Gulf Today

Sunak will hang on and call a winter election

- John Rentoul, The Independen­t

The local elections on 2 May were going to spell the end for Rishi Sunak, according to the handful of plotters against him among Conservati­ve MPS. They warned that he might even call a general election to forestall a leadership challenge. Now some of the prime minister’s own people are speculatin­g that he might call a general election after 2 May for the opposite reason — not because the results will be disastrous, but because they will be surprising­ly good. If Andy Street, the Tory mayor of the West Midlands, and Ben Houchen, the Tory mayor of Tees Valley, are re-elected, the argument goes, Sunak should cash in on the good news before the inevitable attrition of events resumes.

“You have the ¬element of surprise while, if you wait until the autumn, you’ve basically boxed yourself in and allow Labour to attack you for hanging on,” a Downing Street source told The Times. Before we come to whether or not this is a persuasive argument, however, we need to assess the chances of Sunak being able to claim the local elections as a good result for the Conservati­ves.

In my view, most of the elections to be held on 2 May are a write-off for the Tories. They will lose a lot of local council seats and the BBC will calculate a low “projected national share” of the vote — although it won’t be as low as it could be, because Reform, the former Brexit Party, is contesting only one seat in seven. Most of these seats were last contested in 2021, when Boris Johnson was riding the vaccine bounce and Labour lost its safe Hartlepool seat in a parliament­ary by-election.

There will be a by-election at the same time as the local elections this time, too, but Labour’s Chris Webb is so certain to win Tory-held Blackpool South that the party is sending its resources elsewhere. Susan Hall, the Tory candidate for mayor of London, will lose badly to Sadiq Khan, although not as badly as London’s current status as a Labour city would suggest.

There are three contests to watch elsewhere: Street in the West Midlands, Ben Houchen in Tees Valley, and Jamie Driscoll, the independen­t (formerly Labour) mayor of North of Tyne, who is running for the new, bigger mayoralty of the North East. Opinion polls published in the past few days have suggested that Street and Houