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'What does he actually stand for?': Nigel Farage rips into Starmer as he hails victory in knife-edge Runcorn by-election

2 May 2025, 07:56

Nigel Farage (C), leader of the Reform UK party, celebrates the victory of Sarah Pochin, the party's candidate, in the Runcorn & Helsby by-election
Nigel Farage (C), leader of the Reform UK party, celebrates the victory of Sarah Pochin, the party's candidate, in the Runcorn & Helsby by-election. Picture: Getty

By Henry Moore

Nigel Farage has questioned what the Prime Minister stands for as he hailed Reform UK’s “huge win” in the Runcorn by-election.

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The race between Reform's Sarah Pochin and Labour candidate Karen Shore was separated by just six votes following a tense recount.

Sarah Pochin became the constituency's new MP after securing 12,645 votes, six more than Labour's 12,639.

85 ballots were rejected as part of the recount.

Speaking to LBC’s Nick Ferrari, Nigel Farage said: “It may be by a small margin, but it's a huge win.

Read more: With Reform knocking on the door of local politics, the Tories look set for a bloodbath, writes LBC's Natasha Clark

Watch Again: Nick Ferrari is joined by Nigel Farage after Reform's by-election wins | 02/05/25

“This is one of Labour's safest seats in the country. If I said to you a year ago, Reform would win this by-election, you'd look at me as if I came from Mars.

“We've taken big chunks out of the Conservatives and Labour. In the majority of England - we are the main challenger to Labour.”

He went on to slam the Prime Minister, asking, “what does this man actually stand for?”

“Everything is caution, caution, caution,” he said.

Speaking to LBC’s Henry Riley, Farage added the country has "lost faith" in Labour and pointed to the increase in channel crossings as a key reason for their defeat.

: Nigel Farage of the Reform Party celebrates as Reform Party candidate Sarah Pochin is declared the winner of the Runcorn and Helsby by-election
: Nigel Farage of the Reform Party celebrates as Reform Party candidate Sarah Pochin is declared the winner of the Runcorn and Helsby by-election. Picture: Getty

Speaking directly to Sir Keir Starmer, Farage said: “I would just say to him, very simply, that people who put trust in you, that is eroded, albeit almost eradicated, in a very short space of time.

“Be nice to know who he really is, wouldn't it? What does he actually, I mean, what does he actually believe in? It seems that whatever Morgan McSweeney writes for him on a piece of paper he reads out, there's no conviction in this Labour Party.

“But crucially, crucially, the things that switched a lot of old Labour voters to us in this constituency, number one, working people, they have alarms that go off in the morning, they cross the bridge and work in Merseyside.

“Mostly the taxes they pay are going up and they wonder why they're doing it.

“Secondly, a feeling that somehow Labour is not a patriotic party.

“And thirdly, there are 750 young men who've crossed the English Channel living in this constituency at the expense of hard-working taxpayers, causing great alarm in many streets.

“Dover may be a long way away. Its influence on this by election was enormous.”

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage stands with Sarah Pochin.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage stands with Sarah Pochin. Picture: Alamy

Sarah Pochin, who becomes Reform's fifth MP, said: "We have made history here tonight."

The contest to become the new MP for Runcorn and Helsby was the first by-election under Keir Starmer's leadership, and was seen as hugely important for both Reform and Labour.

Labour said by-elections are "always difficult for the party in Government" and the events surrounding the Runcorn And Helsby vote made it "even harder" after Reform UK's Sarah Pochin won the seat.

A party spokesperson said: "By-elections are always difficult for the party in government and the events which led to this one being called made it even harder.

"Voters are still rightly furious with the state of the country after 14 years of failure and clearly expect the Government to move faster with the plan for change.

"While Labour has suffered an extremely narrow defeat, the shock is that the Conservative vote has collapsed. Moderate voters are clearly appalled by the talk of a Tory-Reform pact.

"There are encouraging signs that our plan for change is working - NHS waiting lists, inflation and interest rates down with wages up - but we will go further and faster to deliver change with relentless focus on putting money back into people's pockets."

The vote was triggered after former Labour MP Mike Amesbury quit the party after admitting punching a constituent in the street, which was caught on CCTV.

Votes are counted at DCBL Halton Stadium, Widnes, Cheshire, for the Runcorn and Helsby by-election.
Votes are counted at DCBL Halton Stadium, Widnes, Cheshire, for the Runcorn and Helsby by-election. Picture: Alamy

Amesbury pleaded guilty to assaulting constituent Paul Fellows, 45, after a row in the street in Frodsham, Cheshire, in January, for which he was given a suspended sentence.

Amesbury won his seat last year with a majority of 14,696 over Reform UK, and his resignation became the first by-election test for Sir Keir Starmer's Labour Party.

It comes as a number of by-elections are being held across England, and Reform UK is contesting nearly all of them.

More than 1,600 council seats are up for grabs across 23 local authorities, while four regional mayors and two local mayors will be elected.

At the last local elections in 2024, Reform only put forward candidates in 12% of all available council seats. This year, Farage said the party is deploying nearly a "full list of candidates across the entire country".

Sarah Pochin of the Reform Party speaks after she is declared the winner of the Runcorn and Helsby by-election
Sarah Pochin of the Reform Party speaks after she is declared the winner of the Runcorn and Helsby by-election. Picture: Getty

The leader of the right-wing populist party, Nigel Farage, said he wanted to “smash the two-party system”.

Reform does not currently run any councils, but critics and supporters alike will be eager to see how they will run local authorities if they do win councils and mayoral contests.

The level of votes they receive at the local level will also be a major electoral test for the party, which has publicly spoken about their ambitions to win the next general election and run the country.

Most of the council seats were last contested in May 2021, at a time when the then-Conservative government, led by former prime minister Boris Johnson, was enjoying a spike in popularity following the successful rollout of the first Covid-19 vaccines.

This means the Tories are defending a large number of seats across much of the country: they currently control 19 of the 23 local authorities holding elections on Thursday, either as the majority party or a minority administration.