Summary

  1. Labour 'quietly confident' of Makerfield result, says Haighpublished at 01:40 BST

    Louise Haigh speaks to the BBC from the Makerfield byelection count

    Senior Labour MP Louise Haigh says that she is "quietly confident" that Labour has won the Makerfield by-election.

    Speaking from the count, she tells the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg that she does not want to pre-empt the result but she is "optimistic and confident about the result here".

    Haigh says she expects the result will be clear in around an hour.

  2. Stephen Flynn says some will need to reflect on Aberdeen result 'quite heavily'published at 01:28 BST

    Stephen FlynnImage source, PA Media

    The SNP's Stephen Flynn has said that it is "a tough night in Aberdeen that some will need to reflect on, quite heavily".

    In a post on X he sends his commiserations to his party's candidate Richard Thomson and congratulates Douglas Lumsden, the Conservative candidate.

    "We lost Aberdeen South to the Tories in 2017, and we won it back two years later," he says.

    "I’ve no doubt that we can do so again. If we get things right."

    Flynn was the MP for Aberdeen South before winning a seat in the Scottish Parliament this year.

  3. Labour confidence growing after high turnoutpublished at 01:26 BST

    Harry Farley
    Political correspondent at the Makerfield count

    Labour sources believe the high turnout in the Makerfield by-election is good for them.

    They say it is roughly what they were expecting, meaning they believe they roughly know how many votes they expect to get.

    One source close to Andy Burnham was cautiously optimistic at the start of the night. I’ve just spoken to them again and they say are even more confident now.

    Remember it’s still early days in the counting process and none of this is confirmed. But certainly people in Labour circles here seem chipper.

    An election worker handles ballots for counting in the Makerfield by-election.Image source, Reuters
  4. Restore Britain's leader 'confident' party will get more than 2% of votepublished at 01:19 BST

    Rupert Lowe chatting to journalists in WiganImage source, EPA/Shutterstock

    Restore Britain's leader Rupert Lowe says his party is "bringing people back to vote who haven't voted for a long time".

    Lowe, who was elected as a Reform MP in 2024 before launching Restore, says he is "encouraged" by the support his party has.

    Speaking from the count in Wigan, he tells the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg he's confident they'll get "much higher" than a suggestion of 2%.

    "I think there's an enthusiasm for what we're doing," the Great Yarmouth MP says, adding that the high turnout of 58.75% "should be good" for the party.

    Responding to Lowe, Reform's Danny Kruger says he gets the impression Restore's appeal is "largely online" though adds "it may be they do better than expected".

    But the PA news agency is reporting that Restore Britain has not got as big a share of the vote as some had anticipated, according to a "Labour source".

  5. SNP lose Aberdeen South - sourcepublished at 01:16 BST
    Breaking

    James Cook
    Scotland editor at the Aberdeen South count

    Senior SNP source — “we have lost” Aberdeen South.

  6. SNP accept defeat in Aberdeen South - reportspublished at 01:14 BST

    The SNP have accepted defeat in the Aberdeen South by-election, the PA news agency reports, with a senior source saying it is the "Tories’ night", but pledging to "win it back in 2029".

    Our reporter at the count, Andrew Kerr, earlier said the Conservatives were "extremely positive".

  7. Labour and Reform dissect Makerfield turnoutpublished at 01:02 BST

    Baroness Smith of Labour tells the BBC she's encouraged by the turnout following the official confirmation of 58.75% eligible voters casting their ballot.

    "If we've managed to get that many Labour voters to go out and it's made the difference, that could be good news for us," she says.

    But Reform's Danny Kruger refers to earlier remarks by Sir John Curtice, who says high turnouts occur in by-elections when there is an insurgent party, "and that's what's happening now".

    "Whatever does happen though it seems obvious we've done extremely well," he says.

    Voted being counted in Wigan for the Makerfield by-electionImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Voted being counted in Wigan for the Makerfield by-election

  8. So have the Tories won Aberdeen South?published at 00:56 BST 19 June

    Andrew Kerr
    BBC Scotland political correspondent at the Aberdeen South count

    Shadow Scottish Secretary Andrew Bowie

    The shadow Scottish Secretary Andrew Bowie was live on our TV programme when the Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake received a message saying his party had won the Aberdeen South seat.

    Bowie hadn't heard anything as definitive - and quickly pulled out his earpiece at the end of the interview just to check what colleagues were saying.

    The Conservatives are extremely positive and are thinking it certainly looks like they've won - smiles all round for them.

    Meanwhile, the SNP are looking very glum in the corner of the count hall.

  9. Official turnout was 58.75% in Makerfieldpublished at 00:48 BST 19 June

    The official turnout for the Makerfield by-election was 58.75%, with 45,510 votes being cast.

    Bar chart showing the turnout in Makerfield is 58.8%, higher than the general election when it was 52.5%
  10. Low turnout in Arbroath and Broughty Ferrypublished at 00:47 BST 19 June

    Louise Cowie
    BBC Scotland reporter at the count in Arbroath

    In Arbroath and Broughty Ferry, the turnout has been confirmed as 31.36% - that is 23,827 voters.

    Map of Abroath constituency
  11. It has been a long time since the Tories won a Westminster by-election in Scotlandpublished at 00:46 BST 19 June

    James Cook
    Scotland editor, at the count in Aberdeen

    The last time the Conservatives gained a Westminster seat in a Scottish by-election was 1967 – the year the Beatles released Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

    It looks like that long streak is about to end.

    Both sides seem pretty certain that the Tories have won this seat. There are lots of glum Scottish National Party faces at the Aberdeen South count and plenty of Conservative smiles.

    The SNP candidate, Richard Thomson, looks particularly disconsolate.

    If victory for the Conservative candidate, Douglas Lumsden, is confirmed, it will be a boost for the party’s UK leader, Kemi Badenoch who visited Aberdeen South three times, campaigning hard on a promise to support the flagging oil and gas industry, which is based here.

  12. Monster Raving Loony Party's Howling Laud Hope arrives at Makerfield countpublished at 00:34 BST 19 June

    Harry Farley
    Political correspondent, reporting from the Makerfield count

    Monster Raving Loony Party candidate Howling Laud Hope (C) and supporters attend the vote count for the Makerfield by-election in Wigan, Britain, 18 June 2026.Image source, EPA

    A great tradition in British elections has happened - the arrival of the Monster Raving Loony Party.

    To great cheers in this auditorium, Howling Laud Hope - complete with enormous yellow rosette and cowboy-style hat - poses for the cameras and begins strolling around the room.

  13. SNP downbeat in Aberdeen Southpublished at 00:33 BST 19 June

    Andrew Kerr
    BBC Scotland political correspondent, reporting from Aberdeen South

    SNP candidate Richard Gordon Thomson arrives at the count to a downbeat welcomeImage source, PA
    Image caption,

    SNP candidate Richard Gordon Thomson arrives at the count to a downbeat welcome

    The SNP candidate Richard Thomson has arrived at the Aberdeen South count and was greeted by downbeat activists.

    He was hugged by supporters and party workers but there was no cheering.

    The SNP are said to be very pessimistic so far, with sampling indicating the Conservatives are in the lead.

    The Tories, meanwhile, are optimistic - with their candidate Douglas Lumsden looking focused as he strides around the hall.

    The Greens are standing a candidate here - and some activists made an interesting comparison.

    They say the Conservatives have played this like a traditional Liberal Democrat election - "only we can beat x here".

    Their sampling indicated the Conservatives "have blown the SNP out the water" in the city's suburbs - with the Reform UK and Labour vote collapsing to ensure pro-union voters coalesce around the Conservatives.

    Scottish Conservative Party candidate Douglas Lumsden (centre) in good spirits as votes are counted for the Aberdeen South by-election at P&J Live in AberdeenImage source, PA
    Image caption,

    Scottish Conservative Party candidate Douglas Lumsden (centre) in good spirits as votes are counted for the Aberdeen South by-election at P&J Live in Aberdeen

  14. Too early to call, says Labour's Lisa Nandypublished at 00:21 BST 19 June

    Lisa Nandy speaks to the BBC from the Makerfield by-election count

    Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy says Labour always knew it would be a tough fight in Makerfield, but it is too early to say what the result is.

    But she adds that there is "no question" that Andy Burnham has been pulling back votes from Reform UK.

    Speaking from the count, Nandy adds there is "no panic here", and Labour is not being complacent.

    Nandy explains that she expects Keir Starmer to speak to Burnham if he wins the by-election.

  15. High by-election turnout would be unusual - Curticepublished at 00:17 BST 19 June

    BBC's election guru Sir John Curtice

    The BBC's election guru John Curtice says there's talk of voter turnout in Makerfield being between 60 and 65% - compared to the 52.5% turnout for the 2024 general election.

