The Columbus Dispatch

UK Conservati­ves lose 2 elections in blow to PM

Johnson’s party weighs his political efficacy

- Jill Lawless

LONDON – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson suffered a double blow as voters rejected his Conservati­ve Party in two special parliament­ary elections dominated by questions about his leadership and ethics.

He was further wounded when the party’s chairman quit after the results came out early Friday, saying Conservati­ves “cannot carry on with business as usual,” and a former party leader said the country needed “new leadership.”

The centrist Liberal Democrats overturned a big Conservati­ve majority to win the rural southwest England seat of Tiverton and Honiton, while the main opposition Labour Party reclaimed Wakefield in northern England from Johnson’s Tories.

The contests, triggered by the resignatio­ns of Conservati­ve lawmakers hit by sex scandals, offered voters the chance to give their verdict on the prime minister just weeks after 41% of his own MPS voted to oust him.

“The people of Tiverton and Honiton have spoken for Britain,” said the area’s newly elected Liberal Democrat lawmaker, Richard Foord. “They sent a loud and clear message: It’s time for Boris Johnson to go, and go now.”

Defeat in either district would have been a setback for the prime minister’s party. Losing both increases jitters among restive Conservati­ves who already worry the ebullient but erratic and divisive Johnson is no longer an electoral asset.

Party Chairman Oliver Dowden resigned, saying “our supporters are distressed and disappoint­ed by recent events, and I share their feelings.”

“We cannot carry on with business as usual,” said Dowden, previously a staunch Johnson loyalist.

Former Conservati­ve leader Michael Howard who, like Johnson, was a strong backer of Britain’s exit from the European Union, urged the party to remove him as leader.

“The party, and more importantl­y the country, would be better off under new leadership,” Howard told the BBC.

The prime minister was 4,000 miles away at a Commonweal­th summit in Rwanda as the drama unfolded.

The electoral tests came as Britain faces the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation, with Russia’s war in Ukraine squeezing supplies of energy and food staples at a time of soaring consumer

demand while the coronaviru­s pandemic recedes.

“I’m not going to pretend these are brilliant results,” Johnson said at a news conference in Kigali. “We’ve got to listen, we’ve got to learn. … When people are finding it tough, they send messages to politician­s, and politician­s have got to respond.”

Labour leader Keir Starmer said it showed the party “is back on the side of working people, winning seats where we lost before, and ready for government.”

Even with the defeats, which erode his already shaky authority among his own lawmakers, Johnson’s party holds a large majority in Parliament. But Conservati­ves are increasing­ly concerned that the qualities that led them to make Johnson their leader – including a populist ability to bend the rules and get away with it – may now be a liability.

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN/AP ?? U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, facing the backlash of scandals and economic woes, faces calls to resign, many coming from his own party.
FRANK AUGSTEIN/AP U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, facing the backlash of scandals and economic woes, faces calls to resign, many coming from his own party.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States