UK

Sixteen candidates to contest Batley and Spen by-election

A total of 16 candidates will stand in the Batley and Spen by-election next month, it has been confirmed.

The full list of those nominated to contest the constituency has been published, in what is expected to be a straight two-way battle between Labour and the Conservatives.

Tracy Brabin, who first won the seat for Labour in 2016 after the murder of Jo Cox, quit as an MP after being elected to the new post of West Yorkshire metro mayor.

File photo dated 27/03/19 of Kim Leadbeater, ambassador for the Jo Cox Foundation, who has been awarded an MBE for services to Social Cohesion, to the community in Batley, West Yorkshire and to Combatting Loneliness during Covid-19, in the New Year's Honours List.
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Kim Leadbeater is standing for Labour in the contest

Ms Cox’s sister Kim Leadbeater is Labour’s candidate in the by-election, a contest that is being seen as a test of Sir Keir Starmer’s leadership of the party in the wake of Labour’s defeat in Hartlepool last month.

Leeds councillor Ryan Stephenson is standing for the Conservatives, while the Liberal Democrats have picked Tom Gordon.

George Galloway, the former MP and long-time campaigner, is standing for the Workers Party.

Local engineer Corey Robinson will represent the Yorkshire Party, which came third in the West Yorkshire mayoral election.

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The others candidates are: Paul Bickerdike (Christian People’s Alliance); Mike Davies (Alliance For Green Socialism); Jayda Fransen (Independent); Therese Hirst (English Democrats); Howling Laud Hope (The Official Monster Raving Loony Party); Susan Laird (Heritage Party); Oliver Purser (Social Democratic Party); Andrew Smith (Rejoin EU); Jack Thomson (UKIP); Jonathan Tilt (Freedom Alliance); Anne Marie Waters (The For Britain Movement).

Independent candidate Paul Halloran, who came third in the constituency at the 2019 general election, is not standing.

Another of those not standing is rugby league international Ross Peltier, who had his candidacy revoked by the Green Party.

It came after it was revealed he had made a number of “highly offensive” homophobic tweets when he was a teenager.

The 29-year-old, who is a a prop forward with Doncaster Dons and a Jamaica international, apologised for his “terrible” language and said “in no way” is he homophobic.

A Green Party spokesman said the party would not be putting another candidate forward.