The highly-entertaining Liverpool favourite is back on Merseyside for what could be a very tricky test against a former two-division world champion.
That win ame just three months after Ball had been hard done by to miss out on the WBC title at 126lbs in a controversial split-decision draw with Rey Vargas.
Ball (23-1-0, 13 KOs) kicked out and had a point deducted for pushing during his dramatic 11th-round win over Ireland’s TJ Doheny in Liverpool, having also floored Ronny Rios three times during his first defence en route to a late stoppage.
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The 28-year-old has since been pushing to unify at featherweight and targeted the likes of IBF champion Angelo Leo and WBO title-holder Rafael Espinoza, while he has also been called out already by Bruce ‘Shu Shu’ Carrington, who picked up the WBC belt by knocking out Carlos Castro on the Teofimo Lopez vs Shakur Stevenson undercard at Madison Square Garden last weekend.
Ball has also been mentioned as a potentially difficult opponent for pound-for-pound great Naoya Inoue, who could move up to featherweight in future but is first expected to face Japanese rival Junto Nakatani in a super-bantamweight mega-fight later in 2026.
Instead it’s Figueroa (26-2-1, 19 KOs) next, the American former WBA and WBC super-bantamweight and WBC featherweight champion, who lost his belts in two defeats to Stephen Fulton that were more than four years apart.
‘The Heartbreaker’ began on the comeback trail from that latest loss against Joet Gonzalez on the Mario Barrios vs Manny Pacquiao undercard in Las Vegas last July, with many thinking him fortunate to win a competitive WBA title eliminator on the scorecards.
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Ball vs Figueroa fight date and venue
Nick Ball vs Brandon Figueroa takes place tonight, Saturday February 7, 2026. The event is being held in Ball’s home city of Liverpool, at M&S Bank Arena.
Ball vs Figueroa start time and ring walks
Saturday night’s main undercard is due to start at 7pm GMT, with main event ring walks pencilled in for approximately 10:15pm. As ever, those timings are subject to change.
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How to watch Ball vs Figueroa
TV channel and live stream: The card is being broadcast live and exclusive worldwide through DAZN, not via its pay-per-view service.
Ball vs Figueroa undercard
Saturday night’s undercard includes Liverpool’s Andrew Cain in a WBC bantamweight title eliminator against Mexico’s Alejandro Jair Gonzalez, with Naoya’s younger brother Takuma Inoue lying in wait.
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Nick Ball vs Brandon Figueroa
Andrew Cain vs Alejandro Jair Gonzalez
Lucas Szeto-Biswana vs Liam MacMillan
Luke Turner vs Jensen Irving
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Paddy Lacey vs Jack Swallow
William Birchall vs Cain Singh
Jack Turner vs Juan Carlos Martinez Urbina
Brad Strand vs Ruben Lezama Gonzalez
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Stephen Clarke vs Lewis Howells
Sam Norris vs Jack England
Hassan Ishaq vs Leonardo Baez
Ball vs Figueroa prediction
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Nick Ball to retain his title on points after another thriller in Liverpool.
Peterborough City Council has announced it will be sending half-term supermarket vouchers out to eligible families soon to help them support their children over the school holidays.
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The £10 vouchers will be sent out automatically by text and email on Saturday, February 14 using school data and information held by the council.
All vouchers must be activated by 9pm the following day (Sunday, March 15). Any voucher that remains unactivated past this time will be deemed invalid. Activation is done by simply selecting a supermarket to use.
Councillor Katy Cole, Cabinet Member for Children’s Services, said: “We are continuing to do all we can to support families in need of help, which is why I’m delighted that once again we will be providing this worthwhile scheme over the February school break.”
The council warned that it may take up to 9pm on the day the voucher is sent for it to arrive. Parents with more than one eligible child should note that their voucher links will probably arrive separately.
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Eligible recipients should wait until Sunday, February 15 to contact the council about any missing vouchers.
It is important to note that any children who become eligible for the period up to and including Sunday February 22 will also receive vouchers if an application has been made.
Cllr Cole said she would “strongly urge” anyone who is eligible for the scheme but has not already signed up to consider doing so as soon as possible.
