Britain's Green Party achieved a stunning electoral victory in Greater Manchester, capturing a parliamentary seat that the Labour Party had controlled for nearly 100 years. The upset victory pushes Labour into third place and intensifies pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer amid growing calls for his resignation.

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer encountered a crushing political setback Friday when his Labour Party lost a parliamentary seat in Greater Manchester that had been under party control for nearly a century, highlighting the crumbling foundation of the UK’s traditional two-party system.
The electoral upset in one of Labour’s most secure districts represents the most significant voting challenge in nearly twelve months, intensifying demands on Starmer to justify his leadership amid weeks of political chaos and mounting resignation calls.
Hannah Spencer of the left-leaning Green Party secured victory in the Gorton and Denton parliamentary race, while Nigel Farage’s anti-immigration Reform UK claimed second position, relegating Labour to a humiliating third-place finish.
Labour party chair Anna Turley acknowledged the outcome was “clearly disappointing.”
Starmer had invested significant political capital in securing this seat, going so far as to prevent popular Manchester mayor Andy Burnham from running and personally campaigning in the district this week—a move British leaders typically avoid when facing potential losses.
This electoral blow follows Starmer’s most precarious period as prime minister earlier this month, when several party legislators suggested he step down over his controversial choice to name Labour veteran Peter Mandelson as Washington ambassador, given Mandelson’s connections to deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
During the 2024 general election, Labour captured more than half the votes in Gorton and Denton. However, Starmer’s declining popularity, stagnant economic performance, and multiple scandals and policy reversals led to a dramatic collapse in party support.
Friday’s special election, called after a sitting parliamentarian stepped down due to health issues, saw the Green Party capture 40.7% of votes. Farage’s Reform Party secured 28.7%, while Labour managed only 25.4%.
Labour legislators indicated before the vote that Starmer wouldn’t face immediate leadership challenges if defeated. However, they suggested he could encounter opposition following May elections, when Labour anticipates poor performance in local and regional contests, including parliamentary races in Wales and Scotland.
This marks the Green Party’s first victory in a special parliamentary election and their first win in northern England. The party, which advocates for NATO withdrawal and recreational drug legalization, now holds five of the 650 House of Commons seats.
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