Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Britain’s Conservati­ves dealt 2 big blows

Prime Minister Sunak’s party holds on to only 1 of 3 seats in special elections

- JILL LAWLESS AND PAN PYLAS

LONDON — Voters weary of economic pain and political turmoil handed Britain’s governing Conservati­ves two thumping defeats Friday in a trio of special elections that point toward likely defeat for the party in the next national election.

The Conservati­ves avoided a wipeout by holding onto former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s seat in suburban London — a sliver of comfort for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s party.

Sunak said the results showed that the next general election, due by the end of 2024, was not “a done deal.” But elections expert John Curtice said the Conservati­ves were “in a deep electoral hole” after the main opposition Labour Party and the smaller centrist Liberal Democrats overturned huge Conservati­ve majorities to win a seat apiece.

The three results show the Conservati­ves losing ground across a broad range of voters: suburban Londoners, small-town dwellers in the north of England and rural residents in the southwest.

“We hear that cry for change away from the chaos, away from those rising bills, the crumbling public services — a cry for change and we will deliver,” Labour leader Keir Starmer said alongside the party’s 25-year-old winning candidate, Keir Mather, in the northern seat of Selby and Ainsty.

“The first time we’ve won here is the first time we’ve overturned a 20,000 majority, the biggest majority we’ve ever turned over in the history of the Labour Party,” Starmer added.

The Liberal Democrats took the rural seat of Somerton and Frome in southwest England with a similarly large swing away from the Conservati­ves.

“The people of Somerton and Frome have spoken for the rest of the country who are fed up with Rishi Sunak’s out-of-touch Conservati­ve government,” said Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey. He congratula­ted candidate Sarah Dyke beside a confetti-firing mock circus cannon emblazoned “get these clowns out of No. 10,” the prime minister’s 10 Downing St. residence.

The Conservati­ves won Uxbridge and South Ruislip in west London by 495 votes — down from a majority of 7,000 under Johnson — after a campaign that focused on an unpopular local green levy imposed by London’s Labour mayor.

Sunak headed straight to the scene of his party’s sole electoral success and noted that government­s often find midterm elections difficult.

“The message I take away is that we’ve got to double down, stick to our plan and deliver for people,” he said during a visit to a cafe in the constituen­cy.

The defeats don’t mean a change of government, since the Conservati­ves still have a majority in the House of Commons. But they confirm the trend of opinion polls, which for months have given Labour a lead of up to 20% nationwide over the Conservati­ves, who have been in power since 2010.

The right-of-center governing party has been plagued by the fallout from the tumultuous terms of Johnson and his successor Liz Truss, who quit within weeks after her plan for unfunded tax cuts alarmed financial markets, worsening a cost-of-living crisis and sending mortgage costs soaring.

The bruising defeats make it likely that Sunak will shake up his government with a Cabinet shuffle when Parliament returns from its summer recess in September. Under Britain’s parliament­ary system, Sunak can call a national election whenever he feels the time is right, though it must be within five years of the last one, held in December 2019.

There are also questions for Starmer, who has been cautious in laying out his plans for government, to the frustratio­n of some Labour supporters.

Labour’s defeat in Uxbridge will likely stoke concern over Mayor Sadiq Khan’s plan to expand an anti-pollution zone first introduced when Johnson was mayor to outer boroughs of London, slapping a daily emissions charge on older gas and diesel vehicles.

Starmer acknowledg­ed the levy was the reason Labour lost in Uxbridge. He said “the mayor needs to reflect. And it’s too early to say what should happen next.”

Bale said Labour “will worry a little bit, since much of the party’s economic message is built around green issues.” But he said the Conservati­ves should be more concerned, because many voters who backed them in 2019 had become disillusio­ned.

“We got used to the idea that somehow there was this big realignmen­t in British politics and the Conservati­ves were capable of winning seats where they weren’t before,” he said. “I think the Conservati­ves now should be quite worried.”

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