Location map of Stockport on the UK map

General election forecast

Stockport

Predicted winner: Labour with 30.4% of the vote, a 0.3pp margin over Reform UK.

england · north west

Predicted vote share

How the model expects this constituency to vote

Labour
30.4% +30.4pp
Reform UK
30.1% +15.2pp
Green Party
17.1% +6.0pp
Conservative
8.8% +8.8pp
Lib Dem
8.7% +0.2pp
Workers Party
3.4% -0.3pp
SNP
0.8% +0.8pp
Solidarity
0.4% -0.0pp
Plaid Cymru
0.3% +0.3pp
Other
0.0% 0.0pp

Coloured number is the swing from the 2024 general election result.

Sitting MP

Navendu Mishra

See also: TheyWorkForYou

2024 general election result

What happened on 4 July 2024

CandidatePartyVotesShare
Navendu Mishra Labour Party 21,787 49.9%
Lynn Schofield Reform UK 6,517 14.9%
Oliver Johnstone Conservative and Unionist Party 4,967 11.4%
Helena Julia Mellish Green Party 4,865 11.1%
Wendy Meikle Lib Dem 3,724 8.5%
Ayesha Khan Workers Party 1,630 3.7%
Ashley Walker Solidarity 193 0.4%

Source: Returning officer declaration

How accurate is the model here?

Our 2024 backtest for this constituency

We replayed the same model architecture against the 4 July 2024 general election using only the data a forecaster running the model in May 2024 would have known. Here's what it would have predicted for Stockport, and what actually happened.

✓ Winner called correctly , predicted Labour, actual Labour. Major-party MAE: 3.70pp, the average gap between our predicted vote share and the actual share, per major party.

Predicted

Labour
56.0%
Reform UK
14.1%
Conservative
9.7%
Green Party
6.0%
Lib Dem
13.3%
Workers Party
0.4%

Actual on 4 July 2024

Labour
49.9% +6.2pp
Reform UK
14.9% -0.8pp
Conservative
11.4% -1.6pp
Green Party
11.1% -5.1pp
Lib Dem
8.5% +4.8pp
Workers Party
3.7% -3.3pp

Positive gap = we predicted that party would win more share than they did. See the full GE backtest across all 650 seats for the model's national accuracy.

How this forecast was built
  1. GE2024 Baseline. Actual GE2024 result in Stockport
  2. National Swing (Strong Transition Model). Multiplicative bounded swing, losers shed in proportion to local share, gainers absorb pro-rata national gain. Replaces additive UNS.
  3. BES MRP Prior. Baseline blended with BES Wave 1-30 north_west prior at weight 5%
  4. English-identity floor. English 30.2% → Reform +2.0pp
  5. Normalise. Shares scaled to 100%

Read the full general election methodology →