Council polls see support for Labour evaporate

LONDON – Labour saw its popular support evaporate yesterday after it suffered heavy defeats in local council elections across…

LONDON – Labour saw its popular support evaporate yesterday after it suffered heavy defeats in local council elections across the country.

In Staffordshire, under Labour control since 1981, councillor Derek Davis said his party had suffered a “complete wipe-out” after losing 28 seats as the Conservatives romped home.

“I’ve been a member of the Labour party since 1963 and I’ve never known it as bad as this,” said Mr Davis. “This is the lowest ebb I have ever known,” he told BBC television.

Labour also lost Derbyshire and Lancashire to the Conservatives, and saw Nottinghamshire pass to no overall majority, thereby losing control of its last four county councils in England.

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The Liberal Democrats lost control of Somerset to the Conservatives for the first time since 1989.

“Today’s results are remarkable,” said Tory leader David Cameron.

“The Conservative Party have won all over the country – from Lancashire to Devon and Somerset to Derbyshire. We have won councils that we haven’t held for three decades.”

The BBC calculated that Labour’s projected share of the national vote had slumped to 23 per cent, behind the Conservatives on 38 per cent and the Liberal Democrats on 28 per cent.

If early results were repeated at a general election, the Conservatives would form the next government with a 28-seat majority, Sky News said.

“These are very bad results,” Olympics minister Tessa Jowell told BBC television.

The recriminations started early as former deputy prime minister John Prescott said that Labour had run a “non-campaign”. “While I knew we were short of money I didn’t realise we also lacked the will to fight these elections,” Mr Prescott wrote in a blog on the LabourHome website.

Conservative successes also included taking Devon and Somerset from the Liberal Democrats.

There was some compensation for the Lib Dems after they gained control of Bristol.

Most of the 34 county and unitary councils holding elections on Thursday had waited until yesterday morning to start counting votes.

By early evening, the Conservatives had gained 194 seats while Labour was down 200, with the Lib Dems losing 20, according to declared results from 23 councils compiled by the BBC. European poll results will not be counted until Sunday, when most other European countries vote.

Mr Prescott launched a bitter attack on Labour’s deputy leader, Harriet Harman, as the early council results saw the party’s share of the vote drop by 10 per cent.

The combative former deputy prime minister – who runs the Go Fourth Labour campaign – targeted Ms Harman in particular for blame.

He also blamed the party’s deputy leader – one of Gordon Brown’s staunchest defenders in the media – for not backing the prime minister by running a strong campaign.

“The people responsible for this non-campaign – and make no mistake, there was no campaign – were Harriet Harman, Caroline Flint, Douglas Alexander and, yes, our former communities secretary Hazel Blears,” Mr Prescott wrote.

Mr Brown, he added, had a tough job and relied on others for support. – (Reuters, Guardian service)