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ENT12
FRI · 2026-06-19 · 15:07 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0619-85817
News/Reform investigates whether Makerfield candidate’s sexist po…
NSR-2026-0619-85817News Report·EN·Political Strategy

Reform investigates whether Makerfield candidate’s sexist posts were costly

Reform UK is investigating whether sexist social media posts by its candidate, Robert Kenyon, in the Makerfield byelection may have negatively impacted the party's performance. Despite hopes for a close contest, Labour's Andy Burnham won with a significant majority.

Peter Walker and Ben QuinnThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-06-19 · 15:07 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Reform investigates whether Makerfield candidate’s sexist posts were costly
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
694words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Reform UK is investigating whether sexist social media posts by its candidate, Robert Kenyon, in the Makerfield byelection may have negatively impacted the party's performance. Despite hopes for a close contest, Labour's Andy Burnham won with a significant majority. Voters, particularly women, reportedly cited Kenyon's lewd comments as a reason for not supporting him. Reform leader Nigel Farage acknowledged the disappointing result, though the party also pointed to Burnham's strong local standing and the challenge of campaigning against a well-known figure. Reform is also seeking to attract voters from the far-right Restore UK party.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Social Justice
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Carol Vorderman demanded an apology from Kenyon after he joined a graphic discussion about her in deleted posts.

factual
Confidence
1.00
02

Nigel Farage stated that Reform UK had hoped to win at least 18,000 votes but achieved 15,696.

statisticNigel Farage
Confidence
1.00
03

Reform UK is investigating if sexist comments by its candidate Robert Kenyon harmed the party's chances in the Makerfield byelection.

factual
Confidence
1.00
04

Voters, particularly women, reportedly highlighted Kenyon's sexist and lewd social media posts as a reason for being put off.

factualCanvassers from different parties
Confidence
0.80
05

A Reform activist claimed the party advised Kenyon not to apologize for his comments.

quoteReform activist
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 694 words
Reform UK is examining whether sexist comments by its candidate in the Makerfield-byelection" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="128527" data-entity-type="event">Makerfield byelection may have harmed the party’s chances, after Nigel Farage accepted the result had disappointed him.The party’s examination of its defeat comes after Andy Burnham won 55% of the vote share in a poll that Reform hoped would be a tightly fought battle between the Labour leadership hopeful and its own candidate, Robert Kenyon, a local plumber.Canvassers from different parties reported that voters highlighted sexist and lewd social media posts by Kenyon, which emerged during the campaign, with women in particular saying they were put off by them.After Kenyon came more than 9,000 votes behind Burnham in Thursday’s vote, one Reform activist said the party had advised the candidate not to apologise for the comments. “That’s something that was not his fault, it was how he was advised,” they said.The issue rose to prominence when the TV presenter Carol Vorderman used a video posted online to demand an apology from Kenyon, after it emerged he had joined in a graphic discussion about her, in since-deleted posts.“I will admit that the Vorderman stuff did not help us,” another Reform source said.Farage’s party has pointed to the scale of the task it faced taking on as well-known a figure as Burnham, even in a seat demographically more favourable to Reform than Labour, saying Kenyon performed well to increase his share of the vote from 2024, even by just 2.7 percentage points.The party was also slightly buoyed by Rupert Lowe’s far-right Restore UK taking just under 7% of the vote, less than some forecasts had predicted.In a video message posted on X on Friday morning, Farage urged people who voted for Restore to back Reform instead, saying it was the only viable contender on the right of UK politics.The result had been “a dramatic, emphatic win for Andy Burnham”, Farage said in the message.Reform had hoped to win at least 18,000 votes, against the 15,696 it achieved, Farage said, arguing that his party had been “slightly hoist with our own petard” in taking on a Labour challenger whose implicit message had been that a vote for him was a vote to remove Keir Starmer, which was Reform’s slogan in May’s local election.Burnham’s personal standing in Greater Manchester, where he has been mayor since 2017, appeared to be more of a factor, as well as the comments by Kenyon, who did not apologise but sought to present them as showing he was an ordinary person rather than a professional politician.Despite Restore’s modest showing, Farage will be concerned to have lost some votes to a party whose talk of mass deportations and at times openly racist rhetoric has seemingly nudged Reform into taking a more hard-right and nativist approach in recent weeks.Farage addressed those who voted Restore in his message: “I would say directly to them: what do you want? We are the challenger party to the left in this country, and I would urge you to think again, I really, really would.”Reform was, he insisted, “still the big national party on the centre right”, saying that despite the Conservative win in the Aberdeen South byelection, also held on Thursday, Kemi Badenoch’s party remained uncompetitive in large parts of the UK.He ended his message: “A disappointing morning, but we keep going.”Faced with the threat from Restore Britain, a predominantly online phenomenon, where Lowe’s anti-immigrant messages have been amplified by Elon Musk, the owner of X, who supports Restore, Farage has started pushing Reform on to more hard-right turf.In the wake of the case of Henry Nowak, the student who was handcuffed by police as he lay dying from a stab wound after his killer told officers Nowak had assaulted him in a racist attack, Farage has argued repeatedly that white people in the UK face the most racism in what he calls a “two-tier state”.Reform’s migration policy has also become more hardline, and now also targets EU nationals with settled status, some of whom have lived in the UK for decades.Under planned Reform policies, EU nationals would be among people barred from living in social housing, and employing them would become notably more expensive for companies.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
sexist comments
1.00
makerfield byelection
0.90
reform uk
0.90
candidate conduct
0.80
election campaign
0.70
nigel farage
0.60
andy burnham
0.60
political impact
0.50
voter perception
0.50
social media posts
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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