For nearly a century, Gorton and Denton were Labour territory — a safe seat in the party’s “Red Wall” of industrial communities that once formed the unshakeable foundation of British center-left politics.
On Friday, it fell to the Greens. And Labour finished third.
The result — Greens 40.7%, Reform UK 28.7%, Labour 25.4% — sent shockwaves through Westminster and left Prime Minister Keir Starmer fighting for his political future.
“This is very disappointing,” Starmer told reporters. “I will keep on fighting for those people for as long as I’ve got breath in my body”.
But his pledge to combat “the extremes in politics on the right and the left” did little to calm a party now confronting the collapse of its historic coalition and the rise of insurgent movements on both flanks.

A Seismic Moment
John Curtice, Britain’s most respected pollster, called the result “a seismic moment” that means the “future of British politics looks more uncertain than at any stage since the end of World War Two”.
The uncertainty reflects a broader realignment across Western democracies — the breakdown of traditional two-party systems, the rise of populist movements, and voters willing to abandon lifelong loyalties.
Gerald Gudgion, a 73-year-old lifelong Labour supporter, explained his decision to back the Greens: “We need a change of direction and I think the Greens are offering that”.
How It Happened
Starmer had staked his personal authority on winning this seat. He blocked Andy Burnham, the popular Manchester mayor and potential rival, from standing. He visited the constituency earlier this week. He framed the contest as a choice between unity and division.
The electorate chose division — just not the one he was campaigning against.
Labour’s strategy focused on the threat from Reform UK, Nigel Farage’s populist party, which came second. But that approach ignored the Greens, who won by appealing to voters on Gaza, cost-of-living, and climate issues where Labour’s positions alienated parts of its base.
The result is the first time the Green Party, which supports leaving NATO and legalizing recreational drugs, has won a parliamentary seat in northern England. The party now holds five seats in the 650-seat House of Commons.
Green leader Zack Polanski said he wants to secure at least 30 seats, possibly up to 50, by the next general election.
The Reform Factor
Friday’s result also exposed vulnerabilities for Reform. Candidate Matt Goodwin alienated some voters in the ethnically diverse constituency with past comments that British Muslims “are fundamentally opposed to British values and ways of life”.
Farage dismissed the result, calling it “a victory for sectarian voting and cheating.” He cited reports of “family voting” — when two voters confer, breaching the secret ballot — though the Electoral Commission said only it was “aware of the report” and encouraged anyone with evidence to come forward.
Despite his complaints, Reform’s strong second-place finish confirms the party as a major force on the right, capable of challenging Labour in seats it once took for granted.
Starmer’s Bind
The prime minister now faces a two-front war. On immigration and cultural issues, Reform attacks from the right. On Gaza, climate, and public services, the Greens advance from the left. Labour’s traditional coalition is being pulled apart in opposite directions.
One Labour lawmaker, speaking anonymously, captured the party’s confusion: “In an election we tried to make into one of unity versus division, the electorate chose division — just not the division we were campaigning most against”.
Starmer could face a formal leadership challenge after the May elections, when Labour is expected to fare badly in local and regional polls. For now, no immediate threat has materialized, but patience is wearing thin.
The defeat comes weeks after Starmer faced the most dangerous moment of his premiership, when some lawmakers called for his resignation over his handling of the Peter Mandelson ambassadorial appointment — a scandal tied to the Jeffrey Epstein files.
What Comes Next
The Green victory in Gorton and Denton is not an isolated event. It signals a fundamental reshaping of British politics — one where no seat is safe, no loyalty permanent, and no party immune from the insurgent forces reshaping the West.
Starmer promises to fight “as long as I’ve got breath in my body.” But the breath of Labour’s old coalition is already gone. The question now is whether he can build something new before the forces on his left and right finish the job together.
















