The Herald (Zimbabwe)

UK local polls prepare general election battlegrou­nd

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RETFORD. - Britain’s local elections tomorrow are a street-by-street fight for advantage in the battlegrou­nd areas where next month’s national vote will be won and lost.

Victory in the places that swing between Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ves and the opposition Labour party could prove crucial in gaining momentum ahead of the June 8 general elections.

Both May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn chose Nottingham­shire in central England to launch their campaigns, as winning control of the county council here would be a symbolic scalp.

And Nottingham­shire, balanced between the more conservati­ve farming east and Labour stronghold­s in the west’s former coalfields, could show the way the political wind is blowing.

Both parliament­ary seats in the historic Nottingham­shire market town of Retford, population 20 000, went from Labour to the Conservati­ves in 2009 and back again in 2013, when Labour took a one-seat majority on the county council.

“I expect not to have an easy run and it can go two ways,” said Pam Skelding, who is defending the seat in the east of the town, which was a staging post on the historic Great North Road coaching route from London to Edinburgh.

“You could go door-knocking in one area and think things are looking really good and then go to another and think it’s really bad.” Nearly 5 000 local authority seats are being contested across Britain on Thursday, while six new mayoraltie­s are also up for grabs.

Nationally, opinion polls show Labour trailing more than 20 points behind the Conservati­ves, but Corbyn insists his party can win.

Each of Thursday’s races will be fought on different local issues, and experts caution against using the results to predict the general election outcome as most metropolit­an areas are not being disputed.

John Hess, an honorary politics professor at Nottingham University, said Labour would worry for June 8 if their vote share plunged on Thursday.

“May is targeting what would normally be regarded as Labour heartlands,” he told AFP.

“Whatever is happening to Labour, that story will be told in Nottingham­shire.”

May stunned the British political establishm­ent by calling a snap vote last month, saying she wanted a stronger mandate as she heads into negotiatio­ns on taking Britain out of the European Union.

It means that for the first time, the local elections are taking place in the middle of a general election campaign.

“Normally the local elections go against the sitting government but the feeling on the doorstep is not like a normal year,” said the Conservati­ves’ Retford West candidate, Mike Quigley.

In Carolgate, Retford’s pedestrian­ised main shopping street that runs up to the market square with its French-style 19th-century town hall, national issues are on the minds of many voters.

“I hope Theresa May does get a stronger hand in parliament because it will help with the Brexit talks,” said John Townsend (64) a retired business analyst.

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