“The free school meals scheme not only helps families save around £450 a year per child but also helps their child’s primary school receive much-needed additional funding,” she said.
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Information about free school meals and how to apply can be found here.
Eddie Howe has moved to quell speculation he could walk away at the end of the season following a dispiriting run of results.
Newcastle’s defence of the Carabao Cup, their first major domestic trophy in 70 years, ended on Wednesday night when Manchester City completed a 5-1 aggregate semi-final victory over Howe’s men, and they head into tonight’s Premier League game against Brentford sitting in 11th place in the table.
However, after social media went into overdrive in the wake of a hugely disappointing first-half performance at the Etihad Stadium to suggest the 48-year-old has taken the club as far as he can, with further speculation that he could replace England boss Thomas Tuchel this summer despite Newcastle chief executive David Hopkinson’s claim this week that the two parties remain happy with each other, Howe was in defiant mood.
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Howe said: “That’s a surprise to me. I give my best to the football club every single day, to all the players and the staff. I try to be the best version of myself to inspire the team to win games.
“That’s my only thought. I don’t tend to look too far ahead, but I try to prepare and plan for the club to move forward in every sense. My individual future isn’t really relevant.
“Who knows? I don’t know my length of time here, I’ve got no idea. I just try to do my best every day until told differently.”
Injury-hit Newcastle go into the weekend seven points adrift of the top five but still in business in the Champions League – they face Azerbaijani side Qarabag over two legs for a place in the last 16 later this month – and the FA Cup.
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Their home form has been reasonably solid – although Liverpool, Arsenal and Aston Villa have won in the league at St James’ Park this season – but their return on the road during a campaign which already amounts to 38 games in all competitions has been significantly below par.
The loss of £130m striker Alexander Isak to Liverpool during the summer has had a lasting and ongoing impact, and Howe acknowledges that the £219m they spent on Nick Woltemade, Yoane Wissa, Anthony Elanga and Jacob Ramsey is yet to pay full dividends.
Cole Palmer scored a first-half hat-trick in Chelsea’s 3-1 win away at Wolves (Reuters)
Cole Palmer insists he is still not 100 per cent fit despite scoring a hat-trick in Chelsea’s 3-1 win over Wolves on Saturday.
The 23-year-old has missed over two months of the season due to a groin injury and Liam Rosenior has stressed the need to manage the midfielder’s minutes since his arrival at Stamford Bridge.
‘It felt good to score some goals and get three points,’ Palmer told BBC’s Match of the Day.
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‘I don’t think [I’m 100 per cent fit] just yet. Obviously people don’t know what goes on behind the scenes but being injured the whole season is not ideal and when I’m not able to perform as I want to because I’ve been injured, and still dealing with the injury, but hopefully I can get over the injury soon by managing it.
‘I know what level I can provide when I feel 100% fit. Not being 100% fit isn’t ideal, I still feel like I can help the team but when I’m back to full fitness I feel like I can go to another level.’
Cole Palmer celebrated by covering his ears after scoring Chelsea’s first goal against Wolves (Getty)
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Palmer also praised Rosenior’s impact after he replaced Enzo Maresca as Chelsea’s head coach last month.
‘Life under Liam is amazing, he gives us all confidence,’ Palmer said.
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‘Lets us be ourselves, play free. I’m sure when I’m back proper fit you’ll see the best of me. Him and all the staff give us all confidence on the training pitch, with his strategies, the way we play, I really like it.’
Palmer also explained his celebration against Wolves as he covered his ears after scoring Chelsea’s first goal.
‘Everyone loves to chat rubbish, don’t they? I don’t pay too much attention to it. You see things,’ Palmer said.
‘But I feel like I’ve come from a strong place anyway so I don’t pay attention to it.’
Written by Natalie’s former classmate, the play aims to highlight the ongoing issue with femicide here in Northern Ireland
A former classmate of Natalie McNally has penned a new play to highlight femicide in Northern Ireland and raise money for Women’s Aid.
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Dark Forest Theatre’s upcoming production ‘I, She, Medusa’ centres around gender-related violence in NI and is set within a surreal world where the character of Medusa come to terms with what has happened to her and the trauma that women experience.
