In 2016 the television actress Tracy Brabin was elected as Labour MP for Batley and Spen, the constituency in which I live. (It has now been re-drawn to become Spen Valley.). In 2022 M/s Brabin decided she would rather be, or the Labour Party thought she had the best chance of winning the election for, the Mayor West Yorkshire.
She did win, so resigned as our MP and was replaced after a by-election by another Labour MP, Kim Leadbeater.
The average public cost of a parliamentary by-election is just short of a quarter of a million ponds. (£228, 000 - it varies with the number of candidates, as a large part of the cost is the Freepost to which each candidate is entitled.)
I thought at the time that the Labour party should have born the public cost of this by-election.
There was no need for it other than the internal manoeuvrings of the Labour party. It arose only becasue the Labour Party felt that Miss Brabin had the best chance of winning, or she preferred the job and she was prepared to break the promises she had made to the electorate of Batley and Spen if she got it.
This argument applies to the creation of a vacancy in the Makerfield constituency in order to give Andy Burnham an opportunity to re-enter parliament and challenge Sir Keir Starmer for his job.
There is no need for it other than that sections of the Labour party think it would be to their advantage.
So they should pay the public cost.
Much more expensively, should Mr Burnham win the Makerfield seat he will have to resign as mayor of Manchester and the by-election to replace him is estimated to cost the public purse almost five million pounds (£5 000 000 - it's a very large electorate.)
I'm sure these manoeuvrings feed the public's distrust of our apolitical system. Politicians abuse it for what we see as their "games." It's not just the cost, but the fact that the actors as so willing to break the promisees of devoted service they have made to their previous constituents in order to further their careers.
And the manoeuvrings are not always successful.
Way back in 1964 the Labour Party under Huddersfield's own Harold Wilson won the general election (with a narrow majority of four.) But their shadow foreign secretary, Patrick Gordon Walker, failed to win his seat of Smethwick after a bitter and racist Tory campaign.
Gordon Walker was a senior Labour figure who had been expected to become foreign secretary. A "vacancy" was created for him a a safe constituency, Leyton, by transferring the Labour winner to the Lords.
PGW fought the by-election - and lost.
The electorate didn't like being manipulated.
Things may not have changed.