    "The last time the turnout was higher in a by-election than in the preceding general election you have to go back to 1982 and the by-election Glasgow Hillhead," Curtice tells Laura Kuenssberg on our by-election special.

    "It's well over 40 years since we've had an increase in turnout in a by-election."

    He says that if the turnout was at the upper end of the estimate - "ie close to 65%" - that would be the biggest rise in turnout, compared to the preceding general election, since the 1958 Torrington by-election in Devon.

  16. Snacks - an election night essential...published at 00:14 BST 19 June

    It seems that it's not just the BBC's live team relying on sugar as we await the results overnight - for one member of the Labour Party voting team in Wigan, a chocolate bar appears to be doing the trick...

    As people count votes, a man in a white shirt wearing a lanyard which says "election member" is mid-eating a chocolate bar as he checks his phoneImage source, Getty Images
  17. Labour's Jess Phillips says 'chaos' is possible after Makerfield by-electionpublished at 23:57 BST 18 June

    Jess Phillips speaking on BBC NewsnightImage source, BBC Newsnight

    Labour MP Jess Phillips - who recently resigned as safeguarding minister - says she'd like to see Keir Starmer recognise the risk of continuing as a "very unpopular prime minister".

    "What I would like to see, from a very dignified man, the prime minister, is a recognition of that himself - the risk to the country of taking an unpopular leader into the next general election," she tells Laura Kuenssberg on our by-election special (which you can watch at the top of the page).

    "Personally, I would really like to see him be the person who comes to that conclusion. Because I think he deserves that," Phillips adds.

    Responding to Phillips, Labour peer Angela Smith says Starmer is "not getting the recognition he deserves as Labour leader" and that he is driven by making a difference to people's lives.

    Phillips later says while she hopes Starmer is given the opportunity for a "dignified" conclusion, it's possible we see "chaos ensuing, the government collapsing, [and] ministers walking out".

  18. Conservatives sound hopeful in Aberdeen Southpublished at 23:50 BST 18 June

    James Cook
    Scotland editor, at the count in Aberdeen

    Counting is under way in two by-elections on the east coast of Scotland after the sitting MPs were elected to the Scottish Parliament.

    At the 2024 general election, the SNP won Aberdeen South, and Arbroath and Broughty Ferry, with Labour in second place.

    Since then the prime minister's popularity has slumped; the SNP has been dogged by questions about its former chief executive Peter Murrell embezzling more than £400,000 from the party; and Reform UK has become a serious player in Scottish politics.

    But here in Aberdeen, it's the Conservatives who sound hopeful of victory.

    The UK party leader, Kemi Badenoch, made three campaigning trips to Aberdeen South, promising to revive the UK's declining oil and gas industry, which is based here.

    Tonight, one senior Conservative told me they were "cautiously optimistic" - while an SNP source said there had clearly been a "strong tactical Tory vote."

    Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch campaigns for Aberdeen South candidate Douglas Lumsden during a visit to Cove Rangers FC in Aberdeen this weekImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch campaigns for Aberdeen South candidate Douglas Lumsden during a visit to Cove Rangers FC in Aberdeen this week

  19. Makerfield 'never going to be our seat', Tory chair admitspublished at 23:42 BST 18 June

    Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake tells the BBC his money's on Andy Burnham to win.

    "Makerfield was never going to be our seat," he says, adding the Tories ran a good campaign with former Wigan Mayor Michael Winstanley.

    "I think Andy Burnham will win," he says - adding the Tories are focusing on the result in Aberdeen South, where Conservative Party MSP Douglas Lumsden is running.

    Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake.
  20. Scenes from the Scottish by-election countspublished at 23:36 BST 18 June

    Votes are counted for the Arbroath and Broughty Ferry by-election at the Saltire Sports Centre in Arbroath.Image source, PA
    Image caption,

    Votes are counted for the Arbroath and Broughty Ferry by-election at the Saltire Sports Centre in Arbroath

    The counting of votes is well under way in Arbroath and Broughty Ferry and Aberdeen South.

    Our reporter in Arbroath, Louise Cowie, says, anecdotally, the turnout looks low.

    Votes are counted for the Aberdeen South by-election at P&J Live in Aberdeen.
    Image caption,

    Counters for the Aberdeen South by-election at P&J Live in Aberdeen