Labour leader
Keir Starmer visited the constituency during the campaign on 10 June, and Prime Minister
Boris Johnson visited the
Fox's Biscuits factory in the constituency on 18 June. Both had made earlier visits as well. On 28 June, Johnson visited the constituency again in a
Birstall factory visit. Labour candidate Kim Leadbeater focused on local issues such as crime, green spaces and the poor condition of the roads. Her large leaflet used in parts of the constituency did not use the word "Labour" except in the legal imprint, highlighting her name instead. Conservative candidate
Ryan Stephenson emphasised his local practical political experienceas a
Leeds councillor and director of a West Yorkshire
multi-academy trustto work with the Conservative government effectively, and would be "banging the drum for investment" in the constituency. He mostly targeted the voters in the
Spen Valley rural towns, away from Batley, who until 1997 held a majority in the constituency for the Conservatives. More than 20 per cent of the electorate are of south Asian origin, and were a major focus of electioneering by Workers Party candidate George Galloway, who concentrated on the issues of the
Palestinian territories, the
Kashmir conflict, criticism of Labour leader
Keir Starmer, the suspension of a teacher for showing a cartoon of
Muhammad at
Batley Grammar School and the reopening of a police station in Batley. Historically this community were strong supporters of the Labour Party, but there has been discontent at the waiving of Labour party rules to allow Leadbeater to be the only local candidate in the selection process, excluding local councillors from the community. On the same day the
Bishop of Leeds,
Nick Baines, issued a statement distancing the
United Benefice of Batley from the candidacy of Jayda Fransen, after campaign literature was distributed showing Fransen holding a white cross outside of St Thomas’s church. On 26 June, Kim Leadbeater was heckled and chased by a group of men while campaigning, after being questioned about her support for LGBT rights and her party's position on
Kashmir. The man who challenged her claimed to be speaking on behalf of Muslim parents in the region and had led protests against
LGBT-inclusive teaching at schools in
Birmingham. During an interview following the incident, Leadbeater accused Galloway of laughing at the situation from across the street. Galloway called the accusation "a lie" and condemned the abuse Leadbeater faced. On 27 June, former MP
Tracy Brabin and a group of Labour campaigners were attacked by three men. On 28 June, the Labour Party was criticised for distributing a leaflet featuring a photo of
Boris Johnson with Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi. Critics complained the leaflets were designed to appeal to Muslim voters and to exploit divisions between voters originating from India and Pakistan over the Kashmir conflict. Labour Friends of India asked the party to withdraw the leaflet immediately. A Labour spokesman said the leaflet emphasised not voting for the Labour candidate "would lead to a Tory MP who would support a Prime Minister who insults Muslim women and calls it a joke, refuses to deal with
Islamophobia in his party and fails to speak out on human rights abuses in Kashmir". In response, Labour MP
Navendu Mishra accused his own party of having a "hierarchy of racism", with "some groups seen as fair game for attacks based on religion/race/heritage". ==Opinion polling==