George Galloway wins sweeping victory in Rochdale
byelection, saying ‘this is for Gaza’
Former Labour MP wins almost 40% of the vote in a
contest beset by chaos and controversy – and dominated by the Israel-Hamas
conflict
Josh
Halliday and Aneesa Ahmed
Fri 1 Mar
2024 03.46 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/mar/01/george-galloway-wins-rochdale-byelection
The veteran
political agitator George Galloway declared “a shifting of the tectonic plates”
away from Labour after claiming a stunning victory in the Rochdale byelection.
Galloway,
one of the most divisive politicians in Britain, won almost 40% of the vote in
a contest beset by chaos and controversy and dominated by the conflict in Gaza.
He took aim
at Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak in a victory speech that was interrupted by
hecklers after a dramatic count at Rochdale leisure centre.
“Keir
Starmer, this is for Gaza,” he said. “You will pay a high price for the role
that you have played in enabling, encouraging and covering for the catastrophe
presently going on in occupied Gaza, in the Gaza Strip.”
Galloway
won 12,335 votes – 39.7% of the total – in a much more sweeping victory than
anyone had predicted, giving him a 5,697-vote majority.
Labour,
which abandoned its candidate over inflammatory comments he made about Israel,
finished in fourth place with just 7.7%, having held a near-10,000 vote
majority in the constituency.
Galloway,
an ex-Labour MP, has now unseated his former party in three elections and will
return to parliament representing a fourth constituency in 37 years.
Addressing
Starmer from the podium, Galloway said: “This is going to spark a movement, a
landslide, a shifting of the tectonic plates, a score of parliamentary
constituencies, beginning here in the north-west, in the West Midlands, in
London, from Ilford to Bethnal Green & Bow.
“Labour is
on notice that they have lost the confidence of millions of their voters who
loyally and traditionally voted for them generation after generation.”
Azhar Ali,
Labour’s former candidate, did not attend the count and the Guardian
understands that other Labour campaigners were told to stay away.
Despite a
campaign dominated by events in the Middle East, Galloway said he hoped to put
together a “grand alliance” with Rochdale councillors to work on local issues.
Dozens of
Galloway supporters had gathered outside the leisure centre shortly after the
polls closed, when it quickly became apparent that he was set for a decisive
victory.
Inside the
count, however, the mood was less hospitable. A family member of a rival
candidate muttered “terrorist sympathiser” while another shouting “woe to
Rochdale” after he was declared the winner.
Another
heckler, who gave her name as Jane Twill, was removed by security after
interrupting the victory speech by accusing Galloway of failing to address the
climate emergency.
His victory
comes after one of the most controversial and chaotic byelections in recent
memory.
So
confident was Galloway’s team that they briefed reporters within an hour of the
polls closing that he had won “comfortably” and announced plans for a “mass
rally” immediately after the declaration at his election headquarters, a former
Suzuki showroom.
Labour,
defending a near-10,000-vote majority and riding high in the polls, had
expected a straightforward contest to replace the sitting MP, Tony Lloyd, who
died on 17 January from leukaemia. But its campaign was thrown into disarray
when it emerged its candidate, Azhar Ali, had repeated anti-Israel conspiracy
theories about the 7 October attack by Hamas.
Labour was
eventually forced to disown Ali and abandoned its campaign barely a week into
the contest. Although Ali’s name was on the ballot paper – it was too late to
select another candidate – Labour stopped all electioneering in the town nearly
three weeks ago.
Galloway,
on the other hand, was galvanised. The fedora-sporting politician toured
Rochdale with a megaphone, calling the byelection “a referendum on Gaza” and a
chance to stage a protest against Labour.
His team,
backed by an army of volunteers from across the country, managed to capture the
vote of a significant number of Muslim people, who make up about 30% of the
town’s population, with many angry about Labour’s position on Gaza.
Starmer’s
party also faced a challenge from another former Labour MP in the form of Simon
Danczuk, who was suspended from the party in 2015 after sending inappropriate
messages to a teenager. Danczuk, Rochdale’s MP from 2010 to 2017, was standing
for Reform UK, the anti-immigration party founded by Nigel Farage.
Danczuk’s
new party did poorly, finishing in sixth place with only 6.3% of the vote. A
Reform UK source said the party had under-performed due to logistics: the
Rochdale contest was the third byelection it had fought in three weeks and it
had been focusing on its party conference in Doncaster last weekend.
Galloway,
69, previously unseated his former party in Bethnal Green and Bow in 2005 and
Bradford West in 2012, both following campaigns based heavily on events in the
Middle East.
Like
Galloway’s previous campaigns, the Rochdale contest was mired in controversy.
In the week when MPs were raising concerns over their safety, Galloway said the
names of Labour MPs were “dripping in blood” after the party’s ceasefire
amendment, which did not go as far as pro-Palestinian supporters wanted.
Earlier
this week a 23-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of sending a death threat
to Danczuk, who hired security guards for the final two days of campaigning.
Galloway’s
team said its banners and garden posts had been ripped down in an effort to
stop it getting the word out.
There were
allegations of dirty tricks on polling day too, as Reform UK lodged a formal
complaint about Galloway activists distributing leaflets outside polling
stations.
Richard
Tice, the leader of Reform, claimed the contest had not been “free or fair” and
made unspecified suggestions that the postal vote had been rigged.
“This
byelection and result should act as a serious wake-up call to those in power
and indeed to the entire electorate,” he said.
“We are
supposed to be a beacon of democracy, this shameful contest has been more
characteristic of a failed state.”
Galloway’s
team had earlier accused Labour canvassers of speaking to voters inside polling
stations.
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