Written and co-directed by Nathan Martin, who went to school with Natalie, it will be staged at Lurgan Town Hall on Feburary 21 where 100% of ticket sales will go to support Women’s Aid Armagh.
It will also be performed at the MAC Belfast on February 26 and 27 where a portion of all tickets sold will also be donated to Women’s Aid Belfast.
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Natalie McNally was 32 when she was stabbed and killed at her home in Lurgan, Co Armagh, on December 18 2022. She had been 15 weeks pregnant.
Her partner, Stephen McCullagh, has been charged with her murder and will go on trial on February 16 2026. He denies the charges against him.
Writer and director Nathan Martin said: ‘This show will challenge me in ways that I have never experienced before. It has been the hardest to write and the hardest to develop.
“I don’t know how I will perform it with detachment but already it is the show I am already the proudest of and most afraid of.
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“The play is and will always be dedicated to Natalie McNally, who has left a profound and lasting impact on all of us lucky to have known her and to all the women we have lost through abuse.”
Established in 2023, Dark Forest Theatre is an independent, travelling theatre company based in the heart of Northern Ireland, dedicated to the craft of authentic and compelling storytelling, with a focus on creating work that is emotionally resonant.
A description of the show reads: “Compelled to remain within her gilded prison, Medusa is trapped. To escape her reality, she retreats into games, stories, and make-believe, her only visitor the god Hermes, who humours her desires.
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“But in the distance, the ticking of a clock grows louder – counting down to zero. Her prison begins to fracture, exposing a surreal and terrifying world beneath the surface.
“‘I, She, Medusa is an original piece was created to highlight the ongoing crisis of violence against women in Northern Ireland.
“It seeks to give voice to those we have lost and to honour the strength and resilience of those who endure. Developed and directed by Nathan Martin the artistic team is completed with Heather Martin as co-director and Christine Clark as stage Manager.”
For tickets for the Lurgan charity performance, see here. For tickets for the Belfast performances, see here
The fired-up Azzurri raced into a 12-point lead within 14 minutes and the Scots – with back-three big-hitters Blair Kinghorn, Darcy Graham and Duhan van der Merwe all dropped amid question marks over their form – were unable to get their attack firing in response, while their set-piece continually malfunctioned.
Japanese politics is politer and more understated than most.
It’s perhaps the reason that Western audiences do not always pay a huge amount of attention.
But something feels different this time, and that’s largely down to the woman at the centre of this story; the drum-playing, Trump-hugging, China-provoking prime minister who has raised the stakes for both Japan and the region.
In central Tokyo, just a few hours before polls open in the snap election she called, hundreds of people crowded into a small local park to see Sanae Takaichi.
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Image: Supporters at a rally
Despite the bitterly cold temperatures and the fact that many struggled to see her over the sea of heads, there was a sense that something significant was unfolding.
“I was just passing,” one woman told me, “but I couldn’t not stop to see her!”
There is no disputing the fact that Takaichi is just different to those who have gone before her.
She’s a former heavy metal drummer and motorbike rider, and she is happy to jump around the stage at rallies and sing to visiting foreign leaders (Italy’s Giorgia Meloni was greeted with a rousing happy birthday).
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K-Pop jam session with South Korea and Japan leaders
Her outsized character in a scene historically so male and so dry has led to soaring personal approval ratings, 2.6 million followers on X and a one-year wait to buy her signature black handbag.
Not to mention the reversal of fortunes seen by her struggling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP): it now looks set to take a majority in Japan’s Lower House, just four months after she assumed the leadership in the wake of her unpopular predecessor’s resignation.
Image: A hat worn by supporters has ‘Sanai’, Takaichi’s first name, written on the back and ‘Japan is back’ on the front
Japan’s ‘Iron Lady’ will pursue conservative vision if she wins
But she’s also far from the liberal champion many might have hoped for in the country’s first female leader; she is, in fact, ultra conservative.
She’s anti gay marriage and a vocal defender of traditional gender roles; she sees Margaret Thatcher as a role model and has leant into a rising feeling of “foreigner fatigue” in Japan, directed both at immigrants and tourists.
