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NewsBeat

How trio of notorious prisoners ganged up to murder child killer Kyle Bevan

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Manchester Evening News

Child killer Kyle Bevan was stabbed 25 times during an attack by convicted killers Mark Fellows, Lee Newell and David Taylor at HMP Wakefield in West Yorkshire

Riot police appeared on the screen wearing helmets, stab vests and arm protection. The four officers were surrounding a man wearing a grey, prison issue jumper and jogging bottoms.

Both hands were cuffed behind his back. Slowly and methodically they removed the cuffs off one hand, and then the other. He was appearing at Leeds Crown Court for his trial on video link from HMP Full Sutton near York, one of the country’s high secure jails.

On first glance the man, bald, middle aged and bespectacled, did not appear to justify the level of security he was being afforded. It was an extraordinary scene, which played out in court in the absence of a jury, before they were sworn in to determine his case. Stay in the know by making sure you’re receiving our daily newsletter

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But it was an indication of who the court was dealing with. David Taylor, although perhaps not currently a well-known name within the wider public, is surely one of the country’s most dangerous prisoners.

Because by this time, he had already killed one prisoner in another high security jail, and attempted to murder a police officer in another category A prison, after the Greater Manchester Police cop had come to question him about another murder he had committed before he was remanded in prison to await his day in court. He had also boasted about being able to ‘make a shiv [an improvised weapon] out of all sorts’.

In Leeds, he was standing trial alongside two of the country’s most high profile prisoners – Mark ‘The Iceman’ Fellows and Lee Newell. Both were already serving whole life orders. With Taylor’s help, they murdered child killer Kyle Bevan in HMP Wakefield, which has earned the nickname ‘Monster Mansion’ due to its notorious inhabitants over the years including Harold Shipman.

The trio bonded over their hatred for child killers and sex offenders. We may never know whether the alliance was created to enforce their own warped moral code, or whether it was purely out of self-interest and a desire to be moved away from the jail and a prison regime which they hated.

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Whatever the reason, it had murderous consequences. And it left serious questions about how a prisoner could be murdered and lay dead and discovered for more than 12 hours, and the whole ‘very strange’ policy of mixing vulnerable and main prisoners.

Mark Fellows and Lee Newell both had little to lose by the time they joined forces with David Taylor in HMP Wakefield. CCTV in the days leading up to the murder, on November 4 last year, showed them associating with each other at various times.

Fellows was a high profile, category A prisoner serving a whole life order for the murders of gangland figures Paul Massey and John Kinsella. Massey was hit by a hail of bullets as he emerged from his BMW on the drive of his home in Clifton, Salford, on July, 26, 2015.

It would be the highest profile casualty of a gang war which rocked the city. His assassin was dressed head to toe in combat gear, having waited for the perfect moment to strike. Fellows was generally thought to be a gangland ‘nobody’ before he slaughtered Mr Big.

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But, nicknamed ‘The Iceman’ by his friends, Fellows was capable of cold-blooded murder. Fitted with a colostomy bag in his youth, he was fastidious about cleanliness, his health – and his murderous work.

A non-smoking, long distance runner, Fellows plotted murders with clinical efficiency – using GPS technology and a night-vision hunting scope to track down his targets. He remained a free man for three years after killing Massey, allowing him to commit his second gangland murder.

John Kinsella and his pregnant partner Wendy Owen were walking their six large American Bulldogs through woodland in Merseyside on the morning of May 5, 2018.

Suddenly, Fellows, masked, in a hi-vis jacket and on a mountain bike, appeared and began opening fire with a revolver. Kinsella was an ally of Massey, and carried ‘Mr Big’s’ coffin at his funeral.

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Fellows spent the afternoon after the murder with his mother at the Trafford Centre, eating at Zizzi restaurant, and buying a trendy pair of £165 Mallet trainers from Tessuti. Later, he socialised with pals in the pub and enjoyed a meal at KFC. He flew out to Amsterdam on holiday a few days later.

With a second killing on their hands, police moved quickly. There were similarities in the M.O. Officers already suspected Paul Massey’s killer had fled on a bike, and Mark Fellows was already in the frame. GMP went to colleagues in Merseyside and told them what they knew.

Just a few minutes after Fellows’ return flight touched down at Manchester Airport on May 30, officers boarded the easyJet aircraft and arrested him on suspicion of both murders. A raid of Fellows’ flat turned up a Garmin Forerunner GPS watch.

