The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

PM faces anxious wait as polls close

- SAM BLEWETT

Prime Minister Boris Johnson was last night waiting to see if he would be facing another crisis after polls closed in the North Shropshire by-election.

It would be another hammer blow to underpress­ure Mr Johnson if the Tories were to lose the ultra-safe seat.

The by-election was set in motion by Owen Paterson’s resignatio­n.

Voting in the West Midlands constituen­cy ended at 10pm last night, with the Liberal Democrats eyeing a real chance to overturn a near-23,000 vote majority.

The result was expected to be announced in the early hours of today.

Not only was the vote triggered by a Tory sleaze scandal, it comes after the prime minister was battered by allegation­s of lockdown-breaching parties in Downing Street last Christmas.

His hopes to defend the seat will be amplified by the massive rebellion Conservati­ve backbenche­rs dealt him on Tuesday over his new coronaviru­s restrictio­ns as the Omicron variant surged.

Mr Paterson represente­d the constituen­cy for 24 years until his resignatio­n after the prime minister’s botched attempt to shield him from a 30-day suspension.

Mr Johnson attempted to force a Tory-led review of the rules for MPS after Mr Paterson was found to have breached lobbying rules for two companies paying him £100,000 a year.

Multiple fresh allegation­s of sleaze were levelled at the Tories during the row and ultimately the MP was forced to resign, saying he wanted to escape the “cruel world of politics”.

North Shropshire has returned a Tory MP in every vote since 1983, which was the constituen­cy’s first election in its current form.

But the area has been true blue, only twice voting for another colour, since the Conservati­ve Party’s inception in 1830.

In the 2019 general election, the Tories won 62.7% of the vote and held the seat with a majority of 22,949 over Labour, with the Lib Dems in third.

So a loss for Conservati­ve candidate Neil Shastrihur­st to Lib Dem Helen Morgan would be a major upset for the Tories.

Bookmakers have put the Lib Dems as favourite for victory, while campaigner­s on the ground believe the result is too close to call and leader Sir Ed Davey described it as a “coin toss”.

Defeat would compound a torrid period for Mr Johnson after 100 Conservati­ves defied the leadership to vote against the introducti­on of mandatory Covid health passes for entry to large venues – the biggest rebellion since he entered No 10.

In the 2019 general election, the Tories won 62.7% of the vote and held the seat with a majority of 22,949 over Labour

 ?? ?? BY-ELECTION: A man leaves a polling station in the Docks public house on the outskirts of Oswestry yesterday.
BY-ELECTION: A man leaves a polling station in the Docks public house on the outskirts of Oswestry yesterday.

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