
After the Green Party romped to victory in the Gorton & Denton by-election, right-wingers blamed Reform’s loss on ‘family voting‘. Most people were unfamiliar with this term, but soon learned it was the act of men telling their wives how to vote. Now, Greater Manchester Police (GMP) have confirmed that the investigation into family voting is closed due to a lack of usable evidence:
Greater Manchester Police say they have no evidence of family voting after an extensive investigation, including speaking to Democracy Volunteers and seizing CCTV:
We’ve concluded our investigation into alleged ‘family voting’ at last month’s Gorton and Denton by-election,…
— Sam Coates Sky (@SamCoatesSky) March 27, 2026
Concluded
Sky*‘s* Sam Coates posted the following from GMP (emphasis added):
We’ve concluded our investigation into alleged ‘family voting’ at last month’s Gorton and Denton by-election, finding no evidence of any intent to influence or refrain any person from voting.
Our investigation into alleged influencing of voters at a polling booth (under Section 62C Representation of the People Act 1983 (Ballot Secrecy Act 2023)) began after a criminal report from the Reform UK party following a public statement made by independent electoral observers at Democracy Volunteers.
We have spoken to the four Democracy Volunteers observers present at polling stations on the day of the by-election (26 February) who have shared with us their eyewitness account. This includes some instances of more than one voter going into a booth at the same time, and instances of people looking over the shoulder of voters.
The information they have provided to us estimates this may have happened on 32 occasions across 15 polling stations.
The observers do not allege any verbal instruction or physical conduct that indicated one person was directing or coercing another regarding how to vote. This is a crucial part of the legislation to prove such an offence was committed.
Our investigation team, led by an experienced senior investigating officer, spoke to all four volunteers from Democracy Volunteers as part of our enquiries – obtaining a copy of their observations.
We also spoke to the Presiding Officers at 15 stations as well as the Acting Returning Officer, none of whom received any reports other than from Democracy Volunteers.
We have received no further criminal reports.
For us to investigate allegations, we require an understanding of who the potential suspects may be, and evidence that may corroborate eyewitness accounts. For an investigation to meet the criminal threshold for prosecution, we require admissible evidence of intent or action aimed at influencing the vote.
We have asked Democracy Volunteers for descriptions of those alleged to be involved, and timings on when these are believed to have occurred. These details were not documented by observers or the complainant, and we have not been provided with any identities or descriptions to pursue.
The absence of this information means there is no remaining reasonable line of enquiry. This also includes limitations with CCTV as an absence of descriptions, and votes not being time-stamped, meaning we are not able to identify individuals from footage.
We have approached all 45 polling stations in the Gorton and Denton constituency to ask for CCTV from the day. Forty-one of those polling stations told us they did not have CCTV activated in the building as it would have compromised the secrecy of the vote during polling day, in line with advice given.
We have seized and viewed CCTV from three of the remaining four polling stations. These are three polling station that Democracy Volunteers visited. We have spoken to the Presiding Officer from each one.
However, these stations do not show any evidence of anyone directing or coercing another regarding how to vote – the crucial part of the legislation to prove such an offence was committed.
There is no evidence to suggest any intent to influence or refrain a person from voting as stated in the Ballot Secrecy Act 2023.
We have been liaising with the Electoral Commission, who we have shared our findings with. We have also shared our findings with the Returning Officer.
We have updated the complainant about the work of our investigation and the conclusion we have reached.
Response to Reform
People clocked the ‘family voting’ issue as an attempt for Reform to save face as soon as Farage & co began complaining about it:
“Family voting” – of which police and polling station staff saw no evidence during the vote – is totally made up horseshit intended to cast suspicion on ethnic minorities for having the temerity to exercise their democratic right.
That’s it.
— Ash Sarkar (@AyoCaesar) February 27, 2026
I’ve just done a Google Trends search for “family voting”.
Weird how this has managed to materialise as a phenomenon for this one specific by-election! https://t.co/2uZdwvNIGz pic.twitter.com/WpzooTkXDj
— Owen Jones (@owenjonesjourno) February 26, 2026
Now, people are saying the GMP response confirms Reform are just “sore losers”:
Greater Manchester Police seized CCTV, interviewed Democracy Volunteers, and found no evidence of “family voting.” Reform party and Matt Badloss are sore losers, and they will not still take the L. pic.twitter.com/e1d5yXxbot
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) March 27, 2026
People are also arguing that something seems off about the so-called ‘democracy volunteers’:
So neither Reform UK nor the “Democracy Volunteers” bothered to give the police descriptions of people who were supposedly doing “family voting”, or any times they were supposedly doing it.
They didn’t even try and substantiate their brazen hoax. https://t.co/xkpJx3YE6F
— Rivkah Brown (@rivkahbrown) March 27, 2026
The Green Party’s Zack Polanski, meanwhile, called the story what it is — straight up Islamophobia:
The morning after Hannah won I was asked time and time again about this.
There was no evidence for it. Instead the establishment media fuelled the fire.
It was Islamaphobic. And it’s because those in power are scared of us ending rip off Britain. https://t.co/bhutYrkqoR
— Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) March 27, 2026
Hard to believe
The argument Farage and Matt Goodwin made was that Muslim men were bullying their wives into not voting for Reform. This was always a silly argument, because Muslim women have twice as many reasons to not vote for the Islamophobic and sexist Reform Party. As such, it’s unsurprising to see that this case has amounted to nothing (much like Reform candidate Matt Goodwin himself).
Featured image via Vecteezy
By Willem Moore
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