Data on the watch would reveal Fellows had conducted a reconnaissance mission in the days before Massey’s murder in vivid detail. Police were not only able to trace his route, but could even tell when he had been running, cycling or pushing his bike.

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At the time of the Kinsella murder, Fellows was working as a sous chef preparing sauces at ready meal firm Greencore in Warrington. He worked nights, starting his shift at 5.30pm.

But charged with the murders of Massey and Kinsella, after being convicted with the help of the GPS watch in the first ever prosecution which had used such data, Fellows will call high security prisons home for the rest of his life.

Lee Newell also had a shocking criminal past. He was handed a whole life order in 2013 for murdering child killer Subhan Anwar in HMP Long Lartin. Anwar, from Huddersfield, was serving a life sentence for the murder of his partner’s two-year-old daughter.

At the time of the killing in the Worcestershire jail, Newell had already been serving a life sentence for strangling his neighbour, 56-year-old Mary Neal, to death in Norwich in 1988.

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Newell had lost the sight in his right eye after being attacked by double killer Gary Vinter at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes in November 2014.

A more recent inmate at Wakefield, David Taylor’s wrap sheet was no less shocking.

Even before being found guilty of murdering Bevan, Taylor had admitted murdering a missing woman and been found guilty of attempting to murder a police officer in prison. Taylor pleaded guilty to murdering Alisha Apostoloff-Boyarin from Ashton, who was reported missing by her family in February 2022. Her body has never been found.

Taylor then tried to murder a GMP police officer who had attended HMP Frankland in Durham, where Taylor was being held, to interview him about Alisha’s disappearance. Taylor had claimed to have information about her whereabouts.

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But during an interview, Taylor produced an improvised weapon and stabbed Detective Constable Darren Bratby to the chest, an attack captured on shocking CCTV footage from the jail.

A few days later he admitted in a chat with a prison governor: “So it was a planned attack.

“I’m going to tell you straight. I went to f****** kill him, there’s no two ways about it. I went to f****** kill him.”

Taylor appeared to be furious about being accused of murdering Alisha. He was also said to be angered about being subject to an IPP sentence, imprisonment for public protection, after being convicted of aggravated burglary and possessing an offensive weapon in 2007.

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Taylor had accused a man in his 30s of being a ‘sexual predator’ and behaving inappropriately with his teenage daughter. Taylor forced his way into a property armed with a baton, hitting his victim to the back.

“I didn’t know what an IPP was,” he told his attempted murder trial. He was ordered to serve a minimum of 899 days, about two-and-a-half years. It meant 99 years. With an IPP you have to lower your risk, so it’s low enough for the judge to release you.”

While in prison he studied humanist psychology and counselling, and gained a foundation degree from the Open University. Taylor told the court: “I did everything I needed to do, which is what you have to do to progress. I went through the system completely, from A, to B, to C, to D.”

He said he was released on licence in 2013. Taylor described himself as an ‘old fashioned villain’, with convictions dating back to 1977 when he was a teenager. Describing a conviction for wounding, Taylor, originally from Glossop, said: “It was an after school brawl. I’ve always been a bit of a scrapper.”

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He told how in his later life he came to live in Ashton-under-Lyne, Skegness, and then Durham in 2019. Taylor still had friends in Manchester, including one man named Norman who has since died. He said he knew Alisha through Norman. “She was Norman’s son’s girlfriend,” Taylor told the court.

“She phoned me up asking me for help. I went down, back to Ashton-under-Lyne. She stayed with me with her boyfriend in County Durham.” Asked when was the last time he’d seen her, Taylor said “Probably 2021 or 22?”

“She just got on with her life as far as I was concerned, that was it.” He told how he was spoken to by police as a person of interest, and then a suspect. “I told them everything I could to help them with the case,” he said.

Addressing the attack on DC Bratby, Taylor said the weapon came from the ‘side of the chair’ in the interview room. He told how he ‘retrieved it’ during a visit with his solicitor. Taylor said: “I knew exactly where they are stashed. They are everywhere.”

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Asked why he attacked the police officer, Taylor said: “Because I’m angry, I’m enraged with what’s going on in my life.” When he was asked what had been going through his head at the time, Taylor responded: “I just don’t know. I just snapped. I lost it, I lost my mind, I lost my nerve. I completely lost it.

“All I think is I’m being accused of something I haven’t done. It all came pouring out on that particular visit.” It was November last year when the unholy alliance began to form. CCTV showed the trio associating with each other. What they were discussing remains unclear.

But footage showed them follow Kyle Bevan into his cell at about 5.30pm on November 4. Bevan was in the jail serving a life sentence for the murder of his partner’s daughter, two-year-old Lola James, at her home in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales. Bevan had launched a frenzied and brutal attack on the defenceless tot, who suffered injuries usually found in car crash victims.

He had only been in a relationship with her mum, Sinead James, a few months after adding her on Facebook before moving in with her in early 2020 as the country went into lockdown. Drug user Bevan claimed he was innocent but refused to give evidence during his trial at Swansea Crown Court.

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James was sentenced to six years after being found guilty of causing or allowing her daughter’s death. Serving a minimum term of 28 years, Bevan was said to have kept himself to himself in Wakefield and was ‘very reserved’, often remaining in his cell.

Wakefield prison was something of an outlier within the UK’s jails, in that lags termed as ‘vulnerable prisoners’, including sex offenders and those who have committed crimes against children, were able to mix with the other ‘main’ prisoners. A prison officer from Strangeways called to give evidence at the Leeds Crown Court trial described the arrangement as ‘very strange’.

Only weeks before Bevan was killed, former rock star and Lostprophets frontman Ian Watkins was allegedly murdered in the prison on October 11. Two weeks later, on October 25, prisoner David Minto, was ‘severely attacked’ in the prison by another inmate. The jail was on ‘high alert’.

It is unclear exactly how Bevan came to his death. Cells within the prison do not have CCTV cameras. But he was stabbed 25 times, and his body was left to look as though he was asleep.

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Prison officers checked on him through the window of his cell during the evening, but they did not spot any cause for concern. It was only the following morning when a screw tried to wake Bevan up, that his death was discovered.

No murder weapon was ever discovered but prosecutors claimed he must have been stabbed to death using improvised weapons. In the aftermath of the killing there was ‘something of a satisfied, job done mood’ amongst the perpetrators, prosecutors said. When Fellows’ cell was searched, he was all packed up and appeared ready to leave.

The jail was placed into lockdown and in the days and weeks that followed, the trio were moved out to other prisons. On his transfer out of the prison, Taylor was heard to shout by a nurse in the vicinity of Newell ‘nice working with you and the Iceman’.

Then came the trial at Leeds Crown Court, which began earlier this month. The judge told how it was an ‘enormous enterprise’ to bring all three defendants to court, given the ‘serious security concerns in this case’.

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Prosecutors in their opening speech claimed that Taylor also referred to Fellows as the ‘Wakefield Dexter’. The TV show featured the character Dexter Morgan, who lived a ‘double life’ as a blood spatter analyst who worked for the police, but was also a ‘vigilante serial killer who targets criminals’.

Following inspection reports by the Prison Inspectorate there has been a ‘reconfiguration’ of the prison population at Wakefield. A report published earlier this month by the Inspectorate said: “There had been several serious incidents at HMP Wakefield since our inspection, including the alleged murder of two prisoners.

“Leaders had responded to these incidents by introducing a coordinated set of measures aimed at improving safety. Leaders had reconfigured the population following a review of common themes from these incidents, including a self‑inflicted death.

“The population had previously been integrated, with prisoners convicted of sexual offences accommodated alongside those convicted of other serious offences. As a result of the reconfiguration, a considerable number of prisoners had moved out of the prison to be replaced by others considered more suitable. Nearly all prisoners at Wakefield were now deemed vulnerable due to their offence or circumstances.”

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Taylor could soon join Fellows and Newell among the ranks of criminals to be given a rare whole life order. The case also poses questions to law makers of what can be done to prevent criminals serving whole life orders, with seemingly little to lose, simply doing as they please, with little threat of further consequences.

Fellows, Taylor and Newell will be sentenced at Leeds Crown Court on Friday (June 19).

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Hat-trick hero & Swiss wonderkid – the World Cup duo set for Premier League?

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Thomas Tuchel throws baseball

Manzambi was once a goalkeeper for his youth team – and his first footballing idol was Germany’s Manuel Neuer.

Now he is a creative midfielder who enjoys getting forward.

And his goalscoring exploits against Bosnia-Herzegovina suggests he could be far more than just a “super-sub” at this World Cup.

He broke into the Freiburg first XI last season and helped the German club reach the Europa League final.

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Manzambi started against Aston Villa in the final and although he could not help his side win – they were beaten 3-0 – he has been linked with moves to Napoli, Chelsea and Manchester United.

His performance on Thursday at the Los Angeles Stadium suggests there could be more competition for his services this summer.

