Yorkshire Post

Labour’s test in a seat that defies trends

Bradford West is home to the only Member of Parliament who has managed to unseat George Galloway in an election. Mason Boycott-Owen reports.

-

BRADFORD is a city on the up. Despite being the UK’s youngest city, and being home to over half a million people, it is often overlooked.

From 2025 it will be the UK’s City of Culture, with work in the busy city centre already underway preparing it for the influx of tourism for what is already one of the country’s most internatio­nal cities.

Naz Shah, the Bradford West Labour MP, says: “Bradford hasn’t had its fair share, and winning 2025 was huge for the city. It’s our time to shine.”

Out of Yorkshire’s 54 constituen­cies, Bradford West has the highest levels of child poverty, with the ability of families to earn their way out of low income hampered by the fact it has the highest proportion of people who have never worked.

Part of the issue for seats like this is a lack of investment and infrastruc­ture to match the scale and ambitions of the city.

“The rail infrastruc­ture in Bradford is really needed,” says Ms Shah.

“It takes you longer to go to Wakefield now than it would in Edwardian times on the direct rail. This is a source of shame.

“We’ve got the tenth largest economy in the country. We’re the fourth largest metropolit­an council district in the whole of the country. Why haven’t we had that fair share and our slice of the cake for our people?”

Devolution gives the opportunit­y for Bradford to receive the attention and funding its struggling council cannot achieve alone and gives it a chance to compete with its glitzy neighbour Leeds.

Its council has seen responsibi­lity for its children’s services taken out of its control, with its own budgets stretched to breaking point, and the lack of interventi­on during the cost of living crisis can be seen on its population.

“A third of the families in Bradford are experienci­ng poverty,” says Ms Shah.

“That’s a lot of children. And I’ve been told there are over 30,000 children across Bradford that have to skip meals every day. In 2024, that kind of stat. The idea that we’re not giving out free school meals, the idea that Sadiq [Khan] has just announced in London, it makes a difference to children.

“These are the bread and butter stuff of politics that are really important to the people of Bradford West, but there are others.”

The other issue of vital concern to people in the constituen­cy is the conflict in Gaza.

Some 61 per cent of the seat is Asian or Asian British, compared to around 9.3 per cent nationally across England and Wales.

Around 23.9 per cent of Bradford West is White British, compared to 74.4 per cent across the country, and over 96 per cent in seats such as Bridlingto­n and the Wolds. The most internatio­nal seat in this very internatio­nal city, obviously has an internatio­nal focus.

“We’ve had a lot of casework on that, in the thousands,” says Ms Shah.

“We have to have hope, politics is all about hope, hoping that things get better.

“We have to hope that the hostages are returned, we have to hope that there is an end to the violence, that’s what keeps us going.

“We’ve just celebrated Eid recently and Eid was so bitterswee­t for the Muslim families that I know because the whole point of fasting is resetting your connection with God, but it’s also about humility and resetting your relationsh­ip with life itself and reminding yourself what’s important in life and your role not just in your own family but your role globally as a human being.

“It’s been a really painful Eid and it really affects my constituen­ts.”

Labour’s own relationsh­ip with Muslims has taken a real knock recently.

The defining moment for many British Muslims was an interview which Sir Keir Starmer made on Sky News in October last year when he appeared to suggest that Israel has the “right” to withhold power and water from Gaza.

This interview is still referenced six months later, despite the Labour leader’s attempts to row back from the comments to say that Israel has the right to self defence.

The effect of this saw Muslim voters lose trust with the Labour Party, and, as has happened many times before, George Galloway was there to capitalise.

The Rochdale by-election was a wake-up call for Labour on the ability for Muslim voters to organise against the party that it has more often than not supported fully in UK elections. Bradford West will be one of Labour’s biggest tests on how well it has repaired its relationsh­ip with the Muslim community in the country.

Thankfully for Labour, its current MP has some experience winning Muslim votes when the party’s support is under threat.

“I’m the only Member of Parliament who has even unseated George Galloway,” says Ms Shah.

“It was one of my proudest moments sharing that joy with my constituen­ts who voted for me.

“This is not about Galloway, this is about those actors, and it is the same when it comes to the Reform party, the Farages, the Galloways.

“And the reason that void is there is because we haven’t seen that strong leadership from our leaders.

“I’ve said this to others when they asked how I beat Galloway. You have to lead. Leadership isn’t about pointing out their flaws.

“Demonstrat­e and show people the alternativ­e and by definition you’re highlighti­ng their incompeten­cy. It’s whether you take an approach of ‘I’m beating him’ or ‘I’m winning for you’.”

Under current polling, this seat will vote Labour, but this seat is one which defies national trends with its electorate.

 ?? ?? ‘TIME TO SHINE’: Theatre and performanc­e art in 2022 to mark Bradford’s City of Culture for 2025 award. Naz Shah, the Bradford West Labour MP, says: ‘Winning 2025 was huge for the city. It’s our time to shine.’
‘TIME TO SHINE’: Theatre and performanc­e art in 2022 to mark Bradford’s City of Culture for 2025 award. Naz Shah, the Bradford West Labour MP, says: ‘Winning 2025 was huge for the city. It’s our time to shine.’
 ?? ?? AMBITIOUS: Alhambra Theatre and Bradford Live (ex-Odeon). A lack of investment has failed to match the scale and ambitions of the city.
AMBITIOUS: Alhambra Theatre and Bradford Live (ex-Odeon). A lack of investment has failed to match the scale and ambitions of the city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom