Showing posts sorted by relevance for query LABOUR. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query LABOUR. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2024

UK

Assisted dying bill: How many Labour MPs voted for, against or didn’t vote


Photo: House of Commons

MPs have given their backing to Kim Leadbeater’s assisted dying bill at its second reading, with 330 MPs voting in favour of the motion after a morning of emotional debate in the House of Commons.

A total of 234 Labour MPs voted in favour of the motion, with 147 against and 22 not voting.

The bill would allow terminally ill people with a life expectancy of less than six months to receive assistance in ending their life.


How every MP voted on the Assisted Dying Bill

Yesterday
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MPs have voted for the Assisted Dying Bill with a substantial majority


MPs voted this afternoon on the second reading of The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill. The Bill seeks to legalise assisted dying by allowing adults who are terminally ill with less than six months to live take their own life at the time of their choosing.

The Bill has sparked intense discussion in Westminster. As MPs were given a free vote (they weren’t instructed how to vote by party whips), each MP has been deciding independently whether to support the legislation.

Supporters of the legislation argue that it will allow people who are terminally ill and in pain to have the freedom to end their life at the time of their choosing, and reduce their suffering. Opponents have argued that there are insufficient safeguards in place and it could lead to people being coerced into taking their own life.

The Bill passed its second reading in the Commons, with 330 MPs voting in favour and 275 MPs voting against. As a result, the legislation will now continue its journey through parliament.

The breakdown of MPs’ votes by party was as follows:Alliance: 0 for, 1 against, 0 did not vote
Conservative: 23 for, 93 against, 3 did not vote
Democratic Unionist Party: 0 for, 5 against, 0 did not vote
Green Party: 4 for, 0 against, 0 did not vote
Independent: 1 for, 14 against, 0 did not vote
Labour: 236 for, 148 against, 18 did not vote
Liberal Democrat: 61 for, 11 against, 0 did not vote
Plaid Cymru: 3 for, 1 against, 0 did not vote
Reform UK: 3 for, 2 against, 0 did not vote
Scottish National Party: 0 for, 0 against, 9 did not vote
Social Democratic and Labour Party: 1 for, 0 against, 1 did not vote
Traditional Unionist Voice: 0 for, 1 against, 0 did not vote
Ulster Unionist Party: 0 for, 1 against, 0 did not vote

45 MPs did not vote on the Bill. Many of them will have intentionally abstained – including the majority of Tory MPs missing from the list. Others may have been ‘paired’ – a mechanism used by MPs when they cannot attend a vote in the House of Commons where an MP from another party who would have voted differently to them agrees not to vote, or otherwise did not attend for health or other reasons.

In addition, the speaker of the House of Commons does not participate in votes, and MPs from Sinn Fein do not take their seats in parliament.

Below is a fill list of how every MP voted on the second reading of the Assisted Dying Bill.
MPs who voted for the Bill
Stephen Kinnock Labour Aberafan Maesteg
Connor Rand Labour Altrincham and Sale West
Mark Tami Labour Alyn and Deeside
Linsey Farnsworth Labour Amber Valley
Lee Anderson Reform UK Ashfield
Laura Kyrke-Smith Labour Aylesbury
Elaine Stewart Labour Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock
Claire Hughes Labour Bangor Aberconwy
Dan Jarvis Labour Barnsley North
Luke Murphy Labour Basingstoke
Jo White Labour Bassetlaw
Wera Hobhouse Liberal Democrat Bath
Alison McGovern Labour Birkenhead
Jess Phillips Labour Birmingham Yardley
Lorraine Beavers Labour Blackpool North and Fleetwood
Chris Webb Labour Blackpool South
Natalie Fleet Labour Bolsover
Kirith Entwistle Labour Bolton North East
Phil Brickell Labour Bolton West
Peter Dowd Labour Bootle
Richard Tice Reform UK Boston and Skegness
Tom Hayes Labour Bournemouth East
Peter Swallow Labour Bracknell
David Chadwick Liberal Democrat Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe
Ruth Cadbury Labour Brentford and Isleworth
Chris Elmore Labour Bridgend
Ashley Fox Conservative Bridgwater
Chris Ward Labour Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven
Siân Berry Green Party Brighton Pavilion
Carla Denyer Green Party Bristol Central
Kerry McCarthy Labour Bristol East
Damien Egan Labour Bristol North East
Karin Smyth Labour Bristol South
Callum Anderson Labour Buckingham and Bletchley
Oliver Ryan Labour Burnley
Jacob Collier Labour Burton and Uttoxeter
Christian Wakeford Labour Bury South
Peter Prinsley Labour Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket
Perran Moon Labour Camborne and Redruth
Daniel Zeichner Labour Cambridge
Jo Stevens Labour Cardiff East
Anna McMorrin Labour Cardiff North
Alex Barros-Curtis Labour Cardiff West
Bobby Dean Liberal Democrat Carshalton and Wallington
Alan Gemmell Labour Central Ayrshire
Mel Stride Conservative Central Devon
Ben Lake Plaid Cymru Ceredigion Preseli
Tristan Osborne Labour Chatham and Aylesford
Marie Goldman Liberal Democrat Chelmsford
Max Wilkinson Liberal Democrat Cheltenham
Sarah Green Liberal Democrat Chesham and Amersham
Samantha Dixon Labour Chester North and Neston
Aphra Brandreth Conservative Chester South and Eddisbury
Toby Perkins Labour Chesterfield
Jess Brown-Fuller Liberal Democrat Chichester
Sarah Gibson Liberal Democrat Chippenham
Rachel Blake Labour Cities of London and Westminster
Becky Gittins Labour Clwyd East
Gill German Labour Clwyd North
Pam Cox Labour Colchester
Paul Davies Labour Colne Valley
Sarah Russell Labour Congleton
Lee Barron Labour Corby and East Northamptonshire
Emma Foody Labour Cramlington and Killingworth
Connor Naismith Labour Crewe and Nantwich
Natasha Irons Labour Croydon East
Chris Philp Conservative Croydon South
Sarah Jones Labour Croydon West
Jim Dickson Labour Dartford
Baggy Shanker Labour Derby South
John Whitby Labour Derbyshire Dales
Olly Glover Liberal Democrat Didcot and Wantage
Lee Pitcher Labour Doncaster East and the Isle of Axholme
Ed Miliband Labour Doncaster North
Chris Coghlan Liberal Democrat Dorking and Horley
Mike Tapp Labour Dover and Deal
Sonia Kumar Labour Dudley
Graeme Downie Labour Dunfermline and Dollar
Alex Mayer Labour Dunstable and Leighton Buzzard
Liz Saville Roberts Plaid Cymru Dwyfor Meirionnydd
James Murray Labour Ealing North
Deirdre Costigan Labour Ealing Southall
Yuan Yang Labour Earley and Woodley
Joani Reid Labour East Kilbride and Strathaven
Tom Rutland Labour East Worthing and Shoreham
Josh Babarinde Liberal Democrat Eastbourne
Liz Jarvis Liberal Democrat Eastleigh
Chris Murray Labour Edinburgh East and Musselburgh
Tracy Gilbert Labour Edinburgh North and Leith
Christine Jardine Liberal Democrat Edinburgh West
Clive Efford Labour Eltham and Chislehurst
Charlotte Cane Liberal Democrat Ely and East Cambridgeshire
Helen Maguire Liberal Democrat Epsom and Ewell
Adam Thompson Labour Erewash
Steve Race Labour Exeter
Euan Stainbank Labour Falkirk
Claire Hazelgrove Labour Filton and Bradley Stoke
Sarah Sackman Labour Finchley and Golders Green
Tony Vaughan Labour Folkestone and Hythe
Matt Bishop Labour Forest of Dean
Colum Eastwood Social Democratic & Labour Party Foyle
Anna Sabine Liberal Democrat Frome and East Somerset
Andrew Snowden Conservative Fylde
Mark Ferguson Labour Gateshead Central and Whickham
Michael Payne Labour Gedling
Maureen Burke Labour Glasgow North East
Sarah Dyke Liberal Democrat Glastonbury and Somerton
Jeremy Hunt Conservative Godalming and Ash
David Davis Conservative Goole and Pocklington
Caroline Dinenage Conservative Gosport
Tonia Antoniazzi Labour Gower
Melanie Onn Labour Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes
Rupert Lowe Reform UK Great Yarmouth
Matthew Pennycook Labour Greenwich and Woolwich
Zöe Franklin Liberal Democrat Guildford
Alex Ballinger Labour Halesowen
Kate Dearden Labour Halifax
Andy Slaughter Labour Hammersmith and Chiswick
Tulip Siddiq Labour Hampstead and Highgate
Chris Vince Labour Harlow
Victoria Collins Liberal Democrat Harpenden and Berkhamsted
Tom Gordon Liberal Democrat Harrogate and Knaresborough
Jonathan Brash Labour Hartlepool
Helena Dollimore Labour Hastings and Rye
John McDonnell Independent Hayes and Harlington
Lisa Smart Liberal Democrat Hazel Grove
David Taylor Labour Hemel Hempstead
Freddie van Mierlo Liberal Democrat Henley and Thame
Josh Dean Labour Hertford and Stortford
Oliver Dowden Conservative Hertsmere
Joe Morris Labour Hexham
Jon Pearce Labour High Peak
Luke Evans Conservative Hinckley and Bosworth
Alistair Strathern Labour Hitchin
Keir Starmer Labour Holborn and St Pancras
Richard Foord Liberal Democrat Honiton and Sidmouth
Catherine West Labour Hornsey and Friern Barnet
John Milne Liberal Democrat Horsham
Peter Kyle Labour Hove and Portslade
Harpreet Uppal Labour Huddersfield
Jas Athwal Labour Ilford South
Emily Thornberry Labour Islington South and Finsbury
Kate Osborne Labour Jarrow and Gateshead East
Joe Powell Labour Kensington and Bayswater
Rosie Wrighting Labour Kettering
Karl Turner Labour Kingston upon Hull East
Diana Johnson Labour Kingston upon Hull North and Cottingham
Emma Hardy Labour Kingston upon Hull West and Haltemprice
Fabian Hamilton Labour Leeds North East
Katie White Labour Leeds North West
Hilary Benn Labour Leeds South
Mark Sewards Labour Leeds South West and Morley
Rachel Reeves Labour Leeds West and Pudsey
Liz Kendall Labour Leicester West
Jo Platt Labour Leigh and Atherton
James MacCleary Liberal Democrat Lewes
Janet Daby Labour Lewisham East
Calvin Bailey Labour Leyton and Wanstead
Dave Robertson Labour Lichfield
Hamish Falconer Labour Lincoln
Maria Eagle Labour Liverpool Garston
Kim Johnson Labour Liverpool Riverside
Paula Barker Labour Liverpool Wavertree
Gregor Poynton Labour Livingston
Jeevun Sandher Labour Loughborough
Victoria Atkins Conservative Louth and Horncastle
Rachel Hopkins Labour Luton South and South Bedfordshire
Tim Roca Labour Macclesfield
Joshua Reynolds Liberal Democrat Maidenhead
Josh Simons Labour Makerfield
Lucy Powell Labour Manchester Central
Jeff Smith Labour Manchester Withington
Steve Yemm Labour Mansfield
Brian Mathew Liberal Democrat Melksham and Devizes
Gerald Jones Labour Merthyr Tydfil and Aberdare
Henry Tufnell Labour Mid and South Pembrokeshire
Andrew Cooper Labour Mid Cheshire
Vikki Slade Liberal Democrat Mid Dorset and North Poole
Susan Murray Liberal Democrat Mid Dunbartonshire
Peter Bedford Conservative Mid Leicestershire
George Freeman Conservative Mid Norfolk
Alison Bennett Liberal Democrat Mid Sussex
Luke Myer Labour Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland
Kirsty McNeill Labour Midlothian
Emily Darlington Labour Milton Keynes Central
Chris Curtis Labour Milton Keynes North
Catherine Fookes Labour Monmouthshire
Steve Witherden Labour Montgomeryshire and Glyndŵr
Lizzi Collinge Labour Morecambe and Lunesdale
Pamela Nash Labour Motherwell, Wishaw and Carluke
Lee Dillon Liberal Democrat Newbury
Jessica Morden Labour Newport East
Martin Wrigley Liberal Democrat Newton Abbot
Irene Campbell Labour North Ayrshire and Arran
Ben Maguire Liberal Democrat North Cornwall
Ian Roome Liberal Democrat North Devon
Luke Akehurst Labour North Durham
Louise Jones Labour North East Derbyshire
Wendy Chamberlain Liberal Democrat North East Fife
Alex Brewer Liberal Democrat North East Hampshire
Chris Hinchliff Labour North East Hertfordshire
Dan Norris Labour North East Somerset and Hanham
Ellie Chowns Green Party North Herefordshire
Steff Aquarone Liberal Democrat North Norfolk
Helen Morgan Liberal Democrat North Shropshire
Sadik Al-Hassan Labour North Somerset
Rachel Taylor Labour North Warwickshire and Bedworth
Sam Carling Labour North West Cambridgeshire
Kit Malthouse Conservative North West Hampshire
Amanda Hack Labour North West Leicestershire
James Wild Conservative North West Norfolk
Lucy Rigby Labour Northampton North
Alice Macdonald Labour Norwich North
Clive Lewis Labour Norwich South
Nadia Whittome Labour Nottingham East
Alex Norris Labour Nottingham North and Kimberley
Lilian Greenwood Labour Nottingham South
Jodie Gosling Labour Nuneaton
Alistair Carmichael Liberal Democrat Orkney and Shetland
Jade Botterill Labour Ossett and Denby Dale
Layla Moran Liberal Democrat Oxford West and Abingdon
Miatta Fahnbulleh Labour Peckham
Jonathan Hinder Labour Pendle and Clitheroe
Marie Tidball Labour Penistone and Stocksbridge
Markus Campbell-Savours Labour Penrith and Solway
Fred Thomas Labour Plymouth Moor View
Luke Pollard Labour Plymouth Sutton and Devonport
Yvette Cooper Labour Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley
Alex Davies-Jones Labour Pontypridd
Neil Duncan-Jordan Labour Poole
Amanda Martin Labour Portsmouth North
Stephen Morgan Labour Portsmouth South
Georgia Gould Labour Queen’s Park and Maida Vale
John Healey Labour Rawmarsh and Conisbrough
Anna Turley Labour Redcar
Chris Bloore Labour Redditch
Rishi Sunak Conservative Richmond and Northallerton
Lauren Edwards Labour Rochester and Strood
Andy MacNae Labour Rossendale and Darwen
Jake Richards Labour Rother Valley
Sarah Champion Labour Rotherham
John Slinger Labour Rugby
Alicia Kearns Conservative Rutland and Stamford
Alison Hume Labour Scarborough and Whitby
Nicholas Dakin Labour Scunthorpe
Bill Esterson Labour Sefton Central
Keir Mather Labour Selby
Laura Trott Conservative Sevenoaks
Olivia Blake Labour Sheffield Hallam
Louise Haigh Labour Sheffield Heeley
Clive Betts Labour Sheffield South East
Michelle Welsh Labour Sherwood Forest
Julia Buckley Labour Shrewsbury
Kevin McKenna Labour Sittingbourne and Sheppey
Neil Shastri-Hurst Conservative Solihull West and Shirley
Pippa Heylings Liberal Democrat South Cambridgeshire
Roz Savage Liberal Democrat South Cotswolds
Samantha Niblett Labour South Derbyshire
Caroline Voaden Liberal Democrat South Devon
Lloyd Hatton Labour South Dorset
Anna Gelderd Labour South East Cornwall
Paul Foster Labour South Ribble
James Cartlidge Conservative South Suffolk
Terry Jermy Labour South West Norfolk
David Burton-Sampson Labour Southend West and Leigh
Kim Leadbeater Labour Spen Valley
Daisy Cooper Liberal Democrat St Albans
Noah Law Labour St Austell and Newquay
Andrew George Liberal Democrat St Ives
Ian Sollom Liberal Democrat St Neots and Mid Cambridgeshire
Leigh Ingham Labour Stafford
Kevin Bonavia Labour Stevenage
Chris Kane Labour Stirling and Strathallan
Gareth Snell Labour Stoke-on-Trent Central
Cat Eccles Labour Stourbridge
Manuela Perteghella Liberal Democrat Stratford-on-Avon
Steve Reed Labour Streatham and Croydon North
Andrew Western Labour Stretford and Urmston
Simon Opher Labour Stroud
Jenny Riddell-Carpenter Labour Suffolk Coastal
Lewis Atkinson Labour Sunderland Central
Al Pinkerton Liberal Democrat Surrey Heath
Luke Taylor Liberal Democrat Sutton and Cheam
Andrew Mitchell Conservative Sutton Coldfield
Torsten Bell Labour Swansea West
Will Stone Labour Swindon North
Heidi Alexander Labour Swindon South
Sarah Edwards Labour Tamworth
Shaun Davies Labour Telford
Cameron Thomas Liberal Democrat Tewkesbury
Kevin Hollinrake Conservative Thirsk and Malton
Claire Young Liberal Democrat Thornbury and Yate
Rachel Gilmour Liberal Democrat Tiverton and Minehead
Steve Darling Liberal Democrat Torbay
Jayne Kirkham Labour Truro and Falmouth
Mike Martin Liberal Democrat Tunbridge Wells
Alan Campbell Labour Tynemouth
Danny Beales Labour Uxbridge and South Ruislip
Kanishka Narayan Labour Vale of Glamorgan
Simon Lightwood Labour Wakefield and Rothwell
Angela Eagle Labour Wallasey
Stella Creasy Labour Walthamstow
Charlotte Nichols Labour Warrington North
Sarah Hall Labour Warrington South
Matt Western Labour Warwick and Leamington
Sharon Hodgson Labour Washington and Gateshead South
Matt Turmaine Labour Watford
Adrian Ramsay Green Party Waveney Valley
Gen Kitchen Labour Wellingborough and Rushden
Tessa Munt Liberal Democrat Wells and Mendip Hills
Andrew Lewin Labour Welwyn Hatfield
Sarah Coombes Labour West Bromwich
Edward Morello Liberal Democrat West Dorset
Dan Aldridge Labour Weston-super-Mare
Josh MacAlister Labour Whitehaven and Workington
Lisa Nandy Labour Wigan
Danny Chambers Liberal Democrat Winchester
Charlie Maynard Liberal Democrat Witney
Will Forster Liberal Democrat Woking
Clive Jones Liberal Democrat Wokingham
Pat McFadden Labour Wolverhampton South East
Warinder Juss Labour Wolverhampton West
Michael Wheeler Labour Worsley and Eccles
Beccy Cooper Labour Worthing West
Andrew Ranger Labour Wrexham
Emma Reynolds Labour Wycombe
Mark Garnier Conservative Wyre Forest
Adam Dance Liberal Democrat Yeovil
Llinos Medi Plaid Cymru Ynys Môn
Luke Charters Labour York Outer
Sarah Owen (Teller) Labour Luton North
Bambos Charalambous (Teller) Labour Southgate and Wood Green

