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Starmer’s future on the line as Britain holds closely watched vote

Andy Burnham looks to return to Westminster via the Makerfield by-election, paving the way for a potential Labour leadership challenge

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A polling station at a parish centre in Winstanley, Wigan, located inside the critical Makerfield constituency. Photo: AFP
Associated Press

Keir Starmer is not on the ballot, but the UK prime minister’s future is on the line in a special election on Thursday.

Voters in the Makerfield district of northwest England were electing a new lawmaker, and the leading contender is Andy Burnham of the governing Labour Party, the current mayor of Greater Manchester and oddsmakers’ favourite to be the next prime minister.

If Burnham defeats a candidate from the anti-immigration party Reform UK and wins the seat for Labour, he is almost certain to challenge the embattled Starmer for leadership of the party, and the country.

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Burnham has pledged that “if people put their trust in me, I will change politics” – a big promise for a politician who, if he wins, would be just one of 650 lawmakers in the House of Commons.

But the scores of journalists from around the world who have flocked to Makerfield during the campaign were evidence that this was no normal by-election, the results of which were due early Friday.

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About 75,000 people were eligible to vote in Makerfield, a constituency that encompasses several towns and villages on the edge of Greater Manchester, 320km (200 miles) northwest of London.

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