Recap: Labour, Conservatives, Lib Dems and Restore Britain say they will not standpublished at 19:01 BST
Image source, PA MediaSince Nigel Farage announced this afternoon that he will trigger a by-election and stand again in his Clacton seat, a number of parties have come out and said they will not stand a candidate in such circumstances.
Here's what we've heard:
- A Labour spokesperson says the party will not stand a candidate, calling the by-election a "circus"
- Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch says the Conservatives will not stand a candidate in Farage's "fake by-election"
- Lib Dem leader Ed Davey has called for all parties to "stand aside and refuse to give oxygen to Farage's vanity project"
- Restore Britain's Rupert Lowe says his party will not participate in "a Reform-sponsored media circus"
- The Green Party has not yet confirmed whether it will put forward a candidate. A spokesman says it was a decision for local members in Clacton but adds: "We are a political party - we contest elections"
Reform UK's Robert Jenrick tells the BBC that if other parties are "too chicken to stand, that says more about them than us".
Meanwhile, our chief political correspondent Henry Zeffman writes that there is a precedent for an MP prompting a by-election in their seat which they then contest but others boycott.
In 2008, the Haltemprice and Howden by-election - which Conservative David Davis forced in order to spark a debate about civil liberties - went ignored by Labour and the Liberal Democrats.













