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UK Local Elections 2026
8JUL

Burnham storms back to win Makerfield

2 min read
10:13UTC

Andy Burnham won the Makerfield by-election with 24,927 votes and a 9,231 majority over Reform, on rising turnout, inverting the usual mid-term penalty for a governing party.

PoliticsAssessed
Key takeaway

Burnham beat Reform by 9,231 on rising turnout, outrunning both the 2024 baseline and the polls.

Andy Burnham won the Makerfield by-election on 18 June with 24,927 votes, a 54.8% share and a majority of 9,231 over Reform UK's Rob Kenyon 1. Turnout rose to 58.77%.

By-elections normally punish governing parties: turnout falls and the incumbent's share drops. Here both rose. Labour's share climbed from 45% at the 2024 general election, and turnout went up from 52.5%. That lift looks personal to Burnham, whose name recognition a generic Labour candidate could not match.

Reform's own share also rose, to 34.5%, while the Conservatives collapsed to fifth on 2.2%, behind Restore Britain, so the squeeze fell on the Tories rather than Reform. Burnham outran the Survation poll that had put him three points ahead by roughly twenty. The satirical candidate Count Binface took 95 votes.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A by-election is a special vote to fill a parliamentary seat between general elections. Normally, when the governing party's candidate stands in one, both its vote share and turnout tend to fall compared with the last general election, because voters use the contest to register a protest. In Makerfield on 18 June, the opposite happened. Andy Burnham won with 24,927 votes, 54.8% of the vote, actually up on Labour's 2024 result, and more people turned out to vote than last time. Reform UK's candidate came second but also grew its vote share, while the Conservatives collapsed to fifth place behind Restore Britain. Analysts put this down to Burnham's own personal popularity as Greater Manchester's mayor, separate from how people feel about the Labour government nationally.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Burnham entered the contest already carrying a personal brand built over two elected terms as Greater Manchester mayor, giving him name recognition and a track record independent of the national Labour government he was not yet part of in Parliament.

That kind of split-ticket effect, where voters back a locally popular figure regardless of their party's national standing, is well documented in British Election Study research on personal votes, and explains why Makerfield diverged from the pattern seen in most governing-party by-elections.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Burnham's Makerfield win gave him both a Commons seat and a result strong enough to be read as a personal mandate ahead of the Labour leadership contest.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Farage to quit Clacton to force by-election

Wigan Council· 8 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Local Government Association
Local Government Association
New chair Eamonn O'Brien broke the LGA's neutrality on reorganisation for the first time since December 2024, telling the incoming prime minister the 'unprecedented scale' of disaggregation risks statutory services and asking him to adjust the LGR timetable, aligning the sector's institutional voice with the judicial review claims Suffolk, Essex and Norfolk have already filed.
Reform UK
Reform UK
Reform's £12m Harborne windfall from 2025 predates the 25 March retrospective crypto-donation ban, so the new law does not reach it; a live police probe into £500,000 of Cottrell donations continues, while the standards inquiry into Harborne's undeclared £5m gift is frozen since Farage vacated Clacton on 8 July.
Incoming Burnham government
Incoming Burnham government
Burnham secured 349 of the backing the NEC's 81-MP threshold required by 13 July, becoming Labour leader on 17 July and prime minister on 20 July without a members' ballot. He now inherits the LGR timetable the LGA wants him to adjust and a finance bill his own backbencher, Liam Byrne, is trying to harden further via amendment NC34.
Rupert Lowe / Restore Britain
Rupert Lowe / Restore Britain
Lowe called Farage's Clacton contest a 'Reform-sponsored media circus' and kept Restore Britain out of it, pledging instead to stand in the second by-election he expects the Harborne inquiry to force later this year. The boycott doubles as a signal that Restore Britain, not Reform, will contest the 'real' vote.
Kemi Badenoch / Conservative Party
Kemi Badenoch / Conservative Party
Badenoch dismissed Farage's Clacton contest as a 'fake by-election' and joined the boycott, but reserved the right to fight a genuine second contest if Greenberg's inquiry forces one. The Conservatives are betting their real fight comes in autumn, not July.
Rhun ap Iorwerth / Plaid Cymru
Rhun ap Iorwerth / Plaid Cymru
Ap Iorwerth defended a £145m NHS allocation at First Minister's Questions on 1 July, blaming a graduate-nurse shortfall on 2022 training decisions taken before his Plaid-led government took office in May. Answering for choices his government did not make gives his new administration its first real accountability test.