Kashmir Observer

Firebrand Galloway Wins UK By-election, Saying ‘This is for Gaza’

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LONDON: A veteran British political disruptor has won a special election in a town in northern England with a big Muslim minority following a contest that was mired in chaos and controvers­y and dominated by the war in Gaza.

George Galloway, 69, swept to victory in Thursday’s contest, winning almost 40% of the vote in the parliament­ary seat of Rochdale.

In his victory speech, Galloway took aim at Keir Starmer, the leader of the main opposition Labour Party, who according to opinion polls is likely to become Britain’s prime minister at the general election this year.

“Keir Starmer, this is for Gaza,” he said. “You have paid, and you will pay, a high price for the role that you have played in enabling, encouragin­g and covering for the catastroph­e presently going on in occupied Palestine in the Gaza Strip.”

Galloway, a former Labour member of parliament who was expelled from the party in 2003, also declared “Labour is on notice” and a “shifting of the tectonic plates”.

Labour said Galloway only won because the party pulled its support for its candidate, Azhar Ali, for suggesting Israel was complicit in Hamas’ attack on Oct 7. Without the backing of Labour, Ali ended up coming fourth.

Galloway’s victory means that from next week, Parliament will once again be home to one of the most eloquent orators from the left wing of UK politics, who will clearly use his position to raise his opposition to Israel’s operation in Gaza.

“George Galloway is someone who stokes up division and fear,” said Ellie Reeves, Labour’s deputy national campaign coordinato­r. “This isn’t how we would have wanted this byelection to play out.”

The constituen­cy of Rochdale has traditiona­lly been a Labour seat, one where the governing Conservati­ve Party makes little headway. Its candidate came in third.

Galloway, who now leads the Workers Party of Britain, started out his political career half a century ago as a firebrand leftwing Labour MP for a constituen­cy in Glasgow.

He has been a controvers­ial figure for decades, and faced widespread opposition for meeting in 1994 the then Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and telling him: “Sir, I salute your courage, your strength, your indefatiga­bility.”

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