• Disrupting Power Since 2015
  • Donate
  • Login
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result

Labour’s by-election ‘victories’: when is Starmer going to admit the country doesn’t actually like him?

More nonsense from Labour

The Canary by The Canary
16 February 2024
in Editorial
Reading Time: 5 mins read
253 2
A A
1
Home Editorial
472
SHARES
3.6k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Labour Party won both by-elections on Thursday 15 February, overturning Tory majorities in Wellingborough and Kingswood. Leader Keir Starmer has been celebrating, hailing the results as a sign the UK is “crying out for change”. Of course, Labour’s by-election results were a millions miles away from that. In fact, they show the public has all but given up on politics. Not that Starmer seemed to have noticed – as Labour slipped further down the rabbit hole of delusion and preposterous PR.

By-elections show UK ‘crying out for change’ – according to Starmer

First, to Wellingborough. As BBC News reported:

Labour’s Gen Kitchen, a former London councillor who works in the charity sector and grew up in Northamptonshire, secured a comfortable majority of 6,436.

Meanwhile, the Tories suffered their biggest drop in vote share in any by-election since at least the Second World War.

Ms Kitchen said: “The people of Wellingborough have spoken for Britain. This is a stunning victory for the Labour Party.”

Next, to Kingswood. As BBC News also reported:

Labour secured a majority of 2,501 over Tory candidate Sam Bromiley in the South Gloucestershire seat of Kingswood, near Bristol.

In his victory speech Damien Egan, who resigned as mayor of Lewisham in London to fight the seat where he grew up, said 14 years of a Conservative government had “sucked the hope out of our country”

The constituency had been held by former Tory MP Mr Skidmore since 2010, until he quit over the government’s climate policies.

Reacting to the results, BBC News reported Starmer said:

Labour leader Sir Keir said the country was “crying out for change”, telling BBC Breakfast his party was “a different party” to what it had been in 2019. He said voters “can see that we’ve got the answers to their problems.”

But he added: “There is always more work to do.” He said he had told his team to “fight like we’re five points behind”.

“As every football fan knows, you don’t win the league by a good result in February,” he said.

If you believe the results show the UK is “crying out for change” in the form of Labour, then you’ll believe anything.

Labour: no-one cares about you

Turnout in both by-elections was pretty dire:

  • In Kingswood, 37% of the electorate voted
  • In Wellingborough, 38% of the electorate voted.

Of course, Wellingborough’s new Labour MP Kitchen believes 38% of the electorate turning up to vote shows them ‘speaking for Britain’.

Her statement would be hilarious if it wasn’t so pathetic and insulting to her constituents. This is because, when you look at what percentage of the total electorate voted for Labour, these two by-election results look very different:

  • In Wellingborough, 17.44% of the electorate voted for Labour.
  • In Kingswood, 16.65% of the electorate voted for Labour.

Of course, when you parachute Labour politicians from other areas into seats the public will rightly be suspicious, even if both candidates did ‘grow up’ in their respective constituencies. Egan’s track record as Lewisham mayor was hardly good – with him looking like a careerist from the off.

In reality, both results show that politicians and the state have now utterly disenfranchised huge swathes of the public from our so-called ‘democracy’. However, this has been building for some time.

Starmer: helping to disenfranchise the poorest people from our sham democracy

It was a similar story in the Mid Bedfordshire and Tamworth by-elections last October, and the Hartlepool by-election in 2021. Labour lost it, but most people didn’t bother voting, anyway: the turnout was 42.6%.

It was the same in Wakefield in 2022, where Labour won but turnout was a dire 39.5%. Wellingborough is particularly reflective of both these other results – as the three constituencies all have higher deprivation scores than the England average. That is, Labour (and politics generally) are failing to convince the poorest people it’s worth voting at all.

As the Canary wrote of 2022’s Wakefield by-election result:

Ultimately the Wakefield by-election is useless as a public opinion gauge. Because the turnout was just 39.5% – way down on the general election. This is much like 2021’s Batley and Spen by-election, where Labour spun-it as some sort of victory when turnout was less than 50%. Both constituencies have higher rates of poverty than other parts of England. Hartlepool was a similar story: poverty met a by-election and the result was a turnout of less than 50%.

Our systems of politics and democracy, and their proponents, disenfranchise the poorest people. So much so, that they rightly feel voting will change nothing. The difference in a richer area, like Tiverton and Honiton, is clear. Its by-election saw a 52% turnout and the Lib Dems got in – while the constituency has much lower rates of deprivation.

So, no – the Wakefield election wasn’t a victory for Labour. It was a victory for the political and media class, who’ve maintained the status quo. And it’s all thanks to their disenfranchisement of the poorest people.

Labour’s Wellingborough and Kingswood by-election victories haven’t changed any of that – in fact, they’ve likely compounded the issues. If Starmer and his cronies weren’t such careerist charlatans, they’d admit this and try to engage with missing voters. Instead, they’ve sunk further into a centre-right, delusional abyss – while the rest of us suffer.

Featured image via BBC News – screengrab

Share189Tweet118
Previous Post

Stop The War Cymru: a new group in Wales launches with anti-imperialism at its heart

Next Post

Letters to the Canary: upcoming anti-Palestinian Panorama episode, water companies’ bonuses, and antisemitism

Next Post
Letters to the Canary general election

Letters to the Canary: upcoming anti-Palestinian Panorama episode, water companies' bonuses, and antisemitism

UAV Tactical Systems Palestine

Another judge sees sense and throws out ridiculous case against Palestine Action

Assisted dying change.org

A change.org petition says assisted dying will 'save the NHS & DWP money' - and people are rightly distressed

UN Tax Convention tax evasion

The UK has tried to derail UN plans for a fair tax system. So, 22 NGOs have got involved.

Court of Appeal belief in consent

While Assange is in court, the government will also be trying to remove a crucial legal defence for activists

Please login to join discussion
People are coming together on 7 June to oppose Labour's DWP benefit cuts
News

People are coming together on 7 June to oppose Labour’s DWP benefit cuts

by The Canary
14 May 2025
Keir Starmer's 'Island of Strangers' speech: channeling the racist rhetoric of Enoch Powell
Opinion

Is Keir Starmer capable of killing?

by Jamie Driscoll
14 May 2025
As an ACTUAL GENOCIDE continues, its apologists come for Gary Lineker over an emoji
Opinion

As an ACTUAL GENOCIDE continues, its apologists come for Gary Lineker over an emoji

by Ed Sykes
14 May 2025
Disability doesn’t discriminate, so why are disabled people's organisations?
Long Reads

Disability doesn’t discriminate, so why are disabled people’s organisations?

by Nicola Jeffery
14 May 2025
hygiene poverty
Analysis

1.1 million kids are in ‘hygiene poverty’ – yet no one in government wants to act

by Steve Topple
14 May 2025
  • Contact
  • About & FAQ
  • Get our Daily News Email
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact ben@thecanary.co

For other enquiries, contact: hello@thecanary.co

The Canary is owned and run by independent journalists and volunteers, NOT offshore billionaires.

You can write for us, or support us by making a regular or one-off donation.

© Canary Media Ltd 2024, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion

© 2023 Canary - Worker's co-op.

Before you go, have you seen...?

People are coming together on 7 June to oppose Labour's DWP benefit cuts
News
The Canary

People are coming together on 7 June to oppose Labour’s DWP benefit cuts

Keir Starmer's 'Island of Strangers' speech: channeling the racist rhetoric of Enoch Powell
Opinion
Jamie Driscoll

Is Keir Starmer capable of killing?

As an ACTUAL GENOCIDE continues, its apologists come for Gary Lineker over an emoji
Opinion
Ed Sykes

As an ACTUAL GENOCIDE continues, its apologists come for Gary Lineker over an emoji

Disability doesn’t discriminate, so why are disabled people's organisations?
Long Reads
Nicola Jeffery

Disability doesn’t discriminate, so why are disabled people’s organisations?

ADVERTISEMENT
Business
Nathan Spears

When digital isn’t enough: why paper still matters in modern business

Tech
Nathan Spears

How Digital Addictions Are Formed in the Shadow of Large Platforms

Lifestyle
Nathan Spears

Recovery in the Sun: How the Canary Islands are Becoming a Wellness Tourism Hub