Limited recount held in Wellingborough by-election

  • Published
Vote counting at Wellingborough by-electionImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Ballot papers have arrived at Kettering Conference Centre

A limited recount took place in the Wellingborough by-election, a contest triggered after a recall petition in the Northamptonshire constituency.

The petition was prompted by Peter Bone's suspension from the House of Commons for six weeks for breaching the code of conduct for MPs.

Voter turnout was 38.1%, down from 64.3% at the 2019 General Election.

Labour's Gen Kitchen was declared the new MP at Kettering Conference Centre, at about 04:00 GMT.

Constituents needed photo ID in order to vote after a change in the law last year.

Candidates gathered at the conference centre where about 90 counters were involved in verifying ballot papers.

Officials said the recount was of the ballots in two trays, both on the same table.

Image source, Laura Coffey/BBC
Image caption,

Conservative candidate Helen Harrison has arrived at the count

Before the result was announced Chesterfield's Labour MP Toby Perkins, who was at the Wellingborough count, said his party was feeling confident.

He said: "Any win would be remarkable, [it is] too early to have a final result but [we] like our chances."

Image source, Laura Coffey/BBC
Image caption,

Labour candidate Gen Kitchen, centre, has been watching the count

The Liberal Democrat candidate Ana Savage Gunn said she might have lost her deposit.

Candidates lose their £500 deposit if they fail to secure more than 5% of the vote.

"It'll be close", Ms Savage Gunn told Laura Coffey, the BBC's political reporter for Northamptonshire.

They secured 4.7% of the vote, down from 7.9% of the vote in 2019.

Image source, Carroll Weston/BBC
Image caption,

The Liberal Democrat candidate Ana Savage Gunn says she may have lost her deposit

At the count

Andrew Sinclair, BBC East political editor

Image source, PA Media

The Wellingborough election is taking place in a politically fascinating area of the country at a politically fascinating time.

Wellingborough lies in the middle of the M1/A1 corridor. Home to a group of voters, who are sometimes referred to as "aspirational" and middle England", they are people who have worked hard to better themselves and their families, they probably own their own home and they may have moved out of London, or one of the large cities (where they may still work), for a better way of life.

These people are typical "swing voters" who often reflect the political mood of the country.

The area is full of constituencies which swung to Labour in 1997, and then slowly move back to the Conservatives - places like Kettering, Corby, Northampton and Milton Keynes.

Wellingborough is only 30 miles (48km) from Mid Bedfordshire where Labour recently overturned a 24,600 Conservative majority.

If they can do the same tonight, it will be seen as further evidence that aspirational England is on the move.

If the Conservatives can hold on, it will give them hope in a general election year.

Reform UK's leader Richard Tice was at the Wellingborough count, where he hopes his party will make gains.

He told the BBC early indications were that his party will have its "best ever by-election results" between the votes in Wellingborough and Kingswood in Bristol.

The party's candidate Ben Habib said he believes the party has got its "profile up" and its "share of the vote will be significantly higher than the previous by-election".

Image source, Andrew Sinclair/BBC
Image caption,

Reform UK candidate Ben Habib believes his party has done well in the by-election

The eleven candidates (in alphabetical order) are:

  • Nick the Flying Brick - The Official Monster Raving Loony Party

  • Ana Savage Gunn - Liberal Democrat

  • Ben Habib - Reform UK

  • Helen Harrison - Conservative

  • Ankit Love Jknpp Jay Mala Post-Mortem - Independent

  • Gen Kitchen - Labour

  • Alex Merola - Britain First

  • Will Morris - Green Party

  • Andre Pyne-Bailey - Independent

  • Marion Turner-Hawes - Independent

  • Kevin Watts - Independent

Labour overturned a Conservative majority of more than 11,000 to win the Kingswood by-election, with a majority of more than 2,000.

Conservatives came second, with Reform beating the Green Party to the spot for third place.

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