It could have been even better had he been allowed to take his side’s 97th-minute penalty, with captain Granit Xhaka stepping up to convert instead,

If Manzambi had taken it and scored, he would have become the third-youngest player to hit a World Cup treble, after a 17-year-old Pele for Brazil against France in the semi-finals in 1958 and 19-year-old German Edmund Conen against Belgium in 1934.

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Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea were all linked with Manzambi in March and, if he continues making an impact like this, the interest will only increase.

Speaking about Manzambi’s first goal to give Switzerland a 1-0 lead, former Crystal Palace forward Clinton Morrison told BBC Radio 5 Live: “It’s a brilliant finish.

“Switzerland needed to make changes because they weren’t doing anything, they were dominating possession but weren’t a threat.

“It’s a fantastic volley and great technique to give Switzerland the lead.”

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Work on new Darlington Tesco and office plan to progress this year

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Work on new Darlington Tesco and office plan to progress this year

Work is ongoing to open the new convenience store at the site of the former Elm Ridge Garden Centre on Council Road, Darlington. 

Residents had questioned whether the scheme was still going ahead after work at the site appeared to have slowed in recent months. 

But Councillor Kate Mammolotti, Green Party member for Hummersknott ward, said she recently spoke with the developer, who confirmed further work is expected to take place later this year. 

New Tesco work in DarlingtonWork is ongoing to open the new convenience store at the site of the former Elm Ridge Garden Centre on Council Road, Darlington. (Image: PETER REIMANN)

Applicant Ward Estates said the new store will occupy the ground floor, with offices on the first and second floors. A new car park with 44 spaces is also proposed. 

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A roof is expected to be put on the structure in the Autumn, with work set to be completed by the end of the year, Cllr Mammolotti added. 

A Darlington Borough Council spokesperson said: “We are awaiting an update from the developer before further work can commence. We have been in discussions with them and they hope to have this submitted as soon as possible. We will continue to work with the developer on their planning application.” 

Plans for the facility were approved by the local authority in 2024 before Tesco applied for a licence to operate from the site. 

Sainsbury’s was previously signed up to the scheme but later withdrew. 

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But during the planning process, residents questioned the need for the store. 

At a council planning meeting in October, Kate Heljula said: “We are an area that is very well serviced for convenience stores. We seem to be adding something that residents don’t need in a place that is not suitable.”

Work is ongoing to open the new convenience store at the site of the former Elm Ridge Garden Centre on Council Road, Darlington. (Image: PETER REIMANN)

The owners of the nearby Blackwell Stores also objected to the plans, saying it threatened the future of their business. “Customers have expressed their worry about this development to us and what it will do to their community,” they said. 

Existing convenience stores include the nearby petrol filling station, two stores on Cleveland Terrace, and the Co-op at Mowden.

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A planning committee heard that the new store is intended to be marketed as a ‘top up’ store that allows more convenient access for local customers, reducing the need for dedicated, larger shopping trips to conventional supermarkets, and reducing the need to travel by car.

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Burnham says ‘this is a final chance to change’ in his victory speech

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Burnham says 'this is a final chance to change' in his victory speech

Labour’s Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield by-election, paving the way for him to challenge Sir Keir Starmer as Labour leader.

“Everyone knows that politics isn’t working,” he says in his acceptance speech. “Tonight could, just could, be the turning point”.

Burnham previously said he would seek to enter any Labour leadership contest – he would need the support of at least 81 Labour MPs to join the race.

The newly-elected MP for Makerfield, who held cabinet positions under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, says he always knew he would seek to return to Westminster to “complete that unfinished business” so the north of England could fulfil its “potential”.

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Donald Trump’s popularity is at an all-time low. History says that matters

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Donald Trump’s popularity is at an all-time low. History says that matters

In his first term of office Donald Trump achieved the lowest average job approval ratings (41%) among Americans since the end of the second world war. In his second term he has fallen well below that with an approval rating of only 35% in a recent Economist/YouGov poll.

Much of this can be explained by voter perceptions of the state of the US economy. The chart below shows the relationship between the percentage of Americans who approve of the president’s handling of his job and consumer confidence. It covers almost 50 years of monthly data with the consumer confidence data coming from surveys conducted at the University of Michigan.

