Labour, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, the Green Party and Restore Britain all declined to contest the Clacton by-election Nigel Farage triggered, each giving its own reason 1. Several said openly that they were reserving themselves for an anticipated second, 'real' contest once the standards inquiry concludes.
Labour's Keir Starmer, speaking in Turkey before a NATO summit, called it a 'desperate stunt' and said Farage was 'up to his neck in sleaze'. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch dismissed the 'fake by-election' but said her party would fight a genuine second one if the inquiry forces it. The Green Party refused to 'help legitimise' a contest it says serves Farage's ambitions rather than Clacton's residents.
Rupert Lowe, whose Restore Britain broke from Reform, called it a 'Reform-sponsored media circus' and promised to stand in a second Clacton by-election later this year 2. The Liberal Democrats want ministers to block the resignation until Commissioner Daniel Greenberg reports, so constituents can vote with all the facts. The still-open Harborne inquiry is the event every refusal is timed around.
