Summary

  1. 'For students, this feeling that the Greens can win is going to be impactful come May'published at 14:46 GMT

    Andrew Rogers
    Reporting from Gorton and Denton

    Will wears an open white shirt and a blue jacket and stands next to Rosie who wears a blue shirt and a black puffer jacket

    Rosie and Will both write for the Mancunion, the University of Manchester’s student newspaper, and covered the election count throughout the night.

    The pair both say that local students have had strong feelings about the by-election.

    “We know from the work that we've done that our student population care massively about things like the cost of living, about rent prices, about education policies and I think that's been very central to the debate,” Rosie tells BBC Newsbeat.

    Both Rosie and Will say the Green Party win was not a huge surprise – and gives an insight into how students might vote in the local elections in May.

    “We've seen from national polling that the Greens are particularly popular amongst young people,” adds Will.

    “I think for students in particular this feeling that the Greens can win, that they're bringing an alternative to traditional politics, is going to be really impactful in the local elections.”

  2. Gorton and Denton locals react to Greens' by-election winpublished at 14:28 GMT

    Woman in coat and winter had sits on a public bench
    Image caption,

    Annie says she voted for Reform UK, citing their immigration polices as a key factor

    Gorton and Denton locals have been giving the BBC their reactions to the by-election results in their constituency.

    Annie McAllister, 87, says she would have liked to see Reform UK win the seat.

    "I would have never voted for them [The Green Party]," she says, adding that she voted for Reform because of their policies on illegal immigration.

    Sharon Liddle says she does not like Green Party policies around drugs and open borders. Because she didn't know who to vote for, she says she "didn't bother" voting - but is "surprised" that the Greens won.

    Others, such as local businessman Richard McCalmot, say having "someone different" is "good" for the constituency.

    Lola Kenku, another local, agrees. She says she voted for the Greens to "make everything better" on issues key to her: money, bills and housing.

    Romney Hadfield says he is "disappointed" that Labour have lost their stronghold in the area, and says he blames Keir Starmer.

    "If he put Andy Burnham in, he'd have won that easy," Romney says.

  3. Voters are not feeling changes Labour has brought in yet, says McFaddenpublished at 14:12 GMT

    Reflecting on his party's performance in Gorton and Denton, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Pat McFadden says it was a "very disappointing night".

    He tells BBC Radio 4's World at One programme that "when it happens you have to take it on the chin" and respect the result.

    He says voters are not feeling the changes Labour has brought in enough yet, and that the government needs to continue delivering for the public and keeping in mind the lessons from winning the general election.

    He adds that it will be impossible for the Green Party to "escape scrutiny about breaking up the country and weakening it" when the next general election comes round.

    A bar graph showing how each of the five main parties vote share changed since the general election
  4. Reform says it has reported 'family voting' allegations to police and Electoral Commissionpublished at 13:57 GMT
    Breaking

    Reform UK says it has reported claims of "family voting" to the Electoral Commission and Greater Manchester Police (GMP).

    Party leader Nigel Farage is urging an investigation into the reports, calling them "deeply concerning".

    The BBC has contacted GMP for comment. The Electoral Commission earlier said it was aware of the allegations but that "electoral offences are a matter for the police".

    The allegation originates from a group called Democracy Volunteers, a group of voluntary election observers who say they check voting processes. The BBC has approached the group for comment.

    Earlier, Manchester City Council said polling station staff were trained to look for undue influence on voters, and "no such issues" had been reported.

    Family voting is where a family member is seen to be influencing somebody else's vote, for example by entering the polling booth with them.

  5. Greens: Starmer clearly coming to end of premiershippublished at 13:30 GMT

    Chris Mason
    Political editor

    A Green Party spokesman says: "Starmer is clearly coming to the end of his premiership, one that he has barely been clinging to.

    "He has learnt nothing from the Greens’ stunning victory and once again he is tone deaf. His only answer now is to smear voters as extremists – those who wanted the hope and change that he is failing to offer.

    "It is not the election result or voters who are disappointing, it is his Labour government that is beyond disappointing."

  6. Starmer attacks Greens in letter to Labour MPs after by-election losspublished at 13:25 GMT

    Becky Morton
    Political reporter

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer meets local party membersImage source, PA Media

    In a letter to Labour MPs, Prime Minister Keir Starmer accuses new Green Party MP Hannah Spencer of being "more interested in dividing people than uniting them".

    He says the Greens have capitalised on an endorsement from George Galloway’s Workers Party of Britain – which won 10% of the vote in the constituency in 2024 but did not stand in the by-election - and his "divisive, sectarian politics".

    The PM also attacks the Green Party policy of legalising all drugs and says they "simply do not have the resources, the activist base or the local knowledge to replicate this victory across the country".

    Spencer has dismissed accusations of sectarian politics, insisting her party had united voters with commons concerns about the cost of living, public services and the war in Gaza.

  7. Analysis

    With Labour struggling, Scottish Greens will hope to benefit from a Polanski bouncepublished at 12:52 GMT

    Phil Sim
    Scotland political correspondent

    It may be a local by-election in Manchester, but there has been keen interest in the by-election result in Scotland given the looming polls here.

    Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar had already sought to distance himself from the UK leadership of Keir Starmer.

    But this is still undoubtedly a blow for the Scottish outfit as they gather for their pre-election conference in Paisley.

    They need a big swing from the Scottish National Party (SNP) if they are to win seats at Holyrood - and this by-election is another data point which shows them heading in the wrong direction.

    If Labour is suffering from a Starmer slump, then the Scottish Greens are hoping they can benefit from a Zack Polanski bounce.

    But the Scottish Greens will only be standing in a dozen or so constituencies in the May local elections, preferring instead to focus their efforts on the regional list element of Holyrood's proportional representation electoral system.

    That means the kind of targeted, issue-driven campaigning which succeeded in Gorton and Denton may not translate in the same way to a broader-based nationwide campaign in Scotland.

    The presence of Reform UK is an interesting one too, with multiple parties now trying to set themselves up as the "anti-Reform" vote.

    That complicates the already tangled picture of tactical voting across Scotland, where every constituency tends to be a race between the SNP and the party most likely to challenge them locally - either Labour, the Conservatives or Lib Dems.

    It adds yet another layer of intrigue to what is already shaping up as a fiercely-fought contest.

  8. People are frustrated and the electorate is volatile, says Scottish Labour leaderpublished at 12:45 GMT

    Anas Sarwar in a suit holding a black folder.Image source, Getty Images

    In Scotland, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar says the outcome of the Gorton and Denton by-election is "clearly a disappointing result".

    "I think it demonstrates that people everywhere feel angry, feel frustrated. And the electorate is volatile."

    But, he says, "we do need to be careful not to have an automatic read across to what's happening in Scotland, because of course in Scotland, the establishment for the last 20 years has been the SNP, and I think that'll be a very different framing for an election in 10 weeks time here".

    Asked about his call, earlier this month, for Keir Starmer to stand down, Sarwar adds: "I said what I said in the context of what I believed were standards that I can accept, or things that I was not willing to tolerate."

  9. Watch: How the Greens' victory unfolded... in a minutepublished at 12:40 GMT

  10. 'I'm backing the PM, for now' - the mood among some Labour MPspublished at 12:34 GMT

    Harvey Stevens
    Radio 4's The World at One

    I've been calling around to some Labour MPs to get their reactions to the party's loss in Gorton and Denton.

    One says there will be a "crisis for Starmer after the May elections".

    Another tells me they're unsure whether they still backed the prime minister, saying they will "wait and see what he does this weekend". They also said a reshuffle "needs to happen", presumably referring to Starmer's cabinet.

    One said that they were backing the prime minister - but they're "not sure for how much longer".

    And from another: "There's no doubt this will put Keir under pressure. But I would caution colleagues to put the country and stability first."

  11. 'I'm 17 so couldn't vote, but I was really hoping the Greens would win'published at 12:23 GMT

    Andrew Rogers
    Reporting from Gorton and Denton

    Oscar wears a black hat and a blue scarf as he stands at a tram stop in Manchester

    I've been speaking to young people in the Gorton and Denton constituency as they react to the Green Party’s historic victory here.

