Facing a seismic by-election, the people of Makerfield tell us what matters to them
In a handful of former mining towns and villages in north-west England, there is a lot of frustration with the state of the UK. It is common to hear people say "Britain is broken", "we are forgotten", and calls for "change". This is the Makerfield constituency, where locals are
In a handful of former mining towns and villages in north-west England, there is a lot of frustration with the state of the UK.
It is common to hear people say "Britain is broken", "we are forgotten", and calls for "change".
This is the Makerfield constituency, where locals are being heard louder than ever before in the most consequential by-election in decades.
A constituency that made up 0.1% of voters at the last general election is not only picking a new MP on 18 June.
Voters here are also potentially choosing the next prime minister.
That is because Labour's candidate, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, has said that if elected, he would seek to enter any Labour leadership contest to replace Sir Keir Starmer in Downing Street.
First, Burnham must defeat his main rival in Makerfield, local plumber Robert Kenyon, who is standing for Reform UK, an insurgent party that is also aiming to win power in Westminster.
Britain is "broken", Reform UK claims, while Burnham says the country has been on "the wrong path for 40 years".