Presidential approval and consumer confidence in the US, 1978 to 2026

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Sources: Gallup Poll archives and University of Michigan, Author provided (no reuse)

The two series track each other closely and so demonstrate a moderately strong relationship with a correlation of 0.44 (If they were unrelated the correlation would be 0 and if they were exactly the same it would be 1). In both cases higher scores denote greater approval and increasing consumer confidence. This confirms the well-known fact that the state of the economy is a big driver of presidential approval.

If we look closely at the consumer confidence index, the average score over the entire period was 84. In the late 1970s Jimmy Carter had low and falling approval ratings and consumer confidence scores. This goes a long way to explaining why he was a one-term president who lost to Ronald Reagan in the 1980 election.

A decade later, when Republican George HW Bush was president between 1989 and 1993, consumer confidence plummeted as an official recession in the US economy was declared in July 1990, leading to declining growth and rising unemployment. The Federal Reserve, which is responsible for US monetary policy, exacerbated a weak financial situation by raising interest rates in order to combat inflation. The result was that Bush senior became another one-term president and lost the 1992 election to his Democrat rival, Bill Clinton (whose campaign motto was famously: “It’s the economy, stupid.”).

However, the largest fall in consumer confidence over this period occurred after the financial crash of 2007-2008, which in turn produced a serious recession and rapidly declining consumer confidence. On this occasion George W Bush was in his second term as US president and his collapsing approval ratings paved the way for the victory of Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential contest.

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Finally, when Donald Trump won the presidential election in November 2016, consumer confidence was relatively high. In January 2017 at the time of his inauguration the consumer confidence index stood at 99. Four years later in January 2021 when Joe Biden was inaugurated as president the index was at 79, a dramatic decline in historical terms.

The midterm elections for the House and the Senate take place in November this year and currently things do not look good for the Republicans. Pollsters have been asking what is called a “generic” question in their surveys about who respondents would vote for if the midterm elections took place today. They are virtually unanimous in their agreement that the Democrats will win control of the House of Representatives. In addition, it is possible, though less likely, that the Democrats will win control of the Senate.

A thought experiment

An interesting thought experiment is to suppose that we were looking at a presidential election in November rather than the midterms. What light does the current consumer confidence data throw on such a hypothetical election?

The second chart shows the relationship between voting for the incumbent’s party in the 19 presidential elections since 1978 and consumer confidence in the month of these elections.

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Incumbent vote shares and consumer confidence in presidential elections since 1978


Sources: Gallup Poll archives and University of Michigan, Author provided (no reuse)

Once again, the relationship is moderately strong between the two series with a correlation of 0.43. Voters reward or punish the incumbent president or his party’s candidate depending on how they feel about the economy. As we observed in the first chart, the consumer confidence score was at its lowest at 55 in the 2008 election which Obama won. But the score on the index in June 2026 was 49, so – if consumer confidence continues to fall – then in a hypothetical presidential election in November Trump would lose very badly.

This is a thought experiment rather than a prediction of what is likely to happen in the presidential election of 2028. But when the war in the Middle East launched by the US and Israel threatens to produce a global recession it seems unlikely that consumer confidence in the US will improve any time soon.

Trump will not be on the ballot in 2028. But the Republican candidate in that election is likely to take a historical beating if the US and world economies do not improve in the meantime.

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About 300 children and teachers evacuated or rescued after fire breaks out at a Tokyo school

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About 300 children and teachers evacuated or rescued after fire breaks out at a Tokyo school

A fire broke out at an elementary school in downtown Tokyo Friday, but all of about 300 students and teachers were evacuated or rescued, officials said.

The Tokyo Fire Department said the fire at the Takinogawa No. 3 Elementary School broke out near a music room on the top floor of the four-story building late morning Friday.

Firefighters rescued one teacher and several schoolchildren out of the building, with non-life-threatening injuries, the department said.

Television footage showed black smoke billowing out of windows on the fourth floor, as firefighters combated the fire at the scene. Dozens of fire engines were deployed.

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All others inside the building when the fire broke out had evacuated to a nearby park on their own and no one was left behind, officials said.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

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When will the next Greater Manchester mayor be elected now Andy Burnham is an MP?

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Manchester Evening News

Andy Burnham is heading back to Parliament after winning the Makerfield by-election.

The newly elected Labour MP easily beat Reform UK candidate Robert Kenyon.

It marks the end of weeks of campaigning in the constituency based south of Wigan, and the start of the next political race in Greater Manchester for Andy Burnham’s old job as mayor.

Click here for the latest on Greater Manchester’s politics in our newsletter

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Becoming an MP disqualifies Burnham from being Greater Manchester mayor, so a replacement needs to be found for the region’s top political job.

