General election results: Labour retains control of Stockport constituency

By Alasdair Perry

The Labour party has retained control of the Stockport constituency, with Navendu Mishra re-elected as MP (Image - Alasdair Perry)
The Labour party has retained control of the Stockport constituency, with Navendu Mishra re-elected as MP (Image - Alasdair Perry)

The Labour party has retained control of the Stockport constituency in the 2024 UK general election.

Navendu Mishra has been re-elected as MP, with 21,787 votes.

This seat has returned a Labour MP in every election since 1992.

Ann Coffey was first elected in 1992, and was re-elected in every general election until 2019, when she resigned from the party.

Mr Mishra was first elected in 2019 - this 2024 win is therefore his second.

The full results are as follows, with the winner highlighted in bold:

Stockport  

  • Oliver Johnstone – Conservative (4,967)
  • Ayesha Khan – Workers Party (1,630)
  • Wendy Meikle – Liberal Democrats (3,724)
  • Helena Mellish – Green (4,865)
  • Navendu Mishra – Labour (21,787)
  • Lynn Schofield – Reform UK (6,517)
  • Ashley Walker – Stockport Fights Austerity No To Cuts (193)

Results came in around 3.30am.

Mr Mishra said: "I want to thank the voters of Stockport constituency for re-electing me for a second term with a large majority. I'm very grateful to them. [...] Regardless of how people voted, [...] I represent everyone in the constituency.

He also said: "Housing is the single-most issue for me in Stockport for my constituents."

The reaction (By Declan Carey, Local Democracy Reporting Service)

After his victory, Mr Mishra told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that housing is the 'single biggest issue' facing residents in Stockport. He said: "In the local authority area we have over seven thousand families on the social housing waiting list.

"Housing is a fundamental human right, everybody deserves a safe, clean and decent home. I want to make sure that everyone regardless of their income bracket has that in Stockport and in England and the UK – Labour has made a commitment in the manifesto to deliver on housing.

"We have a minority Lib Dem administration on the council in Stockport, hopefully we can work towards a Labour majority in the council chamber soon, but I'll continue to work with everyone.

"The waiting list is a big issue, but part of that is also Stepping Hill hospital. We need real investment in Stepping Hill, either at the same site or at a different site, we've got almost eight million people on national waiting lists for NHS so that needs to be addressed, it's a fundamental human right so that is a massive issue.

"I want to see the expansion of better public transport, we've got the bus franchising coming in January but Stockport station needs real investment, Reddish South has issues with services, I want disabled access at all train stations in the UK starting with the Stockport constituency."

Stockport Labour MP Navendu Mishra (Image - Declan Carey LDRS)

Asked whether Labour would provide funding for facilities like Stepping Hill, Mr Mishra added: "Absolutely, we've seen 14 years of decline, 14 years of cuts for public services, we've got issues with the library system, our leisure centres, all sorts of issues with the public realm.

"Labour will offer economic growth which will boost tax revenue and bring real investment. I also want to see well-paid, skilled, unionised jobs come to Stockport so we can have people out of poverty wages and into skilled jobs and they can bring up their family with pride."

On railways, the re-elected Stockport MP said: "Labour has made a commitment in the manifesto for GB Rail, so when these [existing] train contracts they will come under the umbrella of GB Rail and that will mean similar to what the bus franchising model will be.

"The people will decide what services should be run, the cost will be regulated, automatic delay repay, all of that stuff. It will be a massive boost to the people of Stockport and Britain."

Mr Mishra's win will see his mixed relationship with the Lib Dem-run Stockport council continue, after he clashed with town hall leader Mark Hunter over issues such as the number of new houses being built.

Mr Hunter said the Lib Dems are addressing the housing problems in Stockport. He added: "We're delivering on housing, that's what we keep saying to Labour when they keep going on about the need for new houses – we agree and we're doing something about it.

"But they have to be the right homes in the right places, that's why we're putting 4,000 new homes in Stockport town centre, and that's not the end of it, we've got plans for more and not just in the town centre, in our district centres as well.

"We take very seriously the commitment to provide new housing, lots of people in Stockport are looking for action on that but we are delivering, you can see it happening across the A6."

Mr Hunter added that the general election had been a 'fabulous night' for the Lib Dems in Stockport and across the country.

~

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