If she secures her own mandate at Sunday’s election, it is this conservative vision that she will be pursuing.
Image: The ‘battle bus’ drumming up support for Takaichi
‘She’s like a friendly neighbour or sister’
In her hometown of Nara, they think that is a good thing.
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Here, a small minivan has been converted into a “battle bus” of sorts, and her dedicated team of supporters are driving it around the traditional streets, asking locals to sign it, calling her name through the megaphones and asking for their votes.
“She’s like a friendly neighbour or sister,” one old man tells us as he remembers her starting out in politics.
Image: This man describes Takaichi as a ‘friendly neighbour’
‘She is simply doing what is necessary to protect Japan’
When I ask one of her team what he makes of her conservative views, he simply responds: “Rather than labelling it conservatism, I think she is simply doing what is necessary to protect Japan.”
Of course, in any election, domestic policy is a focus; she favours tax cuts and increased public spending to boost a sluggish economy.
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But the area of her policy that has brought the most attention and the most ire has been her approach to foreign policy and, particularly, her approach to China.
Image: A member of her team says Takaichi was ‘doing what is necessary to protect Japan’
Image: This voter in Nara says he has been supporting Takaichi for 20 years
Support from Trump
According to its constitution, Japan is still a pacifist country, and it has thus long relied on the US for its security.
Takaichi has made a particular point of cosying up to Donald Trump’s America; his visit to Japan last year was notable for the excess of its warmth, and Trump has actively endorsed her campaign.
Trump hails ‘golden age’ of Japan relations
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But she has also been highly hawkish in her attitudes to Japan’s largest and most powerful neighbour.
The two were already set to be at odds; Takaichi’s plan to spend more on and build up Japan’s military is a deeply sore point in China, which suffered enormously at its hands during the Second World War.
But things plunged to a new low in November when she said that a Chinese attack on the island of Taiwan (a self-governing democracy that China sees as a breakaway province) would amount to an “existential threat” to Japan, and it would have the right to intervene militarily.
The comments have caused outrage in China, drawing a raft of damaging retaliations, from the banning of the imports of Japanese seafood to restrictions on its access to crucial rare metals and a pointed suggestion that Chinese travellers should avoid it.
Relations are at their lowest ebb for over a decade, and while some Japanese are happy to see their leader stand up to China, others are anxious.
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“Seeing China imposing economic sanctions, it proves how thoughtless her remarks were,” one man at her rally tells me. “It’s definitely more dangerous.”
Image: Takaichi has been targeted by Chinese state media
Image: A man addressed Takaichi’s Taiwan remarks at her rally
The reality is that for all the Instagrammable moments, Takaichi’s stance on China might well be the key issue that plagues and potentially even defines her leadership; it is not a disagreement that the Chinese will just let go.
Japan’s lean to the right under a Takaichi-style nationalism might well bring a renewed sense of pride to some, but it could also bring a new jeopardy to all.
The Blues beat the Premier League’s bottom club courtesy of two penalties and a fine finish into the roof of the net from Palmer, racking up a strong enough lead that their second-half drop-off did not prove costly.
Victory made Liam Rosenior just the second English manager in Premier League history to win his first four league games in charge. In the rain and wind on a grim day in Wolverhampton, Chelsea recovered well from their midweek defeat at Arsenal.
Palmer’s long-time-coming moment
His season has been such a frustrating one, marred by different injuries but with the unmovable theme being his groin injury in particular, painful one day yet unnoticeable the next, impossible to plan for and so frustrating for all at Chelsea as well as the player himself.
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But luck was on Palmer’s side at Molineux, with Chelsea not needing to get out of second gear before he had helped himself to two ice-cool penalties after a couple of crazy, needless fouls committed by Wolves on Joao Pedro in the box.
The third goal was a touch of class and displayed Palmer’s attacking instincts as he arrived in the box late to fire high into the roof of the net from Marc Cucurella’s pull-back.
And from Rosenior and Chelsea’s perspective, it was perfect to be able to substitute the Englishman after an hour, with Leeds United to visit Stamford Bridge on Tuesday.
