overseeing much of the Tory campaigning in
Selby. So, added Jones, was he. It was “the main talking point” on the
doorstep, he claimed.
The Liberal
Democrats have now gained four seats from the Conservatives at byelections this
parliament: Chesham and Amersham and North Shropshire in 2021, and Tiverton and
Honiton last year.
In her
victory speech in Somerset, Dyke thanked lifelong Conservative voters for
switching to the Lib Dems for the first time.
The Lib
Dems won 21,187 votes with a 28-point swing, while the Tories achieved their
worst result in the history of the seat with 10,179 votes and 26% of the vote.
The Greens came third, with Reform UK fourth and Labour fifth.
Labour has
now gained two seats in byelections since the 2019 general election, after its
2022 win in Wakefield.
Labour’s
win in Selby exceeds both the national 12-point swing the party needs for an
overall majority at the next general election and the 16-point swing suggested
by recent polls.
Gaining
Selby sets a record for the size of majority overturned by Labour at a
byelection, according to Dr Hannah Bunting and Prof Will Jennings, Sky election
analysts. The highest majority the party has overturned at a byelection is
14,654 votes in Mid Staffordshire more than 30 years ago.
Of the
three byelections, turnout was highest in Uxbridge and South Ruislip, with
46.11% of the electorate casting a ballot. It was 44.12% in Somerset and
44.77% in Selby.
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