UK local elections: Tories down almost 400 council seats

Party figures raise prospect of replacing Boris Johnson as Conservative leader

The Conservative Party in Britain suffered a net loss of almost 400 councillors as a day of vote counting delivered a bruising set of local election results for the prime minister Boris Johnson.

UK ministers conceded it had been "tough" for the ruling party, particularly in the south of England where it lost ground to Labour in London and the Liberal Democrats in its "blue wall" heartlands, but warned against extrapolating the results on a national level.

As the losses trickled in throughout the day, Tory figures continued to publicly raise the prospect of Mr Johnson being replaced as party leader as one senior pollster suggested middle- and upper-class voters had distanced themselves from the prime minister after his fixed-penalty notice for breaking Covid laws.

Labour, which is facing its own difficulties after police announced an investigation into whether leader Keir Starmer broke lockdown rules last year, said the result had been “shattering” for the Conservatives.

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A Labour spokeswoman said: “Boris Johnson was on the ballot paper and the British public has rejected him.

“The question every decent Conservative will be asking themselves is how much further are they willing to fall for a man who never fails to put his own interest above his councillors, his MPs, his party and his country.”

‘Revolt’

Tory peer Lord Hayward said there had been a "revolt of the upper to middle class" against Mr Johnson's leadership.

Speaking to TalkTV, the election analyst said it was the “university educated, managerial, Remain-oriented groups who have defected”, while long-term Conservative supporters had stayed at home during the local elections.

The former MP said the losses were likely to “add to the unease” over the allegations of coronavirus rule-breaching parties in Downing Street, with the potential of difficult by-elections in Wakefield and Tiverton and Honiton still to come.

“There are a series of hurdles that Boris Johnson has got to face, and there is no question he was an issue, and a big issue, on the doorsteps – in some parts of the country more than others,” Mr Hayward added.

Earlier on Friday, David Simmonds, the Tory MP for Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner, said "a change of leader" could be one way of restoring public confidence in the government after admitting the so-called partygate had been brought up by voters.

But farming minister Victoria Prentis said Mr Johnson had developed a strong reputation as a winner and argued it was "too early" to say he had hindered the party's performance in Thursday's poll.

Conceding the results in some areas had been “tough”, she told BBC’s Newsnight: “I think it is important that we should keep remembering that these are local elections . . . and we shouldn’t try and extrapolate too many national trends.

“I know it is very tempting but there are very low turnouts in many of these elections and I think it is very hard to make real concrete guesses as to how [the results would play out in a general election].”

An analysis for the BBC by Prof John Curtice calculated that if the whole country had been voting, Labour would have gained 35 per cent of the vote – five points ahead of the Tories on 30 per cent – the party's biggest lead in local elections for a decade.

Labour’s most striking gains came in London where it took the totemic Tory authority in Wandsworth, won Westminster for the first time since its creation in 1964 and clinched victory in Barnet.

The Tories, however, managed to snatch Harrow from their red rivals, providing a silver lining to their woes in the capital.

Mr Starmer's outfit also took Southampton from the Conservatives and Worthing in traditionally Tory West Sussex from no overall control.

Monmouthshire, the only Conservative majority-controlled council in Wales before polls opened, went to no overall control, with Labour becoming the largest party.

The Tories also dropped into third place in Scotland behind the dominant Scottish National Party (SNP) and a resurgent Scottish Labour.

Investigation

But despite the celebrations, Labour found the result overshadowed by Durham Constabulary announcing officers will investigate whether a beer and curry event last year in Durham attended by Mr Starmer and his deputy Angela Rayner breached Covid regulations.

Mr Starmer insisted again that no rules had been broken after the force stated an inquiry was under way following receipt of “significant new information”.

The Liberal Democrats and the Green Party both enjoyed a strong election showing, finishing Friday’s counts with 189 and 81 net council seat gains respectively.

Ed Davey’s Lib Dems took the new unitary authorities of Somerset – also traditional Conservative territory – and Westmorland and Furness and dislodged the Tories in West Oxfordshire, pushing the council into no overall control.

After full results were declared from 196 councils across England, Scotland and Wales, the Tories had lost control of 12 authorities and suffered a net loss of 398 councillors.

Labour had a net gain of eight councils and more than 250 seats and the Lib Dems had gained five councils.

In Northern Ireland, Sinn Féin is on course for a historic victory in the Assembly election, after receiving the most first-preference votes.

The party secured 29 per cent of first-preference votes, compared with 21.3 per cent for the DUP, 13.5 per cent for Alliance, 11.2 per cent for the Ulster Unionists and 9.1 per cent for the SDLP.

It raises the prospect of Sinn Féin holding the post of first minister and will be sure to reignite debate around a united Ireland.

Mary Lou McDonald, president and leader of the party, told TalkTV she believed a border poll would be “possible within a five-year timeframe”. – PA