That means another by-election is about to take place, with voters across Greater Manchester choosing the next mayor.

It is set to be a massive operation, with 2.1 million people registered to vote in the contest, and around 400,000 expected to do so by post.

Ahead of the crucial race, the Manchester Evening News takes a look at what happens next and when the mayoral by-election will be held.

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What date will the by-election for Greater Manchester mayor take place?

The Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) has confirmed July 30 as the date for the mayoral by-election. The GMCA’s returning officer, Caroline Simpson, told the Manchester Evening News earlier this month: “If the Makerfield by-election result triggers a mayoral by-election, Greater Manchester will be legally required to hold a by-election within 25-35 working days.

“To ensure we are ready, we have identified July 30 as the date which will allow the maximum number of people to vote, whether in person, by post or by proxy.

“This will avoid holding an election during the peak holiday period in August and will mean that postal votes will arrive just before, or only a day or two into, the school holidays.

“While Greater Manchester’s returning officers are very experienced at running elections, the lead time for a mayoral by-election would be shorter than for a scheduled poll.

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“So, following legal advice, and with support from government and the Electoral Commission, we have begun essential preparation work such as booking polling stations. We are doing this in advance of, not in anticipation of, the Makerfield by-election outcome on June 19.”

The by-election touches all corners of Greater Manchester, so expect to see candidates campaigning across all ten boroughs of the city-region.

Counting for mayoral elections usually takes place the day after polling day, so the result should be known by Friday, July 31.

What voting system will be used?

The government has just changed the voting system for how mayors are elected.

A system called supplementary voting will be used to elect Greater Manchester’s next mayor, rather than the previous first-past-the-post method.

The change came into force on June 18 after passing through Parliament wrapped up in the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Act.

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It could have a huge impact on deciding who becomes the next mayor of Greater Manchester. Voters choose a first and second preference among candidates in supplementary voting.

If no candidate gets 50 per cent of vote in the first round of voting, a second round of voting is held between the two candidates with the most support.

That’s the stage where secondary votes are added and could flip the entire result on its head.

One potential scenario could see party A win more votes in the first round of voting, but still go on to lose the mayoral by-election if party B picks up more second preference votes in round two.

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Reform UK said earlier this week that the change was a ‘cynical attempt’ to sway the race in Labour’s favour. Labour didn’t comment when asked about the claims from Reform.

The change in voting system was debated in the House of Lords on June 16.

Lord Hayward, a Conservative, said: “Let us be honest about this order. It is not normal to identify who would be affected by a particular change of law, but this order is an attempt to prevent Reform winning the possible Greater Manchester mayoralty by-election.

“There is no other justification for the haste with which this order has been introduced, other than that it solves the Labour Party’s problems and prevents Reform winning a mayoralty.”

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Baroness Taylor of Stevenage, for Labour, responded: “The Government were very clear during the passage of the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Act that we intended to make this change for mayoral and PCC elections after May 2026. There is now the potential for such an election; I will come on to more about that in a moment. We are therefore acting to deliver on our commitments made to Parliament.”

What happens next?

Political parties will choose their candidates to stand in the mayoral by-election before campaigning begins.

The rumour mill about who could stand for each party has already kicked in, with names being suggested by sources. Official announcements and campaign launches are expected to happen in the next few days.

What follows will be weeks of campaigning to try and convince voters to back their various visions for Greater Manchester.

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The scale of the by-election means parties will be out and about across the region, from Wigan to Stockport and everywhere in between.

Whoever wins the race will be handed one of the most important political jobs in the country, running Greater Manchester.

The mayor of Greater Manchester has a huge range of responsibilities, from deciding the transport budget for the region from government, including over the future of bus services, to being the public’s voice on policing matters, and being in charge of funding for housing and regeneration schemes.

The stage is set for a fascinating race.

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Man arrested after disturbance in Market Street Little Lever

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Man arrested after disturbance in Market Street Little Lever

Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said officers were called to reports of a disturbance on Market Street at around 10pm on Tuesday, June 17.

A GMP spokesperson said: “Officers responded to reports of a disturbance on Market Street, Little Lever at around 10pm yesterday (17/06/26).

“One man in his 20s was arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and possession of an offensive weapon.”

Little LeverLano’s front door was severely damaged (Image: NQ)

Damage was caused to the front door of Lano Store and the front window of Village Chippy.

