Anonymous ID: cce354 Feb. 25, 2026, 11:29 p.m. No.24309735   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9738 >>9740 >>9742 >>0339 >>0497 >>0629 >>0731

>>24309721

tyb

Its election day in the u.k

anon will post some info into who is running. what the demographics are in the area and some background into tthe runners and liars.

btw, thanks to the rules.

no one is allowed to talk about the election today due to rules and restrictions on campaigning, although there will be huge amounts of cheating, forced voting, duplicates and foreigners voting who do not even live there.

prediction. looks like the Greens will win it.

the tactic is do not vote and demonize reform u.k at all costs.

o7

Anonymous ID: cce354 Feb. 25, 2026, 11:38 p.m. No.24309740   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9742

>>24309735

WHAT A.I LEO FROM BRAVE STATES

Note: Gorton and Denton were separate areas, they merged the two areas. so what you have is Gorton is mainly immigrants and those who follow the left, Denton is elderly and white citizens who are a middle working class.

P.s

GO AND VOTE OR YOU GET WHAT YOU ARE GIVEN

pps link below to the screenshots.

https://whocanivotefor.co.uk/elections/parl.gorton-and-denton.by.2026-02-26/gorton-and-denton/

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Gorton and Denton is a parliamentary constituency in Greater Manchester, created for the 2024 general election following the 2023 boundary review. It includes the Manchester neighborhoods of Gorton, Levenshulme, Burnage, and Longsight, along with the town of Denton in Tameside. The seat was last held by Andrew Gwynne (Labour Co-op), who resigned on 22 January 2026 due to ill health, triggering a by-election on 26 February 2026.

 

Demographics

Population: 78,125 registered electors (2024 data).

Ethnicity: 57% White, 27% Asian (mainly Pakistani), 9% Black.

Age: Average age of 46.5 years.

Education: 43% have a degree or higher qualification.

Employment: 53% are employed; 30% in routine or semi-routine jobs.

Income & Housing: Median household income £33,914; average house price £179,748 (below national average).

Deprivation: 61% of households are in deprived areas (above national average).

Political Leanings: 50% voted Leave in the 2016 EU referendum.

2024 General Election Results

Labour (Andrew Gwynne): 18,555 votes (50.8%)

Reform UK (Lee Moffitt): 5,142 votes (14.1%)

Green Party (Amanda Gardner): 4,810 votes (13.2%)

Workers Party of Britain (Amir Burney): 3,766 votes (10.3%)

Conservative (Ruth Welsh): 2,888 votes (7.9%)

Liberal Democrats (John Reid): 1,399 votes (3.8%)

2026 By-Election Candidates

The race is a three-way contest with Reform UK, Labour, and the Green Party neck-and-neck in recent polling. Key candidates include:

 

Labour: Angeliki Stogia – former Manchester City Council candidate.

Green Party: Hannah Spencer – campaigner and local activist.

Reform UK: Matt Goodwin – former MP for Bury North, known for his controversial rhetoric.

Other candidates include:

 

Advance UK: Nick Buckley

Conservative: Charlotte Cadden

Libertarian Party UK: Dan Clarke

SDP: Sebastian Moore

Rejoin EU: Joseph O'Meachair

Liberal Democrats: Jackie Pearcey

Communist League: Hugo Wils

Monster Raving Loony Party: Sir Oink A-Lot

Polling and Outlook

Recent polls (Opinium, Omnisis) show a tight three-way race:

 

Greens: 28% (Opinium), 22% (Omnisis)

Labour: 28% (Opinium), 18% (Omnisis)

Reform UK: 27% (Opinium), 20% (Omnisis)

Experts like Prof. Robert Ford of the University of Manchester warn that a split in the left-wing vote could hand victory to Reform UK, despite Labour’s historical dominance. The outcome is seen as a crucial test for Keir Starmer’s leadership and the future of Labour’s hold on northern urban seats.

 

Turnout is expected to be a key factor—higher turnout could benefit Reform or the Greens, who have built grassroots momentum.