Cole Palmer starred with a first-half hat-trick as Chelsea beat Wolves 3-1 at Molineux
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Records tumble for the hat-trick hero
The fact first Chelsea’s first clear-cut chance from open play was the opening that saw Palmer make it 3-0 spoke volumes about Wolves’ gifts to Chelsea, but Palmer was delighted to accept that, and it was a record-breaking afternoon for the 23-year-old as a result.
In just 41 touches and with only three shots on target — goal, goal, goal — Palmer became the first player in Premier League history to have scored three hat-tricks in the first half of a match, having previously done so against Everton in April 2024 and Brighton in September 2024.
He also netted his fourth Premier League hat-trick for the Blues, the most of any Chelsea player ever. Those he overtook to claim that record for himself? Frank Lampard, Didier Drogba and Jimmy Floyds Hasselbaink.
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It was quite the afternoon for him. Thomas Tuchel, the England head coach, will have been delighted from wherever he was watching on.
A worrying trend continues
Chelsea, under Rosenior, are still a way off producing a sparkling 90-minute performance that is free-flowing from start to finish.
Indeed, he said afterwards at Molineux: “I want us to have a perfect 90 minutes. It was very frustrating.”
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Liam Rosenior knows Chelsea are still far from perfect
Chelsea FC via Getty Images
And Tolu Arokodare’s scrappy second-half goal from a corner was a needless consolation goal to concede and ruined the Blues’ chances of a clean sheet that, at 3-0 up, they really ought to have been able to get over the line and claim for themselves.
It was little wonder Robert Sanchez was so visibly furious — he was given no help from his defenders to clear the corner from which Wolves scored.It was a similarly poor goal to ship to Antonio Vergara’s effort for Napoli in Chelsea’s 3-2 win in Italy, and Jarrod Bowen’s cross-cum-goal at the Bridge last weekend.
Robert Sanchez reacts after Wolves’ goal in the second half
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Chelsea must cut that out. They are lucky it did not cost them this time.
Material from the lorry was left strewn across the carriageway after the collision
David Powell Court reporter and Philip Dewey Court Correspondent
19:34, 07 Feb 2026Updated 19:34, 07 Feb 2026
These photos depict the aftermath of a lorry colliding with a bridge and losing its cargo. The incident resulted in a temporary road closure on Friday.
The road is now clear and traffic is moving smoothly. It remains unknown whether anyone was injured in the incident, which occurred in Saltney, Flintshire, around 1.30pm on Friday.
However, these images show how debris from the unidentified vehicle was scattered across the road following the collision.
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North Wales Police posted on Facebook: “Bridge Street in Saltney was closed earlier due to a lorry colliding with the bridge.
“Network Rail have now checked the bridge, the lorry has been recovered and the road is now open again.”
Online users were quick to comment on the unfortunate accident at the structure, which has a clearance of 2.8 metres (nine ft three ins), reports North Wales Live.
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One woman suggested: “Put more warnings in the trucks and around the bridge, People moaning seriously?
“Not as bad as drink/drug drivers on the road.”
Another observer wrote: “If ever a bridge looked low before you went under it, it’s that one. I wince every time i go to Go Outdoors.”
A joker added: “If only there was some kind of warning written on the bridge..”
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Lucy Powell told The Independent that the vote, on 26 February, represents “a line in the sand” in Labour’s fight to stop the advance of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.
But she admitted she expects the Mandelson issue to come up on the doorstep, and she could not say that Labour was confident of retaining the seat or if the prime minister will show his face there.
Ministers, senior Labour figures and backbench MPs believe the by-election is “the crunch point” for the beleaguered prime minister, with one claiming: “It’s a referendum on Starmer, pure and simple.”
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The prime minister has faced the toughest week of his premiership so far, with his integrity and judgement called into question over his decision to appoint Lord Mandelson as US ambassador despite knowing about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
Lucy Powell (left) and Anna Turley, chair of the Labour Party (right) announce that Angeliki Stogia (centre) is the party’s candidate for the Gorton and Denton by-election (Peter Byrne/PA Wire)
To add to Sir Keir’s problems, it has been claimed that he and his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney were warned against appointing Mandelson to the role of ambassador to the US by both former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner and Labour peer Maurice Glasman.
