China Daily (Hong Kong)

Conservati­ves on a roll in UK local voting

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LONDON — The United Kingdom’s governing Conservati­ve Party made strong gains in local elections on Friday, suggesting Prime Minister Theresa May’s strategy to leave the European Union is winning over voters who should hand her an easy victory in a parliament­ary election on June 8.

Early results in the polls, which voters often use as an opportunit­y to protest against the ruling party, showed May’s Conservati­ves had gained more than 100 council seats and secured victory for their candidate as mayor for the West of England.

The main opposition Labour Party lost control of councils in Wales, but the biggest losses were sustained by the anti-EU UK Independen­ce Party, which has struggled to find new footing since the vote to leave the European Union last June.

By calling an early national election for next month, May has made the local votes a gauge of her leadership, and many of her Conservati­ve candidates have campaigned in recent days using her campaign mantra of “strong and stable leadership”.

But turnout was low and the Conservati­ves were careful not to overplay their expected victory next month, which could reshape the British political landscape for years to come.

“They are encouragin­g results, but I am cautious about predicatin­g the general election on them,” Defense Minister Michael Fallon said.

The opposition Labour Party also played down its losses, with finance spokesman John McDonnell saying that

They are encouragin­g results, but I am cautious about predicatin­g the general election on them.”

Michael Fallon, British defense minister

despite it being “tough ... it hasn’t been the wipeout that some people and some polls predicted”.

The early results indicated May’s Conservati­ves took votes from both Labour and UKIP, signaling that her bid to position her party in the political center and take a strong stance on Brexit might be paying dividends.

Opinion polls give May a runaway lead in the national election on June 8 of around 20 percentage points, which could hand her more than 100 more seats in Parliament.

Meanwhile, the EU said on Thursday it is preparing new regulation­s that could force a key financial market and potentiall­y thousands of jobs to move away from London once Britain leaves the bloc.

The EU’s executive Commission said it will present next month new rules on the oversight of this market, the so-called clearing of euro-denominate­d trades.

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