Labour has overturned the largest ever Conservative majority to win the Selby and Ainsty by-election.
In a historic night, Keir Mather defeated Conservative Claire Holmes to become the youngest MP in parliament.
Mr Mather also becomes the first ever Labour MP to be elected in a constituency that includes part of the Harrogate district.
The result was announced shortly after 4am this morning. The turnout was 45%.
Mr Mather received 16,456 votes while Ms Holmes polled 12,295 votes. Green Party candidate Arnold Warneken was third, ahead of Liberal Democrat Matt Walker.
Mr Mather said:
“I want to begin my time as your MP by being very clear: I understand the enormity of what has just happened, I know what an honour this is, and I am humbled by this opportunity to serve.
“We have re-written the rules on where Labour can win.”
The by-election was caused by the resignation of Nigel Adams.
The full results are:
- Andrew Gray, Independent: 99 votes
- Claire Holmes, Conservative Party: 12,295 votes
- Mike Jordan, Yorkshire Party: 1,503 votes
- Dave Kent, Reform UK: 1,332 votes
- Keir Mather, Labour Party: 16,456 votes
- Nick Palmer, Independent: 342 votes
- Guy Phoenix, Heritage Party: 162 votes
- Sir Archibald Stanton, Official Monster Raving Loony Party: 172 votes
- Matthew Walker, Liberal Democrats: 1,188 votes
- Arnold Warneken, Green Party: 1,838 votes
- John William Waterston, Social Democratic Party: 314 votes
- Luke Wellock, Climate Party: 39 votes
- Tyler Callum Wilson-Kerr, Independent: 67 votes
Read more:
- By-election could give Harrogate district its first ever Labour MP
- Tory accuses Lib Dems of being ‘anti-cycling’ in Harrogate Station Gateway row
Harrogate heavyweights out in force at Selby by-election
The by-election may have been in Selby and Ainsty, but the battleground at the count extended to Harrogate and Knaresborough.
Several local political heavyweights were at Selby Leisure Centre in the early hours of this morning, whispering to colleagues in huddles while circling their political enemies.
With Labour expected to win, the political chat was as much about the race to become the first mayor of York and North Yorkshire next year and the Conservatives’ efforts to maintain control of North Yorkshire Council.
Shortly before 1am BBC News interviewed Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, who said Rishi Sunak’s five pledges had chimed with people in his constituency despite these being tough times.
Asked whether the Tories could hold the seat won by Nigel Adams with a 20,000 majority in 2019, he said he travelled hopefully, deftly avoiding a prediction.

The count in full swing at Selby Leisure Centre.
Shortly afterwards Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat who will try to stop Mr Jones making it five in a row at the next general election made an appearance on Sky News.
Kirk Hammerton’s Nick Palmer, one of three Independent candidates standing yesterday, cursed the ‘London media’ for failing to reply to any of their requests for coverage. He told the Stray Ferret:
“They give us wall to wall coverage of Nigel Farage and Huw Edwards and nobody up here gives a damn about that.”
Fellow independent Andrew Gray, from Harrogate, was too unwell to attend. Pateley Bridge man Keith Tordoff, who is standing as an independent at next year’s mayoral election, represented him.

Acting returning officer Richard Flinton announces the turnout was 45%.
The Official Monster Raving Loony party contingent included a dummy but even their humour was beginning to wear thin as the night wore on.
Finally, at just after 4am, Clare Granger, the Birstwith-based North Yorkshire high sheriff rose to announce the result. Neither Labour candidate Keir Mather nor Conservative hopeful Claire Holmes made an appearance until just before that moment.

Clare Granger
Ms Granger had half-joked earlier that she couldn’t fluff her lines because any error announcing the results could only be remedied through the courts.
The unexpected Tory triumph in Uxbridge and South Ruislip led to speculation that the Tories could pull off a second win. But in the end Mr Mather, 25, won comfortably with 16,456 votes compared with Ms Holmes’ 12,295.
Green candidate Arnold Warneken, looking dapper with flowers grown in Little Ouseburn on his jacket, was third, overcoming Lib Dem Matt Walker.
By the time it was all over, the sun was coming up but the shadows had lengthened over the Conservatives in the run-up to the next general election.

Matt Walker
A decision on controversial plans for houses near a busy road in south Harrogate has been delayed.
North Yorkshire Council had set a target date of yesterday for determining the plans for 17 homes in the Crimple Valley.
However, it has now confirmed the decision will not be made this week.
The council’s assistant director for planning, Trevor Watson, said:
“Our consideration of this application remains ongoing and will not be resolved in time to determine it this week.
“We are nevertheless committed to issuing a decision on the application as soon as is practicable and have informed the applicant of this.”
The plans for seven affordable homes and 10 self-build plots have attracted more than 350 objections from residents.
They focused on the location of the site in the Crimple Valley special landscape area, as well as access to the new homes from the A61 at the bottom of Almsford Bank.
The council’s highways department has also raised concerns about the applicant’s proposal to reduce the speed limit to 40mph between Pannal and Harrogate.
A previous application for 35 homes on the land was rejected by Harrogate Borough Council, whose local plan guiding development in the area did not include the site.
Plans submitted in 2019 for 35 homes were withdrawn, as was a scheme for 65 houses put forward in 2018.
Read more:
- Hundreds object to Crimple Valley housing plans as decision looms
- Harrogate dog-walkers shocked by new barbed-wire fencing at showground
Business Breakfast: Harrogate law firm appoints senior associate
There’s not long to go until the Stray Ferret Business Club’s breakfast event on Thursday, 27 July at Banyan in Harrogate between 8-10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Get your tickets now by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate law firm has appointed a commercial property specialist to its team.
Claire Baker-Kemp has joined McCormicks, which is based on East Parade, as a senior associate.
Since qualifying as a solicitor, Ms Baker-Kemp has acted for the NHS, a major supermarket chain, the Department for Transport, an international shopping centre developer, financial institutions and local authorities.
She joined McCormicks from an investment company and has experienced in dealing with acquisition and disposal of freehold and commercial leasehold properties, as well as transactional landlord and tenant work.
Peter McCormick, senior partner at McCormicks, said:
“Commercial property has been a busy aspect of our legal work for many years and Claire’s background and experience will undoubtedly prove an asset.”
Harrogate firm sponsors Hull City Ladies FC
A Harrogate law firm has agreed a sponsorship deal with Hull City Ladies FC.
The agreement will see Truth Legal sponsor the club’s away shirt for the forthcoming 2023/24 season.
The firm, which is based on Victoria Avenue, said the move would help grow the women’s game in Yorkshire.
Georgina Parkin, managing director at Truth Legal, said:
“Through this partnership, we hope to not only contribute to the growth of women’s football in the region but also showcase our unwavering commitment to serving clients in Hull.”
Danny Johnson, Hull City Ladies FC managing director, said:
“I’m delighted that the club has formed an exciting partnership with Truth Legal and I’m pleased that Truth Legal will appear proudly on the front of our new away shirt 2023/25.”
Read more:
- Business Breakfast: Ripon motor group announces refurbishment and recruitment drive
- Business Breakfast: Harrogate care company launches new day centres
- Business Breakfast: Harrogate care company appoints new chief executive
MW Craven wins top crime novel award in Harrogate
MW Craven has been named as the winner of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year award in Harrogate tonight.
Carlisle-born Mr Craven joined the army at 16 and became a probation officer role before taking up writing.
He won the award for The Botanist, which is his latest thriller featuring the character Detective Sergeant Washington Poe.
He received a £3,000 prize, as well as an engraved beer cask handcrafted by one of Britain’s last coopers from Theakston Brewery in Masham.
More than 17,000 tickets have been sold for the four-day festival at the Old Swan in Harrogate, which began today.
Numerous best-selling authors and celebrities are in town for the event, which is run by Harrogate International Festivals.
A record 14,110 readers cast their votes between six shortlisted authors for crime novel of the year.
The shortlist included:
Elly Griffiths (The Locked Room)
Doug Johnstone (Black Hearts)
Fiona Cummins (Into the Dark)
Ruth Ware (The It Girl)
M.W. Craven (The Botanist)
Gillian McAllister (Wrong Place Wrong Time)
Read more:
- Thousands descend on Harrogate for crime writing festival
- Reduction in Harrogate fire engines to begin next year
The judges, including Simon Theakston, Steph McGovern, Matt Nixson from the Daily Express, journalist Joe Haddow, Lisa Howells and Gaby Lee from Waterstones, met yesterday to decide the winner, with the public vote counting as the seventh judge on the panel.
Ms Griffiths was highly commended for the penultimate mystery in her bestselling Dr Ruth Galloway series The Locked Room. She has now been nominated for the award six times, and this is her first highly commended.
Ann Cleeves honoured
Tonight’s ceremony also saw Ann Cleeves receive the Theakston Old Peculier Outstanding Contribution Award in recognition of her writing career.
Cleeves, the author of more than thirty-five critically acclaimed novels, is the creator of detectives Vera Stanhope, Jimmy Perez and Matthew Venn, who can be found on television in ITV’s Vera, BBC One’s Shetland and ITV’s The Long Call respectively.
Previous winners include Sir Ian Rankin, Lynda La Plante, James Patterson, John Grisham, Lee Child, Val McDermid, P.D. James and last year’s recipient Michael Connelly.
Ms Cleeves said:
“The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate has always been a very special festival for me because I was in at the beginning. I’m delighted to accept this award and to help the team celebrate 20 years of brilliant crime writing.”
Tory accuses Lib Dems of being ‘anti-cycling’ in Harrogate Station Gateway row
The Conservative councillor in charge of delivering Harrogate’s £11.2m Station Gateway scheme has criticised the Liberal Democrats following the party’s decision to oppose the scheme — just two months after giving it their backing.
In May, the controversial active travel scheme received cross-party support among local Tories and Lib Dems.
A majority of Lib Dems said it should go ahead, providing the council engages with residents, businesses and local councillors “in a meaningful way”.
But the party withdrew its support this month, claiming the council had reneged on its promise to work with locals.
At a full meeting of the council in Northallerton yesterday, Conservative executive councillor for transport and highways, Keane Duncan, delivered a scathing assessment of the Lib Dems’ changing stance on the gateway and also disputed that any promises agreed at the May meeting had been broken.
He said:
‘The position now from Lib Dems in Harrogate is one of being anti-investment, anti-walking, anti-cycling, anti-environment and most gravely and damaging of all, anti-goodwill — a factor and quality that I think is essential now more than ever in this council.
“This executive will continue our support for the gateway. There will be no faltering and no political games.”
Read more:
- Harrogate businessmen give council notice of Station Gateway legal action
- Council spends £2m on consultants for Harrogate’s Station Gateway
- Lib Dems withdraw support for Harrogate’s Station Gateway
Liberal Democrat councillor for High Harrogate and Kingsley, Chris Aldred, then accused Cllr Duncan of making the statement in order to further his own political ambitions.
On Friday, Cllr Duncan was selected by the Conservatives to be its candidate for the first mayor of York and North Yorkshire with elections next year.
Cllr Aldred later demanded the council investigates the “factual accuracy” of Cllr Duncan’s statement.
He said:
“I was accused of grandstanding and plating party politics. It wasn’t us who brought this up this afternoon.
“He could have written to me couldn’t he? He chose to mention this today. I’d like to congratulate him on the start of his campaign and I hope it goes a lot better than he’s started it today.”
Cllr Duncan’s comments also provoked veteran Harrogate councillor Pat Marsh, who was one of three Lib Dems to oppose the scheme in May.
Cllr Marsh said:
“To say the Lib Dems are anti-cycling, walking, whatever… that is totally, totally wrong. We were against a scheme that will not really deliver for any of that. We want the right scheme and not the wrong scheme.”
The West Yorkshire Combined Authority is current reviewing the business case for the project with a final decision on whether it goes ahead expected later this summer.
Council pledges ‘comprehensive support’ to former Ilke Homes staffNorth Yorkshire Council has pledged to offer “comprehensive support” to staff being made redundant at Ilke Homes.
The company, which is based off junction 47 of the A1(M), fell into administration on June 30.
Management consultants Alixpartners was appointed administrators after the company failed to find a buyer or further investment.
Since then, a total of 1,057 staff have been made redundant.
Cllr Derek Bastiman, executive councillor for open to business, said in a statement to a full council meeting this week that Ilke Homes staff would be offered “comprehensive support” after the administration decision.
Cllr Bastiman said the council would be working with York and North Yorkshire Local Enterprise Partnership and government to offer skills and financial advice to those effected by the collapse.
He said:
“We are working with the government and the York and North Yorkshire Local Enterprise Partnership to offer support to former Ilke Homes workers to help them secure employment or re-training.
“Alongside the LEP, we have taken a stall at a Department for Work and Pensions job fair later this month where will be providing information on skills bootcamps, self-employment and start-up opportunities, mental health support and financial advice.
“The job fair will also include a pre-information session for former ilke Homes employees aimed at helping them get back into the workplace or finding training opportunities if they wish to learn new skills.
“We will continue to offer support where we can through the DWP.”
Read more:
- Ilke Homes: More than 1,000 staff made redundant
- Knaresborough housebuilder up for sale as operations paused
- Ilke Homes collapse: 80 staff at Flaxby housebuilder start legal action
Ilke Homes’ factory at Flaxby was immediately closed following the company entering administration and all site activities ceased.
Administrators added that the firm had “faced the challenges of unprecedented inflation and a lack of land supply linked to planning processes”.
Officials at Ilke Homes said previously that it needed additional funding to fulfil a £1 billion order book and to protect jobs, adding that new investment was needed to build its pipeline of 4,200 new homes.
Reduction in Harrogate fire engines to begin next yearThe reduction in the number of fire engines based in Harrogate overnight is expected to take effect next year.
North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoë Metcalfe announced the move last year as part of her three-year fire service blueprint on how resources would be deployed in the county.
The reduction, which is part of a shift towards fire prevention, prompted widespread concerns about safety, particularly life-threatening delays at Starbeck level crossing if a second fire engine were required in an emergency.
Conservative Ms Metcalfe also agreed to reduce the number of overnight fire engines at Scarborough and to have on-call rather than full-time firefighters at Huntington, near York.

Harrogate fire station
Her draft fire and rescue annual report for 2022/23, which was discussed by a panel today, says North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service is consulting with trade unions around the implementation of the changes to Huntington station.
The report adds this is expected to be finalised by the end of the year then ‘Harrogate will form the second phase of implementation’.
Harrogate firefighters affected will be redeployed to other stations or roles, including fire prevention roles.
Read more:
- Confirmed: Harrogate to have just one night time fire engine
- Commissioner rules out Harrogate fire engine rethink despite faulty data
Harrogate and Scarborough will have two larger emergency rescue fire engines during daytime, when most fires occur. They currently have one of these and one smaller tactical response appliance. Her report says:
“This will increase the capacity and capability to respond to an emergency when demand is at its greatest, improve resilience across the service area and increase the opportunity to undertake prevention and protection activities during these hours.
“This change will take place at Harrogate first and, on completion of a full review of the implementation of the change, be extended to Scarborough.”

An ambulance waiting at Starbeck level crossing — there are fears this will happen more frequently to fire engines under the changes.
Councillor Pat Marsh, a Liberal Democrat who represents Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone on North Yorkshire Council, said the changes were putting people “at risk”.
She added:
Harrogate council staff strike averted after low ballot turnout“I totally support the emphasis on prevention but we still need to make sure that if accidents and incidents happen we have the right response with the appropriate number of fire engines and firemen.
“The government should set a standard service per head of population. Our Residents should get the service they pay for not a reduced service.”
Harrogate council staff at North Yorkshire Council will not strike after there was a lower turnout in a ballot than what is legally required for industrial action.
Unison, which also represents school workers in the county, balloted members over pay for six weeks this summer.
The union argued council staff have lost 25% from their pay when measured against the retail price index, which is a measure of inflation, over the last 12 years.
It was asking for a pay rise of 2% above the RPI for 2023, which would have resulted in an increase of 12.7% per employee.
However, the the National Joint Council for local government services, which determines pay for council workers, has offered a flat rate increase of £1,925.
Despite 75% of members voting in favour of strike action there was a turnout of 31%, lower than the 50% required to implement a strike.
David Houlgate, Unison branch secretary for Harrogate, said there has been a “chronic underfunding” of local government for over a decade.
He said:
“Due to anti-trade union laws, we can only take industrial action in employers where we achieve a turnout of 50% or more (with a majority voting for action). We passed this turnout threshold in a number of employers but clearly not enough.
“The irony is that in many local elections councillors get elected on similar turnouts, but the Trade Union Act 2016 blocks pro-strike majority votes for action by insisting on a 50% minimum turnout.
“Strike action is always a last resort of course but is on the increase due to the cost of living crisis and year on year real terms pay cuts because wage increases do not match the rate of inflation.
“There has been chronic underfunding in local government now for the past 13 years impacting on service provision and leading to a recruitment and retention crisis. This is set to continue as long as pay continues to fall in real terms.”
Read more:
- No trains for two days in Harrogate as strike action hits
- Harrogate junior doctors: ‘We are prepared to continue to strike’
New muffin cafe opens in Harrogate
A new muffin bakery and cafe has opened in Harrogate.
Muffin Break, which is based in the former Hotter shoe shop, opened its doors on Cambridge Street this morning.
The outlet, which has 60 cafes across the UK, offers a range of freshly baked goods including muffins and cakes, as well drinks such as milkshakes and coffee.
There will also be gluten free and vegan options available.
Customers can even order cakes online to be baked in store and collected.

John Viola, area manager at Muffin Break
John Viola, area manager for Muffin Break, told the Stray Ferret he felt the new outlet would fit into the Cambridge Street scene.
He said:
“Every store has its own feel. The nearest here is in Bradford.
“But I feel like this one has got that Harrogate feel.”
Read more
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- New world cuisine supermarket to open in Harrogate
Mr Viola added that the store will pride itself on giving people a relaxed experience in the cafe.
The cafe will be open from 8am until 5.30pm Monday to Saturday and 10am until 4pm on Sundays.
Muffin Break is a franchise business of FoodCo UK Franchising that first originated in Canada before expanding its cafes in Australia in the late 1980s.


