The British political right is deeply fractured following a controversial announcement by Rupert Lowe. Loweās new political party, Restore Britain, will field a candidate in the crucial Makerfield by-election. This decision has sparked immense backlash from supporters of Reform UK, who argue that Lowe is splitting the right-wing vote, potentially handing the seatāand ultimately the keys to 10 Downing Streetāto Labourās Andy Burnham.
THE MAKERFIELD BATTLEGROUNDĀ The Makerfield constituency has become ground zero for the future of British politics. The seat was intentionally vacated by a Labour MP to clear a path for Andy Burnham, the current Mayor of Greater Manchester, to return to Westminster. Burnham is widely considered the favorite to launch a leadership challenge against a weakened Prime Minister Keir Starmer and subsequently become Prime Minister.
To stop Burnhamās ascent, Nigel Farageās Reform UK has declared it will āthrow everythingā at the Makerfield by-election. Reform performed strongly in the 2024 general election and the recent local elections in Greater Manchester, making the race incredibly tightĀ .
LOWEāS SHOCK ANNOUNCEMENT AND BACKLASHĀ However, the landscape was upended when Rupert Lowe announced that Restore Britain would also contest the seat.Ā āRestore Britain will be standing a candidate in the Makerfield by-election. There is an overwhelming demand from our local members to do so,āĀ Lowe stated, predicting his party aims toĀ āwin thousands and thousands of votes.āĀ .
This announcement triggered immediate fury from right-wing voters and Reform UK loyalists. Critics accuse Lowe of actively sabotaging the rightās chances of defeating Labour. The fear is that in an incredibly tight race, Restore Britain will siphon off 4-6% of the vote from Reform UK, directly enabling Andy Burnham to win the seatĀ . Detractors warn that a Burnham victory would result in a hard-left Labour government, and are preemptively blaming Lowe, derisively dubbing the potential policy outcomes as the āRupert waveāĀ .
RUPERT LOWE FIRES BACKĀ Facing intense pressure to step aside, Rupert Lowe issued a defiant rebuttal, dismissing the āsplit the voteā argument as lazy and patronizing.
āVoters are not the property of Farage or Reform. Votes are earned, not owned,āĀ Lowe fired back.Ā āIf people are leaving Reform and backing Restore Britain instead, that is not because we stole them. Itās because Reform failed to keep them.āĀ .
Lowe accused the Reform party of possessing a ādeeply arrogant mindset,ā arguing that it is insulting to expect millions of patriots to blindly follow one party regardless of performance. He reminded critics that the Conservative Party once accused Reform UK of splitting the vote, an accusation Reform rightfully ignoredĀ .
Lowe pointed to the recent election in Great Yarmouth as proof of concept, boasting:Ā āGreat Yarmouth proved the model. We battered Reform.āĀ He concluded by challenging Farageās party directly:Ā āIf Reform want those voters back, they are welcome to persuade them. In the meantime, we are going to continue making our positive case.āĀ .
A DIVIDED MOVEMENTĀ The political commentator for theĀ British StandĀ channel summarized the dilemma: while Restore Britain has a democratic right to field candidates, the strategic reality is that doing so in Makerfield severely endangers the overarching right-wing goal of stopping Andy BurnhamĀ . As the Makerfield by-election approaches, the infighting between Restore Britain and Reform UK threatens to neutralize the populist momentum recently seen on the streets of London, setting the stage for a dramatic electoral showdown.