MPs who voted against the Bill
Kenneth Stevenson Labour Airdrie and Shotts
Alex Baker Labour Aldershot
Wendy Morton Conservative Aldridge-Brownhills
Brian Leishman Labour Alloa and Grangemouth
Andrew Griffith Conservative Arundel and South Downs
Sojan Joseph Labour Ashford
Angela Rayner Labour Ashton-under-Lyne
Sean Woodcock Labour Banbury
Nesil Caliskan Labour Barking
Stephanie Peacock Labour Barnsley South
Michelle Scrogham Labour Barrow and Furness
Richard Holden Conservative Basildon and Billericay
Kirsteen Sullivan Labour Bathgate and Linlithgow
Marsha De Cordova Labour Battersea
Joy Morrissey Conservative Beaconsfield
Liam Conlon Labour Beckenham and Penge
Mohammad Yasin Labour Bedford
Gavin Robinson Democratic Unionist Party Belfast East
Neil Coyle Labour Bermondsey and Old Southwark
John Lamont Conservative Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk
Rushanara Ali Labour Bethnal Green and Stepney
Graham Stuart Conservative Beverley and Holderness
Kieran Mullan Conservative Bexhill and Battle
Daniel Francis Labour Bexleyheath and Crayford
Calum Miller Liberal Democrat Bicester and Woodstock
Preet Kaur Gill Labour Birmingham Edgbaston
Paulette Hamilton Labour Birmingham Erdington
Tahir Ali Labour Birmingham Hall Green and Moseley
Liam Byrne Labour Birmingham Hodge Hill and Solihull North
Shabana Mahmood Labour Birmingham Ladywood
Laurence Turner Labour Birmingham Northfield
Ayoub Khan Independent Birmingham Perry Barr
Sam Rushworth Labour Bishop Auckland
Adnan Hussain Independent Blackburn
Graham Stringer Labour Blackley and Middleton South
Liz Twist Labour Blaydon and Consett
Ian Lavery Labour Blyth and Ashington
Alison Griffiths Conservative Bognor Regis and Littlehampton
Yasmin Qureshi Labour Bolton South and Walkden
Imran Hussain Independent Bradford East
Naz Shah Labour Bradford West
James Cleverly Conservative Braintree
Dawn Butler Labour Brent East
Barry Gardiner Labour Brent West
Alex Burghart Conservative Brentwood and Ongar
Martin Vickers Conservative Brigg and Immingham
Darren Jones Labour Bristol North West
Jerome Mayhew Conservative Broadland and Fakenham
Peter Fortune Conservative Bromley and Biggin Hill
Bradley Thomas Conservative Bromsgrove
Lewis Cocking Conservative Broxbourne
Juliet Campbell Labour Broxtowe
James Frith Labour Bury North
Ann Davies Plaid Cymru Caerfyrddin
Chris Evans Labour Caerphilly
Jamie Stone Liberal Democrat Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross
Josh Newbury Labour Cannock Chase
Rosie Duffield Independent Canterbury
Stephen Doughty Labour Cardiff South and Penarth
Julie Minns Labour Carlisle
Rebecca Harris Conservative Castle Point
Patrick Spencer Conservative Central Suffolk and North Ipswich
Tom Morrison Liberal Democrat Cheadle
Ben Coleman Labour Chelsea and Fulham
Iain Duncan Smith Conservative Chingford and Woodford Green
Dan Tomlinson Labour Chipping Barnet
Christopher Chope Conservative Christchurch
Mary Kelly Foy Labour City of Durham
Nigel Farage Reform UK Clacton
Bell Ribeiro-Addy Labour Clapham and Brixton Hill
Frank McNally Labour Coatbridge and Bellshill
Mary Creagh Labour Coventry East
Taiwo Owatemi Labour Coventry North West
Zarah Sultana Independent Coventry South
Melanie Ward Labour Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy
Katrina Murray Labour Cumbernauld and Kirkintilloch
Margaret Mullane Labour Dagenham and Rainham
Lola McEvoy Labour Darlington
Stuart Andrew Conservative Daventry
Catherine Atkinson Labour Derby North
Iqbal Mohamed Independent Dewsbury and Batley
Sally Jameson Labour Doncaster Central
Nigel Huddleston Conservative Droitwich and Evesham
Helen Hayes Labour Dulwich and West Norwood
John Cooper Conservative Dumfries and Galloway
David Mundell Conservative Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale
Rupa Huq Labour Ealing Central and Acton
Grahame Morris Labour Easington
Sammy Wilson Democratic Unionist Party East Antrim
Mims Davies Conservative East Grinstead and Uckfield
Stephen Timms Labour East Ham
Damian Hinds Conservative East Hampshire
Gregory Campbell Democratic Unionist Party East Londonderry
Blair McDougall Labour East Renfrewshire
Claire Coutinho Conservative East Surrey
Polly Billington Labour East Thanet
Danny Kruger Conservative East Wiltshire
Scott Arthur Labour Edinburgh South West
Kate Osamor Labour Edmonton and Winchmore Hill
Justin Madders Labour Ellesmere Port and Bromborough
Feryal Clark Labour Enfield North
Neil Hudson Conservative Epping Forest
Abena Oppong-Asare Labour Erith and Thamesmead
Monica Harding Liberal Democrat Esher and Walton
David Reed Conservative Exmouth and Exeter East
Suella Braverman Conservative Fareham and Waterlooville
Gregory Stafford Conservative Farnham and Bordon
Helen Whately Conservative Faversham and Mid Kent
Seema Malhotra Labour Feltham and Heston
Edward Leigh Conservative Gainsborough
Naushabah Khan Labour Gillingham and Rainham
John Grady Labour Glasgow East
Martin Rhodes Labour Glasgow North
Gordon McKee Labour Glasgow South
Zubir Ahmed Labour Glasgow South West
Patricia Ferguson Labour Glasgow West
Richard Baker Labour Glenrothes and Mid Fife
Alex McIntyre Labour Gloucester
Harriet Cross Conservative Gordon and Buchan
Gareth Davies Conservative Grantham and Bourne
Lauren Sullivan Labour Gravesham
Diane Abbott Labour Hackney North and Stoke Newington
Meg Hillier Labour Hackney South and Shoreditch
Paul Holmes Conservative Hamble Valley
Imogen Walker Labour Hamilton and Clyde Valley
Neil O’Brien Conservative Harborough, Oadby and Wigston
Bob Blackman Conservative Harrow East
Bernard Jenkin Conservative Harwich and North Essex
Alan Mak Conservative Havant
David Pinto-Duschinsky Labour Hendon
Jesse Norman Conservative Hereford and South Herefordshire
Roger Gale Conservative Herne Bay and Sandwich
Elsie Blundell Labour Heywood and Middleton North
Julia Lopez Conservative Hornchurch and Upminster
Bridget Phillipson Labour Houghton and Sunderland South
Ben Obese-Jecty Conservative Huntingdon
Sarah Smith Labour Hyndburn
Wes Streeting Labour Ilford North
Martin McCluskey Labour Inverclyde and Renfrewshire West
Angus MacDonald Liberal Democrat Inverness, Skye and West Ross-shire
Jack Abbott Labour Ipswich
Joe Robertson Conservative Isle of Wight East
Richard Quigley Labour Isle of Wight West
Jeremy Corbyn Independent Islington North
Robbie Moore Conservative Keighley and Ilkley
Jeremy Wright Conservative Kenilworth and Southam
Lillian Jones Labour Kilmarnock and Loudoun
Ed Davey Liberal Democrat Kingston and Surbiton
Emma Hardy Labour Kingston upon Hull West and Haltemprice
Anneliese Midgley Labour Knowsley
Sorcha Eastwood Alliance Lagan Valley
Richard Burgon Independent Leeds East
Shivani Raja Conservative Leicester East
Shockat Adam Independent Leicester South
Vicky Foxcroft Labour Lewisham North
Ian Byrne Independent Liverpool West Derby
Nia Griffith Labour Llanelli
Jess Asato Labour Lowestoft
Helen Grant Conservative Maidstone and Malling
John Whittingdale Conservative Maldon
Edward Argar Conservative Melton and Syston
Saqib Bhatti Conservative Meriden and Solihull East
Blake Stephenson Conservative Mid Bedfordshire
Greg Smith Conservative Mid Buckinghamshire
Jonathan Davies Labour Mid Derbyshire
Andy McDonald Labour Middlesbrough and Thornaby East
Siobhain McDonagh Labour Mitcham and Morden
Torcuil Crichton Labour Na h-Eileanan an Iar
Julian Lewis Conservative New Forest East
Desmond Swayne Conservative New Forest West
Robert Jenrick Conservative Newark
Chi Onwurah Labour Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West
Mary Glindon Labour Newcastle upon Tyne East and Wallsend
Catherine McKinnell Labour Newcastle upon Tyne North
Adam Jogee Labour Newcastle-under-Lyme
Ruth Jones Labour Newport West and Islwyn
Alan Strickland Labour Newton Aycliffe and Spennymoor
Jon Trickett Labour Normanton and Hemsworth
Jim Allister Traditional Unionist Voice North Antrim
Richard Fuller Conservative North Bedfordshire
Simon Hoare Conservative North Dorset
Alex Easton Independent North Down
Steve Barclay Conservative North East Cambridgeshire
David Smith Labour North Northumberland
Kemi Badenoch Conservative North West Essex
Mike Reader Labour Northampton South
Louie French Conservative Old Bexley and Sidcup
Jim McMahon Labour Oldham West, Chadderton and Royton
Gareth Bacon Conservative Orpington
Anneliese Dodds Labour Oxford East
Alison Taylor Labour Paisley and Renfrewshire North
Johanna Baxter Labour Paisley and Renfrewshire South
Andrew Pakes Labour Peterborough
Apsana Begum Independent Poplar and Limehouse
Mark Hendrick Labour Preston
Fleur Anderson Labour Putney
Mark Francois Conservative Rayleigh and Wickford
Matt Rodda Labour Reading Central
Olivia Bailey Labour Reading West and Mid Berkshire
Rebecca Paul Conservative Reigate
Maya Ellis Labour Ribble Valley
Sarah Olney Liberal Democrat Richmond Park
Paul Waugh Labour Rochdale
Andrew Rosindell Conservative Romford
David Simmonds Conservative Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner
Mike Amesbury Independent Runcorn and Helsby
Ben Spencer Conservative Runnymede and Weybridge
James Naish Labour Rushcliffe
Michael Shanks Labour Rutherglen
Rebecca Long Bailey Independent Salford
John Glen Conservative Salisbury
Gill Furniss Labour Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough
Abtisam Mohamed Labour Sheffield Central
Anna Dixon Labour Shipley
Julian Smith Conservative Skipton and Ripon
Caroline Johnson Conservative Sleaford and North Hykeham
Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi Labour Slough
Gurinder Singh Josan Labour Smethwick
Robin Swann Ulster Unionist Party South Antrim
James McMurdock Reform UK South Basildon and East Thurrock
John Hayes Conservative South Holland and The Deepings
Alberto Costa Conservative South Leicestershire
Ben Goldsborough Labour South Norfolk
Sarah Bool Conservative South Northamptonshire
Emma Lewell-Buck Labour South Shields
Stuart Anderson Conservative South Shropshire
Rebecca Smith Conservative South West Devon
Gagan Mohindra Conservative South West Hertfordshire
Andrew Murrison Conservative South West Wiltshire
Darren Paffey Labour Southampton Itchen
Satvir Kaur Labour Southampton Test
Bayo Alaba Labour Southend East and Rochford
Patrick Hurley Labour Southport
Lincoln Jopp Conservative Spelthorne
David Baines Labour St Helens North
Marie Rimmer Labour St Helens South and Whiston
Karen Bradley Conservative Staffordshire Moorlands
Jonathan Reynolds Labour Stalybridge and Hyde
Chris McDonald Labour Stockton North
Matt Vickers Conservative Stockton West
David Williams Labour Stoke-on-Trent North
Allison Gardner Labour Stoke-on-Trent South
Gavin Williamson Conservative Stone, Great Wyrley and Penkridge
Jim Shannon Democratic Unionist Party Strangford
Uma Kumaran Labour Stratford and Bow
Esther McVey Conservative Tatton
Gideon Amos Liberal Democrat Taunton and Wellington
Mark Pritchard Conservative The Wrekin
Jen Craft Labour Thurrock
Antonia Bance Labour Tipton and Wednesbury
Tom Tugendhat Conservative Tonbridge
Rosena Allin-Khan Labour Tooting
Nick Thomas-Symonds Labour Torfaen
Geoffrey Cox Conservative Torridge and Tavistock
David Lammy Labour Tottenham
Munira Wilson Liberal Democrat Twickenham
Carla Lockhart Democratic Unionist Party Upper Bann
Valerie Vaz Labour Walsall and Bloxwich
Katie Lam Conservative Weald of Kent
Andrew Bowie Conservative West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine
Douglas McAllister Labour West Dunbartonshire
James Asser Labour West Ham and Beckton
Ashley Dalton Labour West Lancashire
Nick Timothy Conservative West Suffolk
Tim Farron Liberal Democrat Westmorland and Lonsdale
Alec Shelbrooke Conservative Wetherby and Easingwold
Derek Twigg Labour Widnes and Halewood
Paul Kohler Liberal Democrat Wimbledon
Jack Rankin Conservative Windsor
Matthew Patrick Labour Wirral West
Priti Patel Conservative Witham
Sureena Brackenridge Labour Wolverhampton North East
Tom Collins Labour Worcester
Mike Kane Labour Wythenshawe and Sale East
Rachael Maskell Labour York Central
Florence Eshalomi (Teller) Labour Vauxhall and Camberwell Green
Harriett Baldwin (Teller) Conservative West Worcestershire

