Something about Burnley? Political dynamics in Labour’s ‘most winnable’ target seat

Soundings - ISSN 1362-6620
Volume 2024 Number 86

Something about Burnley? Political dynamics in Labour’s ‘most winnable’ target seat
Mike Makin-Waite pages 119-135
DOI: 10.3898/SOUN.86.07.2024

Abstract

George Galloway’s success in the February 2023 Rochdale by-election generated scores of op-ed articles. Ali Milani of the Labour Muslim Network identified it as ‘evidence of a serious problem Labour has with the trust and support of the Muslim community, who Labour has enjoyed the support of for decades’. This article focuses on another northern English town where half the Labour councillors responded to Starmer’s opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza by resigning from the party. In a granular case-study analysis of relationships and realignments in local politics, it identifies the wider patterns and problems behind the current headlines. Alongside long-term trends of de-alignment between Labour and constituencies which have previously supported it, a managerialist and controlling culture has narrowed discussion and shallowed debate, reducing the party’s ability to engage the energies and represent the views and interests of many people who nevertheless still see themselves as holding to ‘Labour values’.

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To cite this article
Mike Makin-Waite (2024) Something about Burnley? Political dynamics in Labour’s ‘most winnable’ target seat, Soundings, 2024(86), 119-135. https://doi.org/10.3898/SOUN.86.07.2024

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