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Little LeverThe Village Chippy was also damaged (Image: NQ)

A worker at Lano Store, which reopened as normal the following morning, confirmed the incident had damaged the shop’s front door.

He said he was unaware of many of the details surrounding the disturbance but confirmed that nothing had been stolen from the premises.

“There was just damage to the front door,” he said.

An eyewitness reported seeing a man running down Market Street carrying a hammer shortly before police arrived.

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The area was also reportedly cordoned off.

Other neighbouring businesses said they were unaware of the disturbance and had not suffered any criminal damage.

Police enquiries into the incident are ongoing.

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Liverpool news: Reds include unusual clause after transfer hijack as history repeats itself

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Daily Mirror

Andoni Iraola and his Liverpool team face a big season after the Basque coach took over from Arne Slot but transfer progress is being made

Liverpool will discover their Premier League fixture schedule on Friday, bringing their summer transfer plans into sharp focus. The Reds are embarking on a first window with Andoni Iraola at the helm and have already been busy.

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Jeremy Jacquet became the Reds’ first new arrival, with a move from Rennes agreed long before Iraola agreed to replace Arne Slot in the dugout. Victor Munoz looks to be next and there is plenty to say about the pursuit of the young Spaniard.

There have also been a number of departures, with out-of-contract pair Andy Robertson and Ibrahima Konate finding new clubs. Robertson’s move to Tottenham was confirmed before the transfer window opened, while Real Madrid confirmed on Thursday that they would add Konate to their ranks for the 2026/27 season.

Today, though, our attention has turned to potential incomings before Liverpool begin their pre-season campaign in July. Here are our latest lines from around Anfield.

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Munoz deal ‘includes surprise transfer clause’

According to reports in Spain, Liverpool’s move for Osasuna star Victor Munoz includes a sell-on clause. However, it doesn’t relate to the Pamplona club but rather to Real Madrid.

Los Blancos were reportedly paid around £4.3m by Osasuna for 50 percent of Munoz’s rights in 2025, with Madrid also enjoying a buy-back clause. Liverpool are reported to have approached Jose Mourinho’s side to ensure they didn’t use the clause to re-sign the 22-year-old forward.

Liverpool are also understood to be paying Munoz’s £34.7m release clause in full but allowing Real Madrid to retain an unspecified buy-back clause which they could use in 2027. The fee paid between for the youngster will be split between the two Spanish clubs.

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Reds pip Newcastle again

A move for Munoz would see history repeat itself. Newcastle United had also been pushing for the Spaniard but their failure to immediately meet his release clause has allowed Liverpool to enter the chase.

It’s an all-too-familiar situation for Eddie Howe’s side. Last summer, the Magpies made an early push for Hugo Ekitike at the start of the summer window only to see the Frenchman move to Anfield.

Newcastle also saw star striker Alexander Isak move to Liverpool on deadline day and looked as though they would also lose out to the Reds for defensive target Marc Guehi. Ultimately, though, Guehi’s move to Anfield fell through and he ended up joining Manchester City midway through the season.

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Decision made on plans for 30 affordable houses in Tonge Fold

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Decision made on plans for 30 affordable houses in Tonge Fold

The plans were submitted by Be One Homes – formerly Bolton at Home – and include 30 houses on green land behind Doris Avenue.

It was the property’s designation as ‘affordable’ that swung the vote in their favour, with several councillors noting the importance of affordable housing in the Bolton area.

Also important was the fact that Bolton cannot demonstrate a five-year housing supply.

A range of houses have been proposed (Image: BTP Architects)

The council officer noted: “The benefits of the development demonstrable outweigh the potential harm, and therefore we recommend the development should be approved.”

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Cllr Martin Donaghy – who is not on the planning committee himself – came to the meeting to oppose the plans as a representative of his ward Tonge with the Haulgh.

Cllr Donaghy said: “The wildlife on the site will be significantly disturbed and lost.

“Access to the site is on the narrow Colenso Road and Bury Road. The residents of my ward asked me to come before you and ask that you reject the application.”

The plans aim to build 30 new houses over the land (Image: Newsquest)

A representative of Be One Homes said: “We are very pleased to be partnering with local developers Forshaw to create these properties.

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“We are looking to deliver 50 per cent of the properties under a social rent scheme. So far we have had over 1400 expressions of interest in the properties.”

Councillors then had a chance to ask questions to the planning officer Jodie Turton.

Cllr John McHugh asked: “Are there any waterways next to the area that have been contaminated? Will the new trees that are planted in the area have TPOs on them?”