MPs with no vote recorded
Kirsty Blackman Scottish National Party Aberdeen North
Stephen Flynn Scottish National Party Aberdeen South
Seamus Logan Scottish National Party Aberdeenshire North and Moray East
Dave Doogan Scottish National Party Angus and Perthshire Glens
Stephen Gethins Scottish National Party Arbroath and Broughty Ferry
Brendan O’Hara Scottish National Party Argyll, Bute and South Lochaber
John Finucane Sinn Féin Belfast North
Claire Hanna Social Democratic & Labour Party Belfast South and Mid Down
Paul Maskey Sinn Féin Belfast West
Al Carns Labour Birmingham Selly Oak
Nick Smith Labour Blaenau Gwent and Rhymney
Jessica Toale Labour Bournemouth West
Judith Cummins Deputy Speaker Bradford South
Charlie Dewhirst Conservative Bridlington and The Wolds
Josh Fenton-Glynn Labour Calder Valley
Lindsay Hoyle Speaker Chorley
Peter Lamb Labour Crawley
Chris Law Scottish National Party Dundee Central
Ian Murray Labour Edinburgh South
Pat Cullen Sinn Féin Fermanagh and South Tyrone
Andrew Gwynne Labour Gorton and Denton
Gareth Thomas Labour Harrow West
Mike Wood Conservative Kingswinford and South Staffordshire
Cat Smith Labour Lancaster and Wyre
Alex Sobel Labour Leeds Central and Headingley
Ellie Reeves Labour Lewisham West and East Dulwich
Dan Carden Labour Liverpool Walton
Douglas Alexander Labour Lothian East
Afzal Khan Labour Manchester Rusholme
Cathal Mallaghan Sinn Féin Mid Ulster
Graham Leadbitter Scottish National Party Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey
Carolyn Harris Labour Neath and Swansea East
Dáire Hughes Sinn Féin Newry and Armagh
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown Conservative North Cotswolds
Debbie Abrahams Labour Oldham East and Saddleworth
Pete Wishart Scottish National Party Perth and Kinross-shire
Chris Bryant Labour Rhondda and Ogmore
Caroline Nokes Deputy Speaker Romsey and Southampton North
Chris Hazzard Sinn Féin South Down
Navendu Mishra Labour Stockport
Nusrat Ghani Deputy Speaker Sussex Weald
Órfhlaith Begley Sinn Féin West Tyrone


Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward



Assisted dying: ‘We should be proud of all MPs’ civil debate and serious reflection’


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For all the speculation that the vote would be down to the wire, in the end the result was decisive. MPs, by a majority of 55, voted to back assisted dying, in stark contrast to another vote on the subject less than ten years ago.

For Labour, it was a vote that divided the party beyond traditional left-right splits, with everyone from ardent socialists to free-market thinkers walking almost hand in hand in their respective lobbies for the free vote in the Commons yesterday.

It was a split that was, and will be, evident at the Cabinet table, especially as the bill gets greater scrutiny.

While the Prime Minister and Chancellor both backed Kim Leadbeater’s bill, Health Secretary Wes Streeting and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood were vocal opponents against it.

One notable thing that united MPs of all parties, regardless of how they voted, was their respect for one another during such a sensitive debate.

The jeering and raucousness that we have come to expect from the Commons was, mostly, gone – instead replaced by respectful, thoughtful and considered contemplation of a bill of a nature of the scale of same-sex marriage, abortion and the abolition of the death penalty.

MPs spoke passionately for and against with deeply personal anecdotes, which left themselves and no doubt many in the chamber choked up.

Regardless of how you feel about the result, we should all be proud of our parliamentarians for treating the bill and the wider debate with the seriousness it deserves.

The debate on this issue should be held up as a gold standard that we should expect all our MPs to reach when debating any parliamentary matter.

LabourList had been tracking how Labour MPs were planning on voting today; by the time the vote came, roughly 160 were on our list as undecided or had not made their position public.

From a close look at the result, it is clear that a majority of those ended up voting to back the bill at second reading.

While many of those MPs will have their own reasons for that move, it appears to suggest a willingness, at least from the Labour benches, to carry on the conversation and debate without necessarily committing Parliament to passing this bill into law.

Any talk of the bill passing into law is premature, for the result only marks the beginning of a greater debate over whether assisted dying has a place in British society and, if so, what form it should take.

Many more hours of committee procedures, along with discussion in the House of Lords and eventually again in the Commons, and of course the media, are yet to come.

However, there is no denying the historic nature of yesterday’s vote – one that may not be matched for many years, if not decades, to come.


Why many disabled people oppose the Leadbeater Bill

NOVEMBER 26, 2024

Merry Cross surveys the Government’s latest attempts to cuts the benefits bill by bullying and explains disabled people’s opposition to the Assisted Dying Bill.

I wonder if the Parliamentary Labour Party has any idea of how many voters it has lost through its insistence on continuing the persecution of disabled people, which is so forensically documented in John Pring’s new book The Department: How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence.

The cuts to our eligibility for benefits as well as the value of them, started with a Labour Government decades ago and have been enthusiastically continued ever since. The results have been disastrous, not just for our physical and mental health, but for our families too. Add into that the reduction in our and our families’ spending power and its impact on the economy, the destruction of social care and the NHS and the absence of affordable, accessible housing and the obstacles to living, let alone living a dignified life, and these cuts have been multiplied many times. That is what being disabled means today, in one of the wealthiest countries on the planet.

Exactly how are we expected to find that holy grail of jobs, when there may be no-one available to help us get up and get ready to leave the house? How, when even if we and our families have managed that, do we get to a job when there is little or no accessible transport available? How do we hold down a job, even if it is working from home, when the medication we need may no longer be available from the NHS or we are unable to get appointments with our GPs?

Mr. Starmer, I am old enough to remember the first iteration of staff in Job Centres (which used to be the Social Security offices) who were there supposedly to help us find jobs. They knew zilch, nada, nothing at all about impairments or disability and were as useless as chocolate teapots then. Nothing has changed there and neither has the enthusiasm, or lack of it, amongst employers for offering us jobs. This has been massively exacerbated by the almost total destruction of the Access to Work scheme, which even 20 years ago wasn’t that great. Let’s face it, given that all the Government bullying to date hasn’t decreased the benefits bill, why tread the same path?

So, is it any surprise that many, many disabled people belonging to many different disability organisations are against the Assisted Dying Bill? Please don’t set too much store by Tom Shakespeare’s assertion that a “quiet majority are in favour of it” when he produces no evidence for that at all. Can you imagine how humiliating and terrifying it is to see a Government possibly preparing to spend money on ending our lives, rather than on helping us live with the dignity that those in favour of the Bill desire for the end of life?

Most disabled people are likely to have the greatest compassion for those who suffer and die perhaps in pain. But we contend that if they hadn’t witnessed, and then been subjected to the reduction in the quality, support for, and meaningfulness of our lives, perhaps they too would oppose the bill.

Our slogan is #AssistUsToLive.

Merry Cross has been a disability activist for fifty years and was among the first members of Disabled People Against Cuts, of which she also chaired a local branch for ten years.

Image: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lccr/2865509591. Creator: The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Assisted dying: Not the Church, not the state, I will decide my fate

NOVEMBER 25, 2024

By Joan Twelves

After Donald Trump’s recent presidential victory, a far-right tweet triumphantly declaring “Your body, My choice” went viral. This misogynistic phrase all too sadly sums up the debate over abortion rights in the US. But it’s also relevant to the current debate on assisted dying in the UK, which is set to be debated in Parliament this week.   

I’ve spent over 50 years campaigning for a woman’s right to choose whether and when she gives birth. I cannot separate that belief, either morally, philosophically or politically, from my belief that I – and all others – must have a right to choose whether and when I live or die.

As a former local councillor, my instincts are those of a politician, but, while it is politicians who are going to decide on whether I can have the right to die at a time of my choosing, my unflinching support for assisted dying is rooted in my lived experience.

Since my late teens I’ve suffered from Crohn’s disease, a condition that is agonising and incurable. I had extensive abdominal surgery in my twenties and again in my forties, resulting in the permanent removal of my bowel and much of my lower intestine. Despite occasional periods of remission, I have lived all of my adult life with intense pain, unpredictable (and potentially fatal) intestinal blockages, and all the problems associated with living with a stoma. When I was first ill, hardly anyone had heard of Crohn’s, and explaining what I was going through was nigh on impossible. I don’t do pity, and nor do I want to listen to others’ squeamishness about my bodily functions… So I rarely talk about it.

Crohn’s effectively stole the ‘90s and ‘00s from me – I had little energy, depression, brain fog, and only the barest interest in the politics which had been my life for the previous 20 years. When my late husband, Greg, become ill in the mid-‘00s it was a real struggle for me to care for him as I could barely care for myself.

New biological drugs gave me my life back in the early 2010s. But these wonder drugs, which I am still on, bring with them their own risks. Life expectancy for a woman with Crohn’s is nearly a decade less than the average. The biological and immunosuppressant drugs I have taken may be one of the reasons for that reduced life span. And, of course, Covid-19 loves to target those with weakened immunity, and the deadly threat of catching it has limited me to only the occasional trip into the outside world since 2020. Am I facing another lost decade?

The greatest risk to my life is intestinal blockage caused by the strictures and lesions of my several operations. Getting to hospital for morphine and rehydration is urgent, and even with morphine plus added steroids the pain will continue for several days, and I will be ill for some time afterwards.

Crohn’s isn’t my only ailment. Most of my body is creaking from the effects of 60 years of strong medications along with the wear and tear of age. In fact, these days when asked how I am, I usually respond with “Still here” or “How long have you got?” I officially have multiple chronic and complex comorbidities.

Chronic illness has defined most my adult life, but, just as I have tried not to let it limit what I can do, I have no intention of giving up yet. However, I know that one day the pain may become unbearable, and I want to be able to decide for myself that I don’t want any more of it, that I’m done.

Much of the debate over assisted dying has focused on the state of palliative care – something I know a bit about. Before Greg died of throat cancer at the age of 54, he used to call the palliative care people the ‘Death Squad’. He had already lost his voice, and he knew that the pain medication of offer would soon take away his personality and identity. For him that would have been a living death, as it would for me. We didn’t talk about assisted dying, but after over 30 years together we knew each other’s views. He wasn’t ready to die when he had a fatal arterial haemorrhage, but he had been told to ‘put his affairs in order’ – a chilling euphemism for saying it’s terminal.  

Palliative care works for some, but the arguments around assisted dying shouldn’t be a competition between improved palliative care and the right to die. In an advanced society, both should be available and both should be of equally high standard. Nobody should want to die because the palliative care isn’t good enough, or because hospices aren’t receiving the funding they need. On the other hand, nobody should be stopped from dying when they choose. Yes, robust protections must be in place to stop people being coerced into something they don’t want, but this risk isn’t a good enough excuse to deny those of us who truly want the right to choose when to die.

Think of it this way: would any supporter of abortion rights argue that it should be illegal while we wait for our gynae or maternity services to be improved? Similarly, should the risk of a young women being coerced into an abortion she doesn’t want mean that nobody else should be allowed to have one? The answer is clearly no and, much like abortion, assisted dying will continue to happen, so enshrining rights and protections into law will mean there can be proper safeguards to protect the vulnerable.

To me the argument of a ‘slippery slope’ is disingenuous. Did its advocates not notice the landslide at the height of the pandemic, when thousands were assisted to die without any choice? Again, legal safeguards and procedures are needed to protect medical staff as well as vulnerable patients.

Finally, MPs and many ministers may be struggling to come to a decision on this matter, but the UK public are crystal clear in their views. The latest YouGov poll shows substantial support for both the principle of assisted dying and the bill before Parliament. The study finds a super-majority of 73% in favour, with only 13% against, spanning all demographics and political parties.

Whatever our politicians decide, support for assisted dying isn’t going away. Although there are many sincere concerns about the proposals, there doesn’t seem to be anything that scrutiny during the passage of the bill and more investment in palliative care couldn’t fix. We must grasp this chance and ensure that dignity in death is a fundamental right down to the choice of the individual, not the state.

Joan Twelves is a Labour, trade union and community activist and former Labour Leader of Lambeth Council. This article originally appeared on her blog here.

Image: https://www.picpedia.org/chalkboard/a/assisted-dying.html License: Creative Commons 3 – CC BY-SA 3.0 Attribution: Alpha Stock Images – http://alphastockimages.com/ Original Author: Nick Youngson – link to – http://www.nyphotographic.com/

Monday, May 18, 2026

 UK

The Local Election Disaster of 2026: Can We Save Labour?

MAY 10, 2026

In 1929 the first British General Election took place under universal suffrage. In the light of the catastrophic local election results, Bryn Griffiths asks will the next General Election, on the centenary of this important milestone, also bring us the worst election outcome since all the British people secured the right to vote?

Labour members are reflecting upon whether Starmer’s performance is so bad that he will enable Nigel Farage to enter 10 Downing Street. In this utterly miserable moment on Saturday 9th May 2026, I first attended the Momentum National Coordinating Group and then travelled on to a Lewes Labour gathering to consider Votes Turns and Wipeouts.

The flyer for the Lewes Labour Party Event on 9 May 2026

The Farage threat

If Farage was to enter 10 Downing Street in 2029 he would become the worst Prime Minister in living memory.  It would be as if Enoch Powell, instead of being frozen out by Ted Heath in the 1970s, had led the Tory Party and gone on to become our Prime Minister.  We all remember the massive series of defeats for the labour movement that followed Margaret Thatcher’s election in 1979, but we can assume that Farage has the potential to be a whole lot worse.

So, how bad was the 2026 local election result?  Is the party facing an ‘existential threat’ as John McDonnell suggested on the Labour Left Podcast back last autumn?  What is to be done to save the party before it is too late?

The bad news

In Lewes, the keynote address was by politics Professor Tim Bale, Queen Mary University London, a co-author of The British General Election of 2024. He introduced, what at points was a doom-laden event, by telling us: “The bad news is there is no good news.”  To make sure we got the point he added that the word “catastrophic understates the situation” and the result was “devastatingly bad”. Tim added that he had been sceptical about a Farage victory in 2029 but he now thinks Farage is on course to win if things don’t change. So, Farage may well be our next Prime Minister.

Earlier in the day at the Momentum National Coordinating Group Mike Phipps, the Labour Hub editor, had suggested that the 2026 elections signalled a fracturing of Labour’s progressive coalition. Labour now not only faces the loss of some working-class votes to Reform but also the peeling away of progressive voters to the nationalists, in Scotland and Wales, and to the Greens as well.   Due to the crisis of Labour, progressive voters now have other places to go.

What actually happened on Thursday 9th May 2026, according to Tim Bale, was that Nigel Farage managed to reassemble much of the Boris Brexit coalition, but this time it was to  support Reform.  As a result, according to Sky TV, it was Reform who were the clear winners with 27% of the vote. The Tories followed behind with 20% of the vote and Labour came third with 15%.  The Greens and Liberal Democrats were very close on our tails with 14% with the balance being made up by other parties.  The translation of local election votes into national percentages is a difficult task and the percentage figures vary a little across outlets but the story is always the same: Reform won and the electorate’s message is universally bad for Labour.

Professor Tim Bale, Queen Mary University London, a co-author of The British General Election of 2024 addresses the Lewes Labour Party event

According to Tim Bale, another disturbing aspect of the local election result is the resurgence of the Scottish National Party and the rise of Plaid Cymru which means Labour can no longer be seen as a national party.  It is as if Tom Nairn’s Break up of Britain is happening before our very eyes.

Fragmentation

In the aftermath of the Caerphilly by-election and a local council by-election in Colchester, I told A Story of Fragmentationin Britain’s two-party system.  The fragmentation of United Kingdom electoral politics has previously been mapped by Hannah Bunting, the Co-Director of the Elections Centre at the University of Exeter, when she wrote in The Conversation last year that “UK local elections delivered record-breaking fragmentation of the vote”.  In Hannah’s words, “the 2025 council election broke records for the extent of fragmentation – a significant movement away from the dominance of the two parties that have dominated British politics for the past century.”  

The process of fragmentation consolidated in the 2026 local elections, with the pollster John Curtice reporting a record low of 34% for the combined total of Labour and the Tories who historically have been the two main parties under the first past the post electoral system.

Given this political fragmentation taking place across Britain, we need to look at the party-specific electoral stories which are emerging to help us map the new political landscape.

The Greens

John Curtice reported that in his calculations the Greens got around 18% of the vote with Labour and the Conservatives trailing with 17% each.  The figures confirm Tim Bale’s suggestion that “catastrophic” understates the seriousness of the result for Labour.  Bale went on to explain how the Labour seats tally tells a misleading story.  Reform may have been winning the seats in big numbers but in many cases the explanation for their victories was that it was the Greens who were reducing Labour’s vote and handing seats to Reform as our supporters abandoned Labour to the left.

To make matters much worse, Tim Bale reported that polling by Focal Data suggests that the Green wave is a more permanent phenomenon than a temporary protest vote. 

Labour

The Labour story is utterly depressing.  The Starmer narrative that this is mid-term blues and we must keep our nerve and keep on track is utterly delusional. It overstates Labour’s ability  to bounce back. Labour councillors form the bulk of Labour’s door step campaigners so when you lose 1,496 Labour councillors you also lose a large proportion of our door knockers.  It is also the case that in many areas councillor expenses pay for our Labour leaflets. Without councillors how do we fund our leaflets next time?

Bale also pointed out how damaging the impact of Starmer’s stance on Gaza had been to Labour’s previously strong support in the Muslim community.  Bale said that Starmer’s Nick Ferrari interview on Gaza had been one of the most damagingly impactful statements by a party leader that he could remember when it came to losing votes.

Reform

The Reform re-creation of the Boris Brexit coalition to win a vote of 26% and 1,451 new seats is utterly depressing.  Tim Bale pointed out that the Conservatives on these kinds of results would ensure that we get a Reform Government.  The only point of doubt is whether they would seek to heal the division on the right after the 2029 General Election, or would they even more frighteningly come to some arrangement with Farage before the election even takes place? If they were to heal their divisions with some form of electoral understanding before 2029, the General Election result would be much worse.

The Liberal Democrats

The Liberal Democrats did not make much progress but along with the Greens they form another part of a picture of a fragmenting left of centre electoral bloc. 

Mainstream

Back in Lewes, another former Labour Left Podcast guest Neal Lawson of Compass, a key mover of Mainstream, the new ‘soft left’ organisation, was in barnstorming form.  Compass had previously pointed out in their aptly named report Thin Ice – Why the UK’s progressive majority could stop Labour’s landslide melting away that an electoral strategy that leans heavily towards trying to out-Farage Farage on his own anti-migrant territory was fatally flawed as it would undermine our own electoral base.  Neal who has been vindicated and was visibly unhappy about it captured the mood of the meeting. 

Meanwhile, Mark Perryman, who organised the event and recently published The Starmer Symptom, reviewed on Labour Hub here, pointed out that 36 of the top 50 Green target seats at the next General Election are Labour seats and, echoing other speakers and John McDonnell MP, suggested Labour is facing an existential crisis.

I left Lewes more convinced than ever that we must back the candidates in Labour’s National Executive elections who say they wish to Reset the Labour Party.  We need to back candidates across Labour’s progressive majority which include both supporters of the Centre Left Grass Roots Alliance and the newly formed Mainstream.  I hope you will join me in backing all the candidates who stand for rebuilding basic democracy, pluralism and fair process within our party.

What is to be done?

If we are to stop Nigel Farage entering Downing Street we need to rebuild Labour’s ‘progressive coalition’. We are up against a Reform Party which has rebuilt the Boris Brexit coalition so the task is absolutely urgent.

To re-start the important task of progressive coalition-building, we need a change of leadership but we also need to change the toxic culture brought about by Labour Together which is a systemic problem at the very heart of the Labour machine.  It’s a culture eloquently described by Paul Holden in the recent Labour Left Podcast. Labour’s Cabinet, with the possible exception of Ed Milliband is no place to look for a new Leader as they were hand-picked by Labour Together and Keir Starmer to take the Party in the direction which has caused us so much damage.

At the time of writing it seems clear that Starmer is going and he will not be the Leader of the Labour Party when we fight the next General Election.  Starmer’s departure is so clear that in Lewes even Christabel Cooper, the Director of Research at Labour Together conceded Starmer would not lead us into the next General Election. What is not clear is the manner of his departure.  Will he leave suddenly in an attempt to allow the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) to circumvent a proper discussion within the party and attempt a PLP coronation?  Will he be forced to depart to a clear timetable to allow for a smooth and orderly transition this year?  Starmer is currently threatening Labour members with a continuation of his leadership so perhaps he will stagger on to be felled by yet another crisis in the not-so-distant future.

Christabel Cooper, the Director of Research at  Labour Together addresses Lewes Labour Party flanked by (l-r) Peter Lamb MP, Mark Perryman and Compass’s Neal Lawson.

Given Labour’s problems are so much more than a Labour Leader who is hated by a large part of the electorate we need a plan that reaches far wider than a change in the face at the top.  I would suggest the following questions would be good ones to pose to any of the leadership candidates that emerge.

