In only the second by-election since 2024’s General Election, the election held on the 26th February is the second time Labour have fallen behind to a party with only a few sitting MPs. This, alongside the increase in media attention on the Green Party and Reform UK, shows that this country is tired of the same old Labour-Conservative narrative that has dominated our country for over a century.
Labour falling to third in the election proves that voters feel as though there are better options on the left, with the Green Party picking up disillusioned Labour voters and the younger generation who are eager to try and fix what they see as a broken system.
With recent polls suggesting a complete split in the vote, and new parties emerging as favourites in areas previously considered safe and sound for the ‘big two’ parties, there is a rapidly changing political scene that can feel hard to keep up with. Suddenly the choice is seemingly not just Labour or Conservative, but wide and varied with lots of parties standing for very specific things in an attempt to represent those who feel unrepresented in the current political narrative. Parties previously on the fringes are no longer a ‘wasted vote’, they are real pathways that people are looking to explore in an attempt to feel truly represented amongst the seemingly untouchable MPs of Westminster.
So does the significant by-election win for the Greens signal something completely unseen before?
Divisions in Westminster are growing, with a clear majority in Parliament appears increasingly unlikely, as the vote seems to split across the country. Representation is important for everybody, and it seems like the political system is finally beginning to shift to create spaces where people from across the broad spectrum of politics can feel as though they have a say.
This means the entire system has to change. There is a focus only on the current Government and second largest party as the Opposition, but with the Tories struggling in the polls, and with opposition voices increasingly represented by parties such as the Lib Dems, the Greens and even Reform, why do they not get the same airtime in Parliament as Kemi Badenoch?
As the country’s politics continues to fragment through by-elections and the upcoming local elections in May, it will become a challenge for Westminster as the political landscape begins to change rapidly. Do they keep the two-party system and hold onto hope that this moment of disillusionment with Labour and the Conservatives is but a blip in history? This seems unlikely.
Society is changing, and politics needs to change along with it.