    For teenager Oscar, who has grown up in the area, the win is an “optimistic thing”.

    “I'm happy about it personally, I'm 17 so I couldn't vote in the by-election but I was hoping for the Greens to win,” he tells me .

    “I was a bit worried actually that Reform would win. The fact that the Green Party has won, I think it's quite an optimistic thing for British politics at the moment.”

    Oscar tells BBC Newsbeat that his friends who are migrants were “scared” of Reform getting in.

    “I think you can tell that people are sort of at breaking point. It's got to the point where they're voting more to extremes and I guess that's just a sign of people being fed up.”

  12. Greens gain Gorton and Denton from Labour - everything you need to knowpublished at 12:10 GMT

    hannah spencer stands next to zack polanski, who has an arm around her.Image source, EPA

    The result: At about 04:30 GMT, it was announced that the Greens had won the Gorton and Denton by-election with 14,980 votes, beating Reform UK who came second with 10,578, and Labour who finished third on 9,364.

    What the Greens said: Spencer, a plumber-turned-politician, told a victory rally she was voted in because constituents are "sick of being told there's no alternative". Meanwhile, the party's leader Zack Polanski said their "seismic" victory had "torn the roof off" British politics. Here's a closer look at how all the parties performed.

    How the PM responded: Keir Starmer called the result "disappointing", but said governments "quite often" get results like this mid-term. Asked if he should've let Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham stand - the view of some Labour MPs - Starmer instead commended the party's candidate Angeliki Stogia.

    Other politicians also had their say: Reform UK has been celebrating its success, with chair David Bull saying he is "absolutely thrilled" and that Starmer "is in big trouble". Meanwhile, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch accused Labour, Reform, and the Greens of trying to "break" the country.

    An update on so-called family voting: Greater Manchester Police told the BBC it's received "no reports" of electoral offences at the by-election. It comes after Democracy Volunteers, an election observer organisation, said members had seen so-called family voting at polling stations - a claim Manchester City Council has disputed.

    What does all this mean? Ourcorrespondents share their thoughts: The result shows just how fragmented British politics has become, our chief political correspondent Henry Zeffman wrote earlier. Meanwhile, the BBC's political editor Chris Mason added: The Greens are remoulded and re-energised under Polanski.

  13. Badenoch: This result shows Starmer's premiership is finishedpublished at 11:41 GMT

    BadenochImage source, PA Media

    We're now hearing from Kemi Badenoch for the first time since the by-election result.

    The Tory leader says Labour's loss to the Greens "shows Keir Starmer’s premiership is finished".

    "He lost authority a long time ago, a mere hostage at the mercy of a divided Labour Party that cannot decide who to replace him with," a statement says. "He has lost the support of his voters, his MPs and the country. He is in office but not in power. If he had any integrity he would go."

    "Our country is not broken," Badenoch says in a post on X, external, "but this by-election showed that Labour, Reform and the Greens are trying very hard to break it."

    She adds that the only "sensible candidate" standing in Gorton and Denton was Charlotte Cadden - the Conservative Party candidate.

    • A reminder of the final vote count: The Greens won the Gorton and Denton by-election with 14,980 votes; Reform UK came second with 10,578; Labour came third with 9,364 and the Tories finished fourth with 706.
  14. Historic win for the Greens, big loss for Labour - a look at the vote sharepublished at 11:36 GMT

    Until today, Labour had not lost an election in the Gorton and Denton area since 1931.

    A historic win for the Green Party ended that winning streak, and Labour's fall in the vote share was significant.

    At the 2024 general election, Labour received a 50.8% share of the vote, with 18,555 votes for candidate and former Labour MP Andrew Gwynne. The Green Party came in third, behind Reform, with 10.6% of the vote share.

    This time around, things have changed.

    The Greens won the seat with 14,980 votes and saw a 28% jump in the vote share, while Labour came third behind Reform and experienced a dip of 25%.

