The Scotsman

Minister defends Sunak after election defeats set against ‘difficult backdrop’

- Paul Wilson scotsman.com

A Conservati­ve minister has defended Rishi Sunak and the party after two by-election defeats, saying they were set against a “very difficult backdrop”.

The losses to Labour in Wellingbor­ough and Kingswood, as well as increased support for the emboldened Reform UK party, were the latest blow to the Prime Minister.

The Conservati­ve Government has endured more by-election losses than any administra­tion since the 1960s, surpassing the eight defeats suffered by john major in the run-up to Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide victory.

However, Tory illegal migration minister Michael Tomlinson told the BBC’S Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “There’s no doubt that these by-elections were set against a very difficult backdrop.

“I was in Kingswood myself a few weeks ago, I saw the excellent candidate in the campaign on the ground. But actually if you look at it, if you look at for example, Reform’s vote, which people have been talking about this week, what comes across to me is it’s very clear that a vote for Reform is actually a vote to let Labour in.”

Speaking to the Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme on Sky News, Mr Tomlinson said he did not recognise the idea many MPS privately want Mr Sunak to go.

The Prime Minister, who had sought to play down the losses as “difficult” mid-term elections, on Friday night called on right-wing and Conservati­ve voters to unite to keep Sir Keir Starmer out of Number 10.

The Wellingbor­ough byelection was triggered by the six-week Commons suspension of former Tory MP Peter Bone after an inquiry found he had subjected a staff member to bullying and sexual misconduct. The Kingswood vote came after former Conservati­ve MP Chris Skidmore resigned in protest against Government legislatio­n to boost North Sea oil and gas drilling.

Labour overturned majorities of 11,220 and 18,540 in Kingswood and Wellingbor­ough respective­ly, delivering the Government’s ninth and 10th byelection defeats of the current Parliament and securing its second-largest swing from the Tories ever.

Both contests were seen largely as two-horse races between Labour and the Tories, though the Conservati­ves also faced the threat of Reform UK. Richard Tice’s party scored more than 10 per cent of the vote for the first time in a by-election, with deputy leader Ben Habib winning 13 per cent Wellingbor­ough. Rupert Lowe, its candidate in Kingswood, won 10 per cent. Meanwhile, one candidate and former MP warned trouble may be ahead as the final full week of campaignin­g in the Rochdale by-election begins.

Simon Danczuk, the exlabour MP for Rochdale now standing as the Reform Party candidate, says he has found the atmosphere has changed.

“I’ve been out of politics for five years or so and I've come back in and – is the word febrile?" he said. "It feels really different, more aggressive, as though there could be more violence around the election than you would've anticipate­d five years ago.”

 ?? ?? Illegal immigratio­n minister Michael Tomlinson speaking to the media outside BBC Broadcasti­ng House in London, after appearing on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.
Illegal immigratio­n minister Michael Tomlinson speaking to the media outside BBC Broadcasti­ng House in London, after appearing on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.

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