The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on local elections: good reasons to give May a bad night

-

Voters in nearly half of England’s local councils, including the London boroughs and the other biggest cities, will go to the polls on Thursday. Few expect the Conservati­ves to do well. This certainly includes the Tories themselves, who are busy managing expectatio­ns down to floor level, so that almost any victories can be presented as an unexpected­ly positive evening.

Perhaps surprising­ly, Labour is also trying to dampen expectatio­ns. Many of these councils were last elected in 2014, a decent year for Labour; and both main parties are unsure how the Ukip vote is likely to be redistribu­ted. Four years ago, Ukip’s estimated share of the national vote was 17%. This year it will be well under half that.

There are plenty of genuine reasons for Tory pessimism and plenty of reasons why it is well deserved. Theresa May’s government has never recovered from last year’s disastrous general election reverse. Brexit has split the electorate and frightened and energised voters on both sides. Last week’s quarterly growth figures were amp;#xa0;poor. Austerity continues more balefully than ever: the Tories hijacked devolution to palm off responsibi­lity for cuts on local councils, while keeping the power to make policy. They should not escape responsibi­lity for the eviscerati­on of libraries, youth clubs, social care and bus routes. The Windrush scandal has laid bare levels of heartlessn­ess and incompeten­ce that on their own provide ample incentive for voters to kick the government. Amber Rudd must return to parliament on Monday after further revelation­s in the Guardian about her role in and knowledge of the “hostile environmen­t” and targets for the removal of illegal migrants. The home amp;#xa0;secretary’s job hangs on her performanc­e; Thursday’s polls may feel its effects too.

Local elections are always difficult for the party in power and this week’s have almost every hallmark of a classic case. The Tories have been in charge for eight years now. England in 2018 is the country that they have made and they alone. At such times, voters can feel it is time to remind the governing party of who is in charge. Thursday is such a moment, and rightly so.

For the same reason, however, midterm local elections are not always the most reliable guide to what the national mood might be in a general election. For one thing, voters are often more pro-Labour in local contests than in national ones. For amp;#xa0;another, Thursday offers a particular­ly juicy free kick: Since Jeremy Corbyn will not become prime minister next weekend, the Tories cannot use the kind of scare tactics and smears that they will undoubtedl­y use when the time comes. By the same token, however, Labour gains and Tory losses on Thursday night may not point reliably to the deeper mood.

Many experts are predicting that this will also be an election of two halves. Labour will want to drive forward its 2017 successes in London, and there are good reasons to think it can do so. Labour’s chances seem particular­ly strong in innerLondo­n boroughs. But Westminste­r, Wandsworth and Barnet (where the antisemiti­sm issue will be closely watched) will amp;#xa0;clearly be pivotal contests, along with the Lib amp;#xa0;Dem-Tory tussles in Kingston and Richmond. Given the importance of Brexit to the capital, and the anti-Brexit instincts of key groups in London, this is a huge opportunit­y to put the squeeze on Mrs May and the Brexiters. The elections outside London may be rather different and less spectacula­r. But Birmingham should be watched with special care: a reduction in the number of seats on the council makes this swing amp;#xa0;city even less predictabl­e than usual.

There are no elections this year in Scotland, pivotal to the chances of a Corbyn government, or in Wales, where the resignatio­n of the first minister Carwyn Jones has begun a period of Labour introspect­ion. Turnout on Thursday may be low in contests that lack the passions of 2016 and 2017. Neverthele­ss, these are the last major tests of the public mood before a possible Brexit. As Britain staggers towards an unknown future, it is vital that voters do not do anything to assist Mrs May in her damaging aim of effecting a hard Brexit. That means supporting the candidates best placed to beat the party of Brexit, which in most places means voting Labour.

 ??  ?? ‘This is a huge opportunit­y to put the squeeze on Mrs May and the Brexiters.’ Photograph: Hannah Mckay/Reuters
‘This is a huge opportunit­y to put the squeeze on Mrs May and the Brexiters.’ Photograph: Hannah Mckay/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia