Farage faces Clacton showdown as rivals refuse to stand Nigel Farage's dramatic gamble to resign as MP and force a by-election has taken another extraordinary twist after Labour, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and Restore Britain all announced they will not contest the seat. The Reform UK leader resigned his Clacton seat insisting voters—not Westminster—should judge the allegations surrounding his finances. If re-elected, Farage says he will return to Parliament with an even stronger mandate. The decision by the major parties to stand aside means the campaign is shaping up exactly as Farage hoped: a straight fight between Reform and what he calls "the establishment". Farage: 'Let the people decide'Announcing his resignation, Farage dismissed the controversy surrounding undeclared financial support and accused the political establishment of trying to destroy Reform UK. "This is a chance to stick two fingers up to the entire establishment," he declared. Farage insists he has broken no parliamentary rules and says the financial support he received was personal rather than political. Rivals refuse to play alongLabour branded the contest a political stunt designed to distract attention from the Standards Commissioner's investigation. The Conservatives also declined to field a candidate, with Kemi Badenoch calling it a "fake election". The Liberal Democrats argued the parliamentary investigation should finish before voters return to the polls, while the Green Party and Restore Britain also confirmed they would stay out. The only confirmed challenger so far is perennial protest candidate Count Binface. Investigation only pausedAlthough Farage has resigned, the parliamentary standards investigation has not disappeared. The inquiry into allegations surrounding a £5 million gift from businessman Christopher Harborne has simply been suspended while Farage is no longer an MP. If he wins the by-election, the investigation resumes immediately. Should the Standards Commissioner eventually recommend a suspension long enough to trigger recall rules, Clacton could even face a second by-election. High-stakes political gambleFarage won Clacton comfortably at the 2024 General Election with a majority of more than 8,000 votes. By forcing a by-election himself, he is betting that voters care more about what they see as establishment attacks than Westminster investigations. If he wins convincingly, he will almost certainly claim a renewed personal mandate and argue the allegations have been rejected by the public. If turnout is poor or his majority is slashed, however, critics will argue the gamble has backfired. DiscussionThis could become one of the most unusual by-elections in modern British politics. With the main parties refusing to stand, Farage has turned what began as a standards investigation into a public referendum on himself. Whether that proves to be political genius or an enormous miscalculation will soon be decided—not in Westminster—but by the voters of Clacton. SOURCE