    A graphic that shows percentage point change in election, Green, Reform up, Lib Dem stay the same and a loss for Conservatives and Labour.
  15. Greater Manchester Police tell BBC it's had 'no reports' of electoral offencespublished at 11:27 GMT
    Breaking

    Joshua Tindall
    Political reporter

    Greater Manchester Police has told the BBC that they have received "no reports" of electoral offences at the Gorton and Denton by-election.

    That statement comes after Democracy Volunteers, an election observer organisation, said their observers saw "concerningly high" levels of so-called family voting at polling stations in the constituency.

    It's a claim Manchester City Council has disputed.

  16. PM asked if he was wrong to block Burnham from standing at by-electionpublished at 11:12 GMT

    Keir Starmer stands in a hall wearing a blue shirt and looks into the cameraImage source, Pool

    Still speaking to reporters, Starmer is asked if he believes he was wrong to block the Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham from being Labour's candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election.

    The prime minister says Labour had an excellent candidate in the by-election who was "rooted in her community", thanking Angeliki Stogia and everyone who campaigned in the constituency.

    He adds that Labour have been fighting the extremes of the left and right.

    • For context: Burnham - who is not an MP - sought permission to stand in the Gorton and Denton by-election, but was blocked from doing so by Labour's National Executive Committee (NEC) in January. The NEC, which includes Starmer, said this would "avoid an unnecessary mayoral election".
  17. A disappointing result for Labour, says Starmer, who vows to 'keep fighting'published at 11:07 GMT
    Breaking

    StarmerImage source, Pool

    Away from Manchester, we're now hearing from Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the first time since the Gorton and Denton by-election.

    He says this was a "very disappointing result" for Labour, who lost the seat to the Greens and finished in third behind Reform UK.

    "Incumbent governments quite often get results like that mid-term," the PM tells reporters.

    Despite this, Starmer says he understands that voters are "frustrated" and "impatient for change". He adds: "I will keep on fighting for those people for as long as I've got breath in my body."

  18. Are Greens expecting any defections from Labour?published at 10:59 GMT

    Another question for Zack Polanski now, who's asked if he's expecting any defections from Labour, or any other parties, to the Greens.

    In response, the party's leader says defections are not his priority right now.

    "My priority right now, actually, is scoping out when might a likely by-election be about to happen, and how do we make sure we can be on the ground as quickly as possible, to make sure we can repeat this as many times as we need to".

    Local elections in England in May, as well as those in the Senedd - Welsh parliament - are also priorities for Polanski and the Greens, he says.

    We're going to leave the Greens' news conference there.

    Zack Polanski speaks into a microphoneImage source, Getty Images
  19. Voters are crying out for change, Polanski says after Green by-election winpublished at 10:55 GMT

    Both Green leader Zack Polanski and MP Hannah Spencer are now answering questions from reporters - we'll bring you any key lines.

    Sky News' Beth Rigby notes that today's win for the Greens is unprecedented, with the party having never won a Westminster by-election before. She then asks if the Greens plan to "eviscerate" Labour.

    Polanski says "it's beginning already", noting the Gorton and Denton seat was one of Labour's safest - the party hadn't lost in the area since 1931, until today.

    "When you look at membership numbers, we're so close to that 200,000," he adds, saying people are "crying out for change, crying out for an alternative".

  20. Hugs, smiles and (warnings of) tears - Greens celebrate victorypublished at 10:46 GMT

    Green Party leader Zack Polanksi and his party's newest MP Hannah Spencer were all smiles as they arrived at a news conference in Manchester, billed as a victory rally, following their by-election win in Gorton and Denton.

    Read our last couple of posts to see what the pair said when they took to the stage - with Spencer joking she may get teary and wouldn't apologise if she did.

    Hannah Spencer wearing a bright green waistcoat and a polka dot shirt walks next to Zack Polanski wearing a dark blazer and a jacketImage source, Reuters
    Spencer and Polanski hugImage source, Reuters
    Photographers take pictures of Hannah Spencer on stageImage source, PA Media