The Asian Age

London elections set to leave PM Theresa May down, but not out

Labour said to have an edge over Tories in this week’s local polls

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London, April 29: Voters in London are expected to punish Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve Party at local government elections this week which could embolden critics of her Brexit strategy, but are not expected to trigger her downfall.

London and some other regions will on Thursday elect the local officials in charge of day- to- day public spending — a vote as much about issues like refuse collection and road repairs as it is about the national debate on immigratio­n and Ms May’s plan to take Britain out of the European Union after a 2016 referendum.

The elections are seen as a bellwether of public sentiment and polls show voters are ready to deliver a critical verdict on both May’s leadership and her party’s eight years spent pursuing a policy of public spending cuts to shore up Britain’s finances.

“A government that’s been in power for eight years with an austerity programme is naturally going to suffer at elections,” said Robert Hayward, a former Conservati­ve lawmaker who now sits in parliament’s upper house and specialise­s in polling analysis.

A YouGov survey published on April 26 gave the Opposition Labour Party, led by Jeremy Corbyn, a 22 percentage point lead over the Conservati­ves in London, putting it on course for its best performanc­e in the capital for 40 years.

Thursday’s vote will come less than a year after a snap parliament­ary election splintered the previously rock- solid foundation­s of May’s position, stripping her party of its majority in a vote she had expected to win easily.

The result of that general election has been a weakened leadership, open dissent among Conservati­ve lawmakers over exiting the EU and a nagging fear for some investors that her government could fall and be replaced by socialist- led Labour.

Thursday will not directly affect May’s practical ability to govern: the vote does not cause seats in parliament to change hands and the slim working majority she has thanks to a deal with a smaller party will be unaffected.

But a below- par performanc­e will embolden critics in her party and could then complicate the already- difficult task of executing her Brexit plan without making concession­s to pro- EU factions, such as agreeing to stay in the EU customs union.

“Politician­s always look at the last set of election results and by definition they’re going to look at what happens on May 3 and make a judgement on that,” Hayward said.

“It will have an impact on what has to happen in the budget, ‘ Do I take a more militant view in relation to the Customs Union, or Brexit, or nurses, or numbers of policemen?’”

The key results in London will be Wandsworth and Westminste­r, both boroughs with a strong Conservati­ve tradition that are now within reach of Labour.

However, anything short of a total Conservati­ve wipeout is not expected to generate renewed calls for her to quit.

Although her party is deeply divided over Brexit, neither the faction that seeks a clean break from the EU nor those who favour a closer relationsh­ip have shown an appetite for a leadership contest before Britain has left the bloc.

Fortunatel­y for May, expectatio­ns are low.

London has in recent decades voted more towards Labour, favouring its more liberal policies on immigratio­n and social issues. The Conservati­ves currently control only eight of 32 boroughs outright.

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 ?? — AFP ?? A pigeon flies as Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May arrives to attend a memorial service at St. Martin- intheField­s in Trafalgar Square in London last week to commemorat­e the 25th anniversar­y of the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
— AFP A pigeon flies as Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May arrives to attend a memorial service at St. Martin- intheField­s in Trafalgar Square in London last week to commemorat­e the 25th anniversar­y of the murder of Stephen Lawrence.

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