Tories Ride Brexit Wave to ‘Historic’ Win: U.K. Elections Update
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© Photographer: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images Europe Hartlepool By-election Count And Declaration
(Bloomberg) — Boris Johnson’s ruling Conservatives recorded an “historic” election victory in Hartlepool, the first major result from Britain’s “Super Thursday” votes and one that will pile intense pressure on Keir Starmer’s leadership of the opposition Labour Party.
U.K.’s Johnson Wins Historic By-Election on Brexit, Vaccine Bump
The win in Hartlepool, which had voted for a Labour MP ever since the seat’s creation in 1974, shows Johnson’s party gaining support on the back of the coronavirus vaccine rollout, as well as the completion of Brexit. The town in northeast England backed leaving the European Union by about 70% in 2016.
For Starmer, the result is a disaster given it’s rare for the ruling party to gain seats from the opposition at a by-election.
Key Developments: Conservatives win 15,529 votes in Hartlepool, compared to 8,589 votes for LabourJohnson’s majority in the House of Commons increases to 82Results expected Friday: key English council districts; the Welsh parliament; and city mayors including Liverpool and DoncasterResults for Scottish Parliament and Mayor of London expected SaturdayOf 17 councils in England reporting so far, Tories gain control of four and Labour lose control of one Curtice: Nine Seats Key for SNP in Scotland (10:50 a.m.)
Counting has started in the Scottish parliamentary election, which could ultimately pave the way for a second referendum on breaking away from the 317-year-old union with the U.K.
Results will be spread over two days, with the final outcome not expected until late on Saturday. However due to Scotland’s mixed electoral system, the result could hinge on nine key marginal constituency seats, according to John Curtice, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow.
Of those, six are expected to declare on Friday, which could give a strong indication of whether First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party is likely to secure the outright majority she has said is a mandate for a new vote on independence.
Labour’s Left Slams Direction Under Starmer (10:30 a.m.)
The defeat in Hartlepool is reigniting divisions in Keir Starmer’s Labour Party, with criticism especially strong from the socialist left, which dominated under former leader Jeremy Corbyn.
“The leadership are reacting to this disaster by promising ‘more change’ — but over the last year we’ve gone backwards,” the campaign group Momentum said on Twitter. “A transformative socialist message has won in Hartlepool before, and it would have won again.”
Such criticism is likely to escalate for Starmer, who promised to unite the party when taking office last year, if he can’t show Labour is heading toward a first general election victory since 2005 under his leadership.
Mandelson ‘Gutted’ by Hartlepool Result (9 a.m.)
Peter Mandelson, the Labour MP for Hartlepool between 1992 and 2004 and an architect of former premier Tony Blair’s New Labour movement — which led the party to three general election wins — said he is “gutted” by the result.
“I feel a mild fury that the last 10 years of what we’ve been doing in the Labour party nationally and locally has brought us to this result,” Mandelson told BBC Radio. “That is above all the explanation of what happened today.”
McDonnell: Starmer Should Be ‘Given Chance’ (Earlier)
John McDonnell, Labour’s former shadow chancellor and a key figure on the political left of the party, said leader Keir Starmer should be “given his chance” following the heavy defeat in Hartlepool.
“Keir now needs to sit down and think through what happened in this campaign,” McDonnell told BBC Radio. “The Labour Party went into this election campaign almost policy-less. We should never ever do that again.”
Labour’s Reed: Party ‘Hasn’t Changed Enough’ (Earlier)
Labour’s shadow minister for communities and local government, Steve Reed, said the Conservatives had benefited from picking up former Brexit Party supporters in Hartlepool.
“The Brexit Party vote has collapsed into the Conservatives,” Reed told the BBC. But Labour also needed to do more to show that they are different under the leadership of Starmer, he said.
“People don’t yet understand how the party is changing,” he said. “Frankly the party hasn’t changed enough.”
Conservatives Hail ‘Historic’ Win in Hartlepool (Earlier)
Amanda Milling, co-chairman of the Conservative Party, said the result in Hartlepool is “historic” and would bring more jobs and investment to the area.
“People recognize that this area has not had a strong voice before,” Milling said on Sky News.
Milling also said voters weren’t moved by the “sleaze” allegations against Johnson his government in recent weeks, and that the Tories were rewarded for delivering on their manifesto promise to complete Brexit.
Earlier:
Johnson’s Popularity Faces a Key Test in a Brexit Heartland
U.K.’s ‘Sleaze’ Scandal: How Bad Can It Get for Boris Johnson?
The British Flag Is Flying Over a Country Fraying at the Edges
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