The Statement of Persons Nominated was published on 13 February and confirmed 14 candidates for the by-election. The defending party, the Liberal Democrats, nominated
Eastleigh Borough Council councillor
Mike Thornton. Maria Hutchings, the Conservatives' candidate at the general election, was chosen as the candidate for the by-election on 7 February. Hutchings came to prominence in 2005 when she interrupted a live television phone-in with the then Prime Minister
Tony Blair. She said that she would vote for
Britain to leave the EU and would have voted against
gay marriage. She also identified as
pro-life and says that she is not a "Tory toff". The
Labour Party chose author and broadcaster
John O'Farrell as its candidate on 12 February. Having received during the campaign negative coverage of selected quotations from a book he wrote in 1998, in which he recalled the Brighton bomb attacks against the Conservative Party and then Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, O'Farrell reflected after polling day that the experience was enough to put him off electoral politics for good.
UKIP Eastleigh selected candidate
Diane James, a Councillor from
Ewhurst in
Waverley, Surrey, who was elected there as an independent and subsequently joined UKIP. The party's leader,
Nigel Farage, previously contested the seat at a
by-election in 1994. While he initially said he would consider standing again, he decided not to after much media speculation. The
English Democrats fielded Michael Walters, the South East Area Secretary of the party. The Christian Party candidate was Kevin Milburn. He said "I am standing in this election to allow voters the opportunity to show their disapproval of this Government over many issues, including their attack on marriage. The Government has upset vast swathes of the population with this ill-conceived Bill." The
Monster Raving Loony Party, which stood in the 1994 by-election, selected its leader
Howling Laud Hope as its candidate. On 8 February, the
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition announced that it had chosen Darren Procter, secretary of the Southampton Shipping branch of the
RMT union, as their candidate. Procter also serves on the National Executive Committee of RMT. He stood on an anti-
austerity platform. The
National Health Action Party, a new party founded in 2012 in response to the
Coalition Government's healthcare reforms, selected Dr Iain Maclennan, a local doctor and former
Royal Navy medical officer, as their candidate. Independent candidate Danny Stupple stood in protest at gay marriage and what he describes as the party "machine" pushing it through Parliament. The
Wessex Regionalist Party fielded the party's president, Colin Bex, as its candidate. ==Polling==