The planning officer said: “The land used to be the site of a bleachworks. And no, the trees will not immediately have tree protection orders on them when they first go in – this can only be done at a later date.”

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Cllr Glen Clarke said: “What measures are being taken to protect the waterways?”

The officer said: “The environment agency have asked us to monitor the construction process sure that no pollution goes into the waterways as a result of it.”

The plans will go to a vote at town hall (Image: BTP Architects)

Cllr David Grant made a statement: “I think what is important is that it is 100 per cent affordable housing. There is a huge need. I don’t see anything in the reports that would warrant refusal.

Cllr McHugh agreed: “I think the key thing is that it is affordable.

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I think it sad that a community is affected by this, but it is the key that it is affordable. I second the motion to approve.

The planning committee then voted to approve the application.

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Report published on major Fylingdales Moor/Langdale End fire

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Report published on major Fylingdales Moor/Langdale End fire

The report provides a clear review of how last year’s Fylingdales Moor/Langdale End wildfire was handled, based on operational data, decision records and feedback from staff involved.

The wildfire happened in summer 2025 and required a long, coordinated response involving many organisations working together. At its peak, it affected a large area (over 20km) of moorland and forest.

The report provides a clear review of how last year’s Fylingdales Moor/Langdale End wildfire was handled, based on operational data, decision records and feedback from staff involved.

The incident was particularly complex as the fire occurred in a remote area with limited water supplies and difficult access.

Parts of the site had previously been used as a military training range, meaning crews also had to work around the risk of unexploded ordnance.

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Despite these challenges, there was no loss of life, no serious injuries and no damage to homes. Critical infrastructure at RAF Fylingdales was also successfully protected.

The report highlights several key strengths, including teamwork between more than 30 partner organisations, successful protection of communities, homes and infrastructure and clear command structures and use of specialist wildfire expertise

It also sets out where improvements can be made, including enhancing wildfire pre-planning and sharing of wildfire and other risk information, strengthening resilience for long-running incidents

and developing scalable welfare and support for staff over extended periods

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(Image: North Yorkshire Fire & Rescue Service)

Chief Fire Officer Jonathan Dyson said: “I would like to take this opportunity to again thank our staff, partner agencies, other fire and rescue services, landowners and farmers and local communities for the support they provided both during the incident and since.

“This debrief provides a clear account of our response to one of the most significant wildfire incidents we have faced. It highlights what worked well, but also where we need to improve, so we can continue to strengthen how we prepare for and respond to incidents of this scale.

“Since the incident, we have already taken steps to strengthen our safety messaging working more closely with partners. We have also improved our ability to operate in remote areas by developing new water supply arrangements with farmers and we are working with landowners and partners through a North Yorkshire Fire Operations Group to improve coordination and shared understanding of wildfire risk.

“The remaining areas identified in the debrief will be taken forward through a structured improvement programme to ensure learning is fully embedded and put into practice.”

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David Skaith, Mayor of York and North Yorkshire said: “The Langdale wildfire was a defining moment for our region, highlighting both the scale of the challenge we face and the importance of being prepared for it.

“Jo and I have spoken to businesses and landowners in the area and understand the impact they still face. This was a truly North Yorkshire response and I will always be in awe of the bravery and commitment of our firefighters, farmers, landowners and everyone that came together to tackle this unprecedented incident. We are seeing the impact of more extreme weather in the countryside, our communities, and our economy. Incidents like this reinforce the need to think long-term about resilience, how we manage our land, how we support our emergency services, and how we work together to reduce risk.

(Image: North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service)

“This debrief helps build that bigger picture. It’s not just about learning from one incident, but about shaping how we respond to a changing environment. I will continue to work with partners and government to ensure North Yorkshire has the recognition and investment it needs to meet these challenges head-on.”

Jo Coles, Deputy mayor for policing, fire and crime said: “This was one of the most significant incidents North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service has ever faced, and I want to once again recognise the extraordinary efforts of fire fighters, partners such as farmers and landowners as well as the local community whose combined effort was instrumental in tackling this extraordinary fire. It’s vital that lessons are learned following an incident on this scale so that we can improve the prevention and protection work that will keep people safe from future risks across the county – this debrief is a crucial part of that process. The work to improve prevention of future wildfires is already underway and I will continue work closely with Mayor David Skaith to hold the fire and rescue service to account for those changes on behalf of the public.”

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The report can be read in full at Fylingdales Moor/Langdale Wildfire – North Yorkshire Fire & Rescue Service

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