The Scotsman

Disillusio­ned public will take revenge on PM in local polls, says Lesley Riddoch

The Tories are on course for a drubbing from a disillusio­ned public in English local elections, writes Lesley Riddoch

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Theresa May is set for an embarrassi­ng defeat this Thursday – not in the Lords over Brexit, the High Court over the Withdrawal Bill, nor in Brussels over plans for the Irish border.

Thursday’s almost inevitable drubbing will take place on the modest and unlikely electoral battlefiel­d of the English local elections. There will be voting in all 32 London boroughs, 34 metropolit­an boroughs, 68 district and borough councils and 17 unitary authoritie­s, as well as contests for Mayor in five London boroughs. The results won’t be straightfo­rward because some boundaries have changed, some seats won by Ukip have since been vacated and only a quarter of seats are up for grabs thanks to the electoral cycle that operates in England. With a turnout of 29 per cent last time round in 2014, it may not look like much of a danger zone. But since 2014 there’s been a general election, a snap election and the European referendum – the latter clocking up a 72 per cent turnout. Thursday’s local vote won’t come near that – but a low turnout could work in Labour’s favour and the outcome will inevitably be a verdict on the leadership of Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn.

A Yougov poll shows 51 per cent of Londoners could back Labour. The BBC predicts Labour could beat its previous record of 1,221 London seats set in 1971, while the Conservati­ves could fall beneath their 1994 low of 519 seats, losing flagship Kensington and Chelsea council, which has been Tory for 50 years. Wandsworth and Westminste­r might also fall to Labour and the Lib Dems are eyeing up the London boroughs of Kingston and Richmond.

The shameful Windrush fiasco may have been the tin lid, but rage against Theresa May’s government still simmers in council estates across London over the Grenfell Tower disaster that took place almost a year ago. Three days later Theresa May said all residents would be rehoused within three weeks. At the start of this month, almost half were still in temporary accommodat­ion and Grenfell Tower’s owners, Tory- led Kensington and Chelsea council, were found to have built 80 per cent fewer affordable homes than the average London council. The Windrush debacle has only built on this dismal Tory record. And now it’s clear that arbitrary government targets operate in the field of benefit appeals as well as immigratio­n. Last year the Department of Work and Pensions ( DWP) was found to have told staff that “80 per cent of original decisions [ to reject benefit claims] are to be upheld”. Last week, the UK government finally responded to a Commons Select Committee on the use of this “outrageous target” as the chair of a leading Parkinson’s charity described it. The DWP said; “no adverse or incorrect decisions would have been made” as a result of the targets and “there was no link between the measure and the outcome of any decisions”.

Anyone spot a familiar use of language there?

Two weeks ago, Downing Street said the destructio­n of Windrush- era landing cards in 2010 “would not have had a bearing on immigratio­n cases where Commonweal­th citizens are proving residence in the UK”. That claim was immediatel­y undermined by whistle- blowers, who said Home Office staff routinely used Windrush landing card informatio­n in decisionma­king. The impact of benefit appeal targets is no less brutal. Written questions in the Commons show that only 18 per cent of appeals for the Personal Independen­ce Payment ( PIP) were approved by the DWP compared to 65 per cent of appeals that reached the safe haven of an independen­t tribunal. This on top of the revelation that where Universal Credit has been rolled out food banks use has risen by 50 per cent.

Does all of this deceit and doublespea­k matter? Yes it does.

It shows, beyond a shadow of doubt, that the Tory party is the Nasty Party again. Theresa May’s cynical use of targets and the resulting collapse of dignity in England’s benefits and housing systems get less coverage than a certain royal wedding in the London tabloids. But a quick search online confirms that almost every local paper in England has a story of trag- edy arising from benefits denied and appeals rejected. Bit by bit, the case against Conservati­sm has been mounting up, and although there’s still doubt about the strength of Labour’s vote outside London on Thursday, there could still be a big upset.

As Vince Cable said in the online site Politics Home: “There’s long been a conceit amongst the political class in Westminste­r that we are all pretty tolerant but Joe Public is a bigot. The outcome is an agree - ment not to be too courageous on matters of race and immigratio­n. That conceit has now been exploded. Windrush demonstrat­es that being ‘ tough’ easily degenerate­s into gross injustice.”

And the public cares. Of course it helps that newspaper and TV coverage of the Windrush scandal has been excellent and leaks suggest well- placed Tories are gunning for the beleaguere­d Home Secretary Amber Rudd and perhaps her predecesso­r in the post Theresa May.

According to former Spectator editor Matthew D’ancona: “Obliterati­on in the capital would be a punch in the Conservati­ve solar plexus, a symbolic indignity disproport­ionate to its actual statistica­l significan­ce. London, after all, is where Tory MPS live and work for most of the week. They would feel like illegal aliens in a city that hated them – a sentiment close enough to the truth to drill into their collective psyche.”

A lot depends on former Ukip voters in the north of England. Labour has been struggling in Birmingham and support for Ukip is in freefall. But middle of the road Brexiteers may yet agree with Matt Kelly, editor of the New European, who says the Windrush debacle has revealed the Tories to be “a government quite willing to use blunt and brutal tools to pursue the affection of the far right in this country.”

So could a terrible night, with perhaps the loss of all her London councils ( unlike - ly but not unthinkabl­e) leave Theresa May fatally wounded? Of course the prospect of immediate change appeals to very few Tories, but losing London could be a bridge too far even for the seemingly inde - structible Theresa May.

A week, once again, may be a long time in politics.

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 ??  ?? 0 Mrs May may pay the price for cynical use of targets and the state of England’s benefits and housing systems
0 Mrs May may pay the price for cynical use of targets and the state of England’s benefits and housing systems
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