Ms Rayner, who was in Gorton and Denton campaigning on Saturday, is now emerging as a potential replacement for Sir Keir and her intervention on Wednesday, siding with the Tories, was crucial in forcing the PM to release all vetting documents linked to Mandelson’s appointment.
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Shocking revelations on Mandelson allegedly passing confidential market-sensitive government material to Epstein when he was business secretary in 2009 have added further questions over the appointment.
Ms Powell admitted the scandal will become one of the factors in the by-election, and gave a lukewarm defence of the prime minister’s actions in appointing him as US ambassador.
“All I’d say is that prime ministers have to make judgement calls all day long and all the time, and sometimes they get them wrong,” she said. “I think the prime minister’s put his hands up about that.”
Labour is under no illusions about the scale of the task ahead in Gorton and Denton. Ministers have been ordered up to the Greater Manchester constituency to campaign in a seat the party won with more than 50 per cent of the vote in 2024.
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Their campaign has already been hit by a row over Sir Keir blocking Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham from standing to be the Labour candidate, with many believing he was the only one who could stop Reform.
Ms Powell, who voted to allow Mr Burnham to run on Labour’s National Executive Committee, said she and the Manchester mayor “want to draw a line” under that episode but insisted he was “a great asset” in the by-election campaign.
She highlighted how a succession of cabinet ministers are being sent up to the by-election to knock on doors including chancellor Rachel Reeves, education secretary Bridget Phillipson, and transport secretary Heidi Alexander, as Labour throws everything at stopping Reform. But she was unable to say whether the beleaguered prime minister would be joining them.
Ms Powell said: “I’m not sure yet, but look, everyone’s going to be coming and playing their part. But I speak to him regularly about it.”
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Mr Farage, who has visited the constituency several times to campaign with Reform UK candidate Matt Goodwin, told The Independent: “I really do believe this is turning into a referendum on Keir Starmer.”
Starmer apologised for believing Mandelson’s lies on Thursday (2026 Getty Images)
One Labour MP said: “Farage could not have written this. It allows him to paint politicians as all ‘at it’, part of some kind of elite, helping each other out instead of voters. It is an absolute disaster for a seat where everyone is watching us and the pressure is on to prove that Reform can be stopped.”
A minister added: “If we do [come third], the PM is in trouble.”
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Others repeated that he needs to go now, with left-wing MP Nadia Whittome describing the prime minister’s position as “untenable”.
Kim Johnson, the Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, said: “The public and MPs aren’t willing to wait for a by-election or the locals – both were already going to be serious tests. The Mandelson scandal eclipses all of it.”
Neil Duncan-Jordan, the MP for Poole, added: “We can’t just keep going on like this – lurching from one crisis to the next.”
Recent polling suggests Reform is leading the way, but only by a few points on average. The Greens published canvassing data suggesting Reform was leading, with them in second and Labour a distant third.
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Reform candidate Matt Goodwin pictured with Nigel Farage (Danny Lawson/PA Wire)
Two of the current main MRP polls put Reform ahead of Labour: Electoral Calculus, at 32 per cent to Labour’s 22.6, and Britain Predicts, at 32 per cent to Labour’s much higher 26.
Meanwhile, Polling Report predicts that Labour will hold the seat with 35.26 per cent of the vote, while Reform gets 27.65.
But Ms Powell, who represents the nearby Manchester Central seat and is taking a lead in the campaign with candidate Angeliki Stogia, took a defiant tone.
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“This is not about my fortunes or other people’s fortunes. I’ve had enough of their [Reform’s] division, their othering, their blaming of the problems of society on immigrants.”
Highlighting how Reform’s candidate Matt Goodwin has been endorsed by far-right activist Tommy Robison, she added: “There has to be a line in the sand here, and this by-election is that line, and I’m holding it up firmly, as we all are as a team.”
Asked if this campaign was “a dry run” for Labour’s fight with Reform on a national level, she said: “In some ways this is. It’s about showing that we are absolutely up for that fight, we’re prepared to take on that fight.
“There are things that we will need to try out here and to learn from here. It’s important because we just can’t let Reform come into an area like this and have a free run.”