Will you shoot rightwards rather than leftwards to do all you can to stop Nigel Farage entering Downing Street? In the local elections Labour’s relentless attacks on the Greens led by Labour Together’s toxic factionalist and Cabinet member Steve Reed MP were utterly shameful. If we are to attract Green voters back to the Labour fold we need to address their policy concerns and make Nigel Farage our main enemy.

What will you do to  save the link to unions like UNITE and show that Labour will again act for working people? An important feature of Labour’s existential crisis is the possibility of losing big trade union affiliations, most notably UNITE’s. Not only would this devastate Labour’s finances but further loosen Labour’s identity as a Party that represents working class people, further accelerating the fragmentation of Labour’s base. 

How will you restore Labour’s democracy? Labour’s internal culture is toxic with excellent hard working Labour representatives being dumped by the party.  To give one clear example, Hackney MP Diane Abbott, the Mother of the House and Britain’s first Black woman MP, has had the whip withdrawn.  The result has been a moribund local party and the election of a Green Mayor in Hackney.

Would you signal an end to Labour’s creeping authoritarianism by supporting John McDonnell MP’s call for an independent inquiry into Labour Together? If we are to show that Labour is bringing an end to the toxic culture that led to the appointment of Peter Mandelson as the United States Ambassador, the Party needs to signal a clear break with Labour Together.  Labour needs to be apologising to the British public and an independent inquiry would be a great way to signal we have started to change.

Will you support Labour’s Conference policy of proportional representation to ensure that Nigel Farage’s Reform could not enter Downing Street with as little as say 28% of the vote? We should not risk Nigel Farage following Keir Starmer by securing his own wide but shallow parliamentary majority. A new leader needs to be crystal clear on this policy so in the event of a hung parliament we know we can forge a coalition to lock out Nigel Farage.

Will you question Labour’s long held policy of Atlanticism and forge an ethical foreign policy independent of Donald Trump and his ally Benjamin Netanyahu? Labour needs a new debate on its approach to foreign policy now that events in Gaza and Iran have well and truly broken the so called  ‘special relationship’.  In a multi-polar world we need to reconsider, in the words of the late Robin Cook MP, what an ‘ethical foreign policy’ should look like.

When Starmer goes, we should support an attempt by the Socialist Campaign Group to stand a candidate but it is very likely that the Morgan McSweeney-instigated rule change that requires around 80 MP nominations to get on the ballot will prevent this from happening.  To facilitate a proper leadership election taking place we need to push back against any rushed attempt to secure a coronation by the Parliamentary Labour Party.  Now more than ever we need a serious debate with time, if we are going to save the Labour Party and stop Nigel Farage.

If we cannot have a Campaign Group candidate on the ballot paper I think Andy Burnham is best placed to answer all the questions above. The obvious concern after Labour Together’s factional blocking of Andy’s attempts to re-enter Parliament will be that the members’ favoured choice will fail to even make the ballot paper.

Can we stop Farage?

The big question is can Farage be stopped in 2029?  The answer is that there is clearly the  potential to beat him as we know from the local elections that there is a left of centre electoral bloc made up of the Greens, Labour and the Liberal Democrats which commands the votes of around half the electorate.  The problem is that under first past the post there is every possibility that Farage supported by the Conservatives could enter 10 Downing Street with as little as say 28% of the vote. 

The difficult task is to reconstruct Labour as a progressive bloc which can win or at least get as far as achieving a hung parliament from which an anti-Farage coalition can emerge.  But we all know that the precondition for embarking on the long march to the re-creation of Labour as a progressive coalition is the removal  of Sir Keir Starmer as our Labour leader and the end of Labour Together’s toxic political culture at the heart of our party.  If we don’t carry out these essential political tasks we will all be doomed and Nigel Farage will be our next Prime Minister.

What happens next in the Labour Party matters to the whole of the left.  It is clear that the Greens cannot win a parliamentary majority alone so who becomes the next Labour leader will be crucial to us all.  If there is a hung parliament will the Labour Leader in 2029 pick up the phone to call Zach Polanski?  Will they be prepared to back proportional representation? Will they have a respectful conversation with the nationalists of Scotland and Wales? We know the answers we need to hear if we are going to rebuild Labour as a progressive coalition to stop Farage and win.

Bryn Griffiths is an activist in Colchester Labour Party and North Essex World Transformed. He is the Vice-Chair of Momentum and sits on the Campaign for Labour Party Democracy’s Executive. 

Bryn hosts Labour Hub’s spin off – the Labour Left Podcast.  You can find all the episodes of the podcast here  or if you prefer audio platforms (for example Amazon, Audible Spotify, Apple, etc,) go to your favourite podcast provider and just search for the Labour Left Podcast.

To explore the key themes in this article you may wish to watch the Labour Left Podcast with Paul Holden to understand the role of Labour Together.  The latest podcast with David Renton looks at the threat of the extreme right.

Main image: the author out leafleting in Colchester’s New Town and Christ Church. Photos c/o the author.

Red Wall Tory voters defect to Reform, but Muslim vote leaves Labour

MAY 16, 2026

Michael Hindley looks at May’s local election results in the former East Lancashire Cotton Belt.

The four East Lancashire District Council elections (Blackburn with Darwen, Burnley, Hyndburn and Pendle) all saw a collapse in Labour representation, and though the boundaries do not correspond exactly to Westminster constituencies, the results spell disaster for Labour in the sub-region. The Westminster Labour victories in 2024 were a temporary respite, and not a revival.

It is clear that the long-term prospects for Labour in East Lancashire were set in the ‘Red Wall’ election of 2019, and didn’t fundamentally change in 2024.

To recap, the metropolitan chatterati got very excited with Boris Johnson’s victory in December 2019, which in essence was down to a clever, opportunist slogan of “Get Brexit Done”. That election was in effect the ‘Second EU Referendum’, which Keir Starmer, then Labour’s Europe Spokesperson, had naively demanded. Labour promised to renegotiate the terms of membership and put the subsequent new deal to another referendum; a faint echo of a far more skilful Harold Wilson’s clever winning strategy in 1974.

East Lancashire had been staunchly anti-Europe in the 1975 Referendum held to confirm our membership. East Lancs retains a deep reservoir of Euro-scepticism, as I well know as a former Hyndburn Council leader and MEP for the sub-region from 1984 to 1999.

The clever campaign slogan of “Get Brexit Done” fed on that anti-EU sentiment, despite East Lancashire’s great success in attracting EU funds, which to some degree alleviated the ravages of Thatcher’s stripping of East Lancashire’s manufacturing base and starving of local government aid.

Only in Blackburn did Labour escape the General Election of December 2019 election cull.

But Johnson and subsequent Tory governments had not the slightest intention of alleviating the misery of social and economic distress and the failures of successive PMs, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak drained the Tory Party’s reservoir of support.

The Labour ‘landslide’ of 2024 had everything to do with the peculiarities of the First Post the Post (FPTP) electoral system and the exhaustion of the Tory Party had very little to do with Starmer’s cautious policies. In fact in the East Lancs seats, which Labour regained (Burnley, Hyndburn, Rossendale and Darwen and Pendle) the Labour vote actually fell,but was compensated for by a collapse in the Tory vote.

Starmer did not enter Number 10 with any popular enthusiasm, more a relief that the Tories were gone.

The immediate fiasco of the winter fuel allowance and the ‘second child cap’ severely dented any idea that ‘change’ was coming. Also, the immediate revelation that the Labour elite were freeloading on Lord Alii’s generosity and also accepting freebies for pop concerts and sporting events increased the grumbling that ‘they’re all the same’.

The collapse in confidence in Starmer’s Labour had set in long before the damage of the Mandelson scandal. Most significant, and often overlooked in election analysis, is the continued impact of the Israeli government’s horrendous destruction and slaughter in Gaza, which still continues despite a bogus ceasefire.

The outrage felt among the usually loyal Muslim Labour voters and representatives has been profound and lasting. Throughout East Lancs, Muslim Labour councillors resigned in protest against the Starmer government’s failure not only to explicitly condemn Israel’s attacks on Gaza, but in effect to become complicit in those attacks. Many of those ‘Independent’ defectors kept their seats in the recent local elections and there are now some thirty-five such local councillors identifiable as Muslim ‘Gaza’ Labour defectors.

This disillusion climaxed in the Rochdale by-election in February 2024. The local Labour Party selected the much respected and competent Labour Leader on Lancashire County Council and Pendle-based, Azhar Ali. Some intemperate remarks of his were magnified by a press in full hue and cry to accuse another Labour figure of anti-Semitism. The former MP and former Leader of Lancashire County Council, Louise Ellman, at first spoke in his favour but then on the leaking of further intemperate remarks, joined the chorus to drop Azhar Ali.

Buckling under the pressure, the Labour leadership dropped Azhar Ali but too late to stop his name appearing on the ballot paper. The inevitable drop in the Labour vote in Rochdale led to the itinerant radical George Galloway winning the seat, only to lose the seat in the May General Election.

Azhar Ali is now the Leader of a small groups of Greens and Independents in County Hall under the name ‘Progressive Lancashire’, perhaps a sign of things to come.

Worst was to follow for Labour in Lancashire in the County elections in May 2025, when Reform advanced spectacularly from a few councillors to a staggering overall majority.

The percentage of people identifying themselves as Muslims in East Lancashire boroughs is higher than the national average of 6.5%. (Blackburn 35%, Pendle 26%, Burnley and Hyndburn 14% each), figures eagerly seized on by the anti-immigration Reform party, which deliberately conflates immigration with refugees and asylum seekers.

The nadir of Labour’s loss of support amongst Muslim voters came in the General Election of 2024, when an ‘Independent’ won Blackburn, which had been a safe Labour seat for decades and had had Philip Snowden, Barbara Castle and Jack Straw as its MPs.

The winner, Adnad Hussain, another Labour defector, won. Like other Muslim representatives, Hussain, a local businessman, is pro-Palestine but socially conservative. Although an initial supporter of the ‘Independent Group’ of MPs, he soon left after its transformation into ‘Your Party’.

The Greens have little impact on the electoral map of East Lancashire, but a growing membership and have an appeal to younger votes.

Boundary changes in East Lancashire were gerrymandered by the Tories to ensure their survival but the plan failed disastrously as the Reform surge ate into the Tory vote. Ironically it was this loss of Tory votes, which saw Labour win seats despite a fall in the Labour vote.

Labour needs East Lancashire seats to form a government and it is significant that two of Labour’s 2024 new winners, have called for Starmer’s resignation. My own conversations throughout East Lancs with many friends with longstanding experience in Labour politics were adamant that Starmer’s unpopularity was a decisive issue on the doorstep.

Will Andy Burnham’s possible entry into an eventual leadership contest change the picture? Currently reading Chris Moss’ Lancashire, I came across a very apt description of Lancashire urban society. Though Lancashire is now a post-industrial society, the atmosphere hasn’t really changed. The original quote comes from 1930s Bolton but is as accurate today as then.

“…the complete discrepancy between what all the people I am working with think and what is being reported in the newspapers and on the BBC. The gap between leader and led, between… Westminster chatter and Lancashire talk has built an invisible barrier that is dangerous in democracy.”

The feeling in ‘Red Wall’ East Lancs, is that Starmer simply doesn’t get it; but Andy Burnham does. Burnham’s record in Manchester, East Lancs’ most accessible metropolis, is admired across all sections of the North West.

The challenge though is, can Andy Burnham translate that empathy into national policy?

Michael Hindley is a former Leader of Hyndburn Council, a Lancashire County Councillor and MEP for Lancashire East. He is now a freelance writer and speaker on international politics. This article first appeared on his substack here.

Image: https://socialistalternative.info/2022/07/01/wakefield-by-election-yet-another-tory-catastrophe/ Creator: Kim Hansen (Wikimedia Commons User:Slaunger) Copyright: Kim Hansen Licence: Attribution 3.0 Unported CC BY 3.0 Deed

Labour’s catastrophic results necessitate new leadership

 

MAY 9, 2026

‘Sweeping  gains for Reform’ was the dominant headline following the first wave of results in Thursday’s local government elections. It’s undeniable that Reform were highly effective at converting votes into seats, particularly in parts of the North and especially in areas represented by prominent Labour MPs.

BBC Political Editor Chris Mason pointed out that in Tameside, Greater Manchester, the seat of former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, Labour lost 16 of  the 17 seats it was defending to Reform. In nearby Wigan, where the local MP is Cabinet Minister Lisa Nandy, Labour lost all 22 seats it was defending to Reform.

In many such areas, this is a reaction to politics-as-usual, a vote by desperate voters for the ‘Change’ that Keir Starmr promised in 2024 but signally has failed to deliver. Elsewhere, Reform made gains at the expense of the Tories, a straightforward switch between the two right wing parties.

Where did Labour’s votes go?

But polling expert Professor John Curtice counselled caution in drawing any conclusion that it is Reform who are doing most damage to Labour in these elections. “That is not the pattern,” he argued. “A sharp fall in Labour’s performance is accompanied more often by an above average Green performance than it is by a strong Reform performance.”

Politics Professor Rob Ford agreed: while Labour may have lost most seats to Reform, it lost more votes to the Greens and this split allowed Reform to come through the middle. He warned: “If Labour react to this pattern by saying ‘we need to win back votes from Reform’ they risk making a major misdiagnosis, one which could make their current troubles even worse.”

London Mayor Sadiq Khan went further. He said: “Labour has lost votes in London to a variety of different parties, but the biggest change has been Labour voters switching to the Greens.” He said that many people who had voted Labour in 2024 “clearly feel angry, disappointed and let down.”

“They want a Labour government to address the cost-of-living crisis while demonstrating the core values the party was established to promote,” he continued.

Green leader Zack Polanski certainly had a lot to celebrate, including the end of two-party politics, as his party made substantial gains, especially in London. But without proportional representation, this fracturing of the progressive vote has unhealthy consequences, with good socialists in both Labour and Greens – and sometimes independents too – running against each other. In some cases, this allowed candidates – sometimes from the far right – to win with a small percentage of the vote. With a future Reform-led government a distinct possibility, this is a luxury the left simply cannot afford.

For Labour, the break-up of its coalition of radical progressives and working class voters is producing a stark polarisation. Nowhere is this clearer than in Wales with the Labour voters moving to Plaid Cymru and Reform to demand different kinds of radical change. Even Labour’s First Minister Eluned Morgan could not retain her seat. Contrast this with the picture a few years ago under Mark Drakeford’s leadership, when a clear Welsh Labour identity helped the Party in Wales to buck national trends that were unfavourable to Labour.

Some caution clearly needs to be exercised when extrapolating from these results projections for the Westminster Parliament. Turnout may have been higher than usual, but it was still significantly lower than in a general election. For a variety of reasons, older voters tend to vote more in second-order elections, and this cohort tends to favour parties of the right, compared to younger voters. In a general election, where younger voters are likely to be more engaged, the Greens might do even better, Reform UK less so.

Who’s responsible?

Much of the blame for Labour’s dire performance must be attributed to the Starmer government’s failure to deliver the promised change, instead attacking Labour’s base with the winter fuel allowance policy and the continuation of the two-child benefit cap. All the worthy things the government may be doing are marginalised by its refusal to address the cost of living crisis.

But a good part of Labour’s dismal showing is down to what the Starmer faction, led by the now disgraced Mandelson and McSweeney, have done, not just in government, but to the Party itself, with their factional expulsions, deselections and blocking of decent candidates.

Take Hackney, where the Greens made sweeping gains to win a majority on the Council and the mayoralty. “Hackney North MP Diane Abbott has been suspended for nearly two years and the Constituency Labour Party is moribund, without even branch meetings, let alone any pretence at internal democracy. The result is yesterday’s collapse in the vote,” pointed out David Osland.

In Brent, northwest London, where Labour won all but eight seats in 2022, the Council passed to no overall control. The Borough Party was the centre of a Campaign Improvement Board, answerable only to the National Executive Committee. It tore up the local selection process by branches and imposed candidates centrally, barring several sitting councillors, many from the left, with impeccable records, in the process. Some joined the Greens and retained their seats. The widespread demoralisation of Labour members undermined effective campaigning and  all opposition parties made sweeping gains, leaving Labour councillors in a minority.

Change the leader

The news agenda has moved on from analysing the results to weighing up how long Keir Starmer has left in office. A change of leadership is undoubtedly necessary, as increasing numbers of MPs – and not just from the left – are now saying publicly.

“There was one issue on the door and it was Keir. If he leads us into a future election we are dead,” one Labour MP told the BBC. Another usually loyal Labour MP, in an area that went heavily Reform in Thursday’s poll, said the reassuring thing was that voters didn’t really hate Labour, but “they did hate Keir.”

Former Cabinet member Louise Haigh said: “Unless the government delivers urgent and significant change it’s clear the PM cannot lead us in to the next election.”

Clive Lewis MP spelled it out: “The Prime Minister needs to go. That is not negotiable. The only thing now in his gift is the nature of the contest that follows. It must be open, fair and legitimate. Everyone who should be part of that process must be allowed to take part. That means no blocking Andy Burnham. And it means a clear departure date, no later than the autumn. These results are existential for the Labour Party. Existential. Anyone still saying we should simply carry on ‘delivering the plan’ has lost touch with political reality, and with the public. The voters have spoken. It is not for the leadership to pretend they have not.”

This is eminently sensible. And it should be added: replacing the current leader with a ‘better communicator’ will not address Labour’s woes if the political direction remains the same. Labour needs new leadership, but also new policies that address the combined crises of health, climate and cost of living – and much more.

Urgent! A letter from defeated Labour councillors and candidates is now circulating calling on Keir Starmer to set a timetable for his departure. Please get defeated candidates and councillors to sign.

On the Monday evening after the elections – 11th May, 6.30 – 7.30 – Arise and the Trade Union Coordinating Group will be hosting an online discussion asking these questions. Left MPs including John McDonnell and Richard Burgon will be joined by trade union leaders Fran Heathcote (PCS) and Daniel Kebede (NEU) to think through the significance of what has happened and the political lessons for activists on the left.   

Register here to join the meeting.