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Left-wing firebrand George Galloway only won the Rochdale by-election because Labour did not stand a candidate, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

Apologising to voters in the Greater Manchester seat, the opposition leader insisted it was the “right decision” to ditch Azhar Ali from the party slate after he became engulfed in an antisemitism row.

Sir Keir also vowed to field a “unifier” at the upcoming general election.

Politics Live: Starmer reacts to Rochdale defeat as Galloway questioned over Israel-Palestine comments

His comments came after the political comeback of Mr Galloway, taking Rochdale for the Workers Party of Britain with almost 40% of the vote following a campaign dogged by controversy and dominated by the Middle East conflict.

The former Labour MP and Celebrity Big Brother contestant, who gained 12,335 votes, a majority of 5,697, on a turnout of 39.7%, dedicated his victory to Gaza and claimed the Labour leader had “sold his soul to the Israel lobby”.

Read more:
Starmer should be very, very, worried after Galloway win
Who is George Galloway, the new MP for Rochdale?

Pressed over whether he accepted it was Labour’s fault that Mr Galloway was back in the Commons, Sir Keir said: “Galloway only won because Labour didn’t stand a candidate.

“I regret that we had to withdraw our candidate, I apologise to voters in Rochdale, but I took that decision – it was the right decision – and when I say I’ve changed the Labour Party, I mean it.

“Obviously, we will put a first class candidate, a unifier before the voters in Rochdale at the general election.”

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Reform UK overtakes Conservative membership – Nigel Farage calls it ‘historic’, Kemi Badenoch says numbers are ‘fake’

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Reform UK overtakes Conservative membership - Nigel Farage calls it 'historic', Kemi Badenoch says numbers are 'fake'

Reform UK now has more members than the Conservative Party and is “the real opposition” according to Nigel Farage, while Kemi Badenoch has called his numbers “fake”.

According to a digital counter on the party’s website, Reform UK had gone past 131,690 members – the amount the Conservative Party declared before its leadership election in the autumn – just before midday on Boxing Day.

Mr Farage, party leader and MP for Clacton-on-Sea, hailed the “historic moment” and said on X: “The youngest political party in British politics has just overtaken the oldest political party in the world. Reform UK are now the real opposition.”

But Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch accused the party of issuing misleading figures: “Manipulating your own supporters at Xmas eh, Nigel?. It’s not real. It’s a fake… [the website has been] coded to tick up automatically.”

Posting on X, she added that the Tories had “gained thousands of new members since the leadership election”.

Reform UK also shared a video of the membership tracker being projected on to the Conservative Party headquarters in London overnight.

Zia Yusuf, party chairman, also said “history has been made today” and that the Tories’ “centuries-long stranglehold on the centre-right of British politics” has “finally been broken”.

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Mr Farage hit back at Ms Badenoch, who strongly contested Reform UK’s figures. He claimed to have proof and posted a screenshot of an online register reportedly showing ‘active memberships’.

“We understand you are bitter, upset and angry that we are now the second biggest party in British politics, and that the Conservative brand is dying under your leadership. However, this not an excuse to accuse us of committing fraud,” he wrote on X.

Mr Yusuf added to the debate by appearing to goad Ms Badenoch about an audit: “We will gladly invite a Big 4 audit firm to verify our membership numbers on the basis that you do the same.”

Read more on Reform:
Is Reform UK winning the ‘bro vote’?
Farage meets Musk amid possible £78m donation

Nigel Farage attends the Old Surrey, Burstow and West Kent Hunt in Chiddingstone.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Nigel Farage said Reform UK is ‘now the real opposition’ after the ‘historic moment’. Pic: Reuters

The Conservative party membership figure – shared after Kemi Badenoch was announced as the new leader on 2 November – was the lowest on record and a drop from the 2022 leadership contest, when there were around 172,000 members.

In response, a Conservative Party spokesman said: “Reform has delivered a Labour Government that has cruelly cut winter fuel payments for 10 million pensioners, put the future of family farming and food security at risk, and launched a devastating raid on jobs which will leave working people paying the price.

“A vote for Reform this coming May is a vote for a Labour council – only the Conservatives can stop this.”

According to research from the House of Commons Library, there is no uniformly recognised definition of party membership and no established method or body to monitor the number of members each political group has.

Reform UK was also originally set up as a limited company, but Mr Farage said he would change the party’s structure to be member-owned in September.

Read more from Sky News:
Funeral for five journalists killed in Israeli airstrike
‘Russian air defence system’ downed plane – Reuters

It comes after Mr Farage offered to help Lord Mandelson, the new ambassador to the US, negotiate with president-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administration.

A long-time associate of Mr Trump, he has been seen at several Republican events during and after the presidential election.

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Trump-linked Strive files for ‘Bitcoin Bond’ ETF

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Trump-linked Strive files for ‘Bitcoin Bond’ ETF

The fund aims to offer exposure to MicroStrategy’s convertible bonds, among others.

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Betting markets predict bullish 2025 for crypto

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Betting markets predict bullish 2025 for crypto

Prediction markets Kalshi and Polymarket anticipate a slew of wins for crypto in 2025.

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