The Greens Just Beat Labour in a Seat They've Held Since 1974
Hannah Spencer won Gorton and Denton with a 27.5% swing, making history as the Greens' first Westminster by-election win while Labour crashed to third place.
Labour didn't just lose Gorton and Denton. They came third.
The Green Party's Hannah Spencer won Thursday's by-election with 40.7% of the vote, marking the first time the Greens have ever won a Westminster by-election. Reform UK came second with 28.7%. Labour, which has held the Manchester seat in some form since 1974, finished with 25.4%.
The swing: 27.5 points.
Almost half of Labour's 2024 voters walked. Some went Green. Some went Reform. The message was unanimous: the old options aren't working.
How It Happened
Andrew Gwynne resigned in January after leaked WhatsApp messages showed him calling a constituent a "Duki Hag" and her neighbourhood a "sh**hole." Labour suspended him before he stepped down.
Then came the real controversy.
Andy Burnham — the popular Greater Manchester Mayor — was expected to run. Starmer's allies blocked him, reportedly to head off a future leadership challenge. Labour picked Angeliki Stogia, a councillor nobody outside the constituency had heard of.
Voters noticed.
What the Numbers Say
Spencer won by 4,402 votes. The Green vote tripled since 2024. Labour's share collapsed.
The party's own numbers are brutal: in one of their safest seats, their biggest test in nearly a year, they finished behind both the Greens and Reform UK.
The Greens are already doing the math. If this swing replicates nationally, they claim over a hundred seats at the next election. Optimistic? Sure. Absurd? Not anymore.
Why It Matters
Gorton and Denton isn't just a Manchester story. It's a pattern running through democracies everywhere.
Denmark's PM just called a snap election after surging polls on her Greenland stance against Trump. Trump himself won the presidency as an outsider. Brazil's voters keep swinging between extremes, hunting for someone who delivers.
The thread: when traditional parties fail — or actively block the people voters want — those voters find someone else.
Labour's pitch in Gorton was simple: "Only we can stop Reform." Translation: vote for us even if you don't like us.
Voters called the bluff. They chose a third option.
What Comes Next
Starmer's facing pressure from inside Labour to prove he should keep his job. Blocking Burnham looked tactical. It may have backfired.
The Greens are energised. Co-leader Zack Polanski said Labour would need to "search their conscience" if they lost. Now they have.
Reform UK got second in a Labour stronghold — more evidence they're building real credibility, not just protest votes.
The next general election isn't required until 2029. If by-elections keep going like this, it might come sooner.
The Pattern
Voters aren't just rejecting politicians. They're rejecting the idea that two tired options are all they get.
In Gorton, the Greens were the alternative. Elsewhere it's Reform, independents, or parties that didn't exist five years ago. The common thread isn't ideology. It's impatience.
Thursday night in Manchester, voters found someone else.
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