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British Labour leader Keir Starmer received a boost in northern England on Friday, fighting off a challenge from the governing Conservatives to hang on to a parliamentary seat that if lost, would have heaped pressure on him to stand down.
The victory for Labour, which saw 13,296 to 12,973 votes in favour of its candidate Kim Leadbeater, hands Starmer a reprieve from those questioning whether he is the right leader to rebuild Britainโs main opposition party after a 2019 election disaster.
Prime Minister Boris Johnsonโs Conservatives had been cautiously hopeful they could oust Labour from another northern English constituency after winning a contest Hartlepool in May, a victory that led some to suggest Starmer might have to go.
โI am absolutely delighted that the people for Batley and Spen have rejected division and theyโve voted for hope,โ said Leadbeater, sister of Batley and Spenโs former lawmaker, Jo Cox, who was murdered by a neo-Nazi in the constituency in 2016.
Starmer welcomed the โfantastic resultโ on Twitter saying: โKim ran a positive campaign of hope, in the face of division. She will be an outstanding Labour MP for Batley and Spen.โ
With only 323 votes separating the two parties, the result in the so-called by-election, which was triggered after the last Batley and Spen lawmaker became a mayor, showed that neither party was able to capitalise on the otherโs weaknesses.
But Labour managed to hold its ground despite an attempt by firebrand leftist George Galloway, leader of the Workers Party of Britain, to split the main opposition partyโs vote in a race that was tarnished by accusations of dirty tricks.
The Conservative government may also have been hampered by a slew of scandals, including the resignation of Matt Hancock last month, who stood down as health minister after he was caught breaking COVID-19 guidelines he had set by kissing his aide.
Britainโs 2016 vote to leave the European Union has transformed the political landscape, with the Conservatives, traditionally the party of more affluent southern areas openly targeting voters in northern England.
Some in the party fear Johnsonโs strategy to โlevel upโ Britain by tackling its geographical inequalities might be alienating southern English voters after the party suffered a defeat in an election on the outskirts of London last month.
But by-elections offer only partial evidence of trends, pollsters say, and the poll in Batley and Spen may only show a small part of a wider political picture, especially after the race was tarnished by a divisive campaign.
The Muslim vote had come to the fore, with Galloway challenging Labour over its stance on the Palestinians. Labour was criticised for producing a leaflet that featured a photo of Johnson with Indian leader Narendra Modi, saying: โDonโt risk a Tory who is not on your side.โ
The party said it stood by the leaflet.
REUTERS