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Analysis

Hartlepool by-election: Sir Keir Starmer under 'huge pressure' if Conservatives win constituency

The polling points to another loss in Labour's former heartlands, leaving its leader facing serious questions.

Sir Keir Starmer visited the Liberty Steel Mill in Hartlepool earlier this month
Image: Losing the town would be a huge psychological and political blow for the Labour leader
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Hartlepool has been Labour for nearly six decades.

But so too was a handful of neighbouring North East constituencies - Bishop Auckland, Blyth Valley, Darlington, Sedgefield, North West Durham - until the Boris Johnson Brexit election wrecking ball smashed through Labour's "red wall".

The by-election this week will determine whether Hartlepool will also turn Tory. The polling of recent days suggests it will.

A man passes a mural in a Hartlepool street
Image: Another brick looks set to fall in Labour's former red wall

One of the biggest Brexit-backing towns in the country, the Brexit Party won a quarter of the votes in this coastal town in the 2019 election as support shifted away from Labour.

But for the opposition to lose a seat to the governing party is almost unheard of: It's only happened twice (Copeland in 2017 and Mitcham & Morden 1982) in the past four decades.

Whatever the circumstances or context, losing Hartlepool would be a huge psychological and political blow to Sir Keir Starmer's attempts to prove he is the one who can rebuild Labour's red wall and make the party serious contenders for Number 10.

Senior Labour figures who have been canvassing in Hartlepool tell me that while they don't expect the party to lose by the margins polled his week - a Survation phone poll gave the Conservatives a 17-point lead - they also don't think it's realistic to expect a Labour win.

More on Hartlepool

"The Tories there are putting out a message of change, telling people you've had a Labour MP forever, vote Tory if you want change, despite there being a Tory government, this was always a heritage Labour seat, so that message of voting for change resonates," says one senior Labour figure who's been door-knocking.

Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer meets local people in Seaton Carew in County Durham during a day of campaigning for the Hartlepool
Image: Sir Keir Starmer on the campaign trail in Hartlepool

Another Labour MP tells me canvassing has been "challenging" and the Tories have momentum in these parts.

"I think people voting for someone to be their MP under a Conservative government and they see neighbouring seats being given lots of sweeties and they think they'd like the same."

A voter's guide to 'super Thursday'
A voter's guide to 'super Thursday'

On the Tory side, one Conservative figure familiar with the area says that while Ben Houchen, the Tory Tees Valley mayor, is home and dry, polls suggesting that Hartlepool is nailed on too isn't helping.

"People up here don't like being told how to vote," said the figure. "I'm 50/50 on Hartlepool [turning Conservative]."

Boris Johnson poses for a 'selfie' as he meets members of the public while campaigning on behalf of Conservative candidate Jill Mortimer in Hartlepool
Image: Boris Johnson has also been on the campaign trail in Hartlepool

Despite the caution, polling suggests that this week Labour will lose Hartlepool, the Tees Valley and West Midlands mayor - three big blows for the red wall build-back.

For many in Labour, the loss of Hartlepool would be a continuation of the rot that set in between the party and its post-industrial heartlands long before Brexit catalysed a huge political shift in allegiance.

What to look out for in the mayoral races across England
What to look out for in the mayoral races across England

As former leader Ed Miliband and Manchester Central MP Lucy Powell concluded in their 150-page report unpacking the 2019 election loss, the defeat had been a "long time coming" and could be traced back to two decades of democratic and political change that had fractured Labour's voter coalition.

For those working class communities, which have been de-industrialised, politically alienated and want change, Labour had not offered the kind of change voters wanted.

Mr Johnson and his new blue Tories saw the opportunity and filled the gap.

An offshore wind farm, pictured off Hartlepool in 2019. Record levels of wind power were generated on Monday, figures show
Image: Labour figures admit they don't expect to hold on to the town

That's why Sir Keir knows it's going to take longer than 16 months in office to begin to turn the tide. The danger for him in these local, mayoral and by-elections is that he can't really even show progress.

That will put him under huge personal pressure and public scrutiny, and is likely to kickstart a new phase in which he sets out more clearly what his Labour Party really stands for, rather than what it's against.

Hard enough already, even more difficult to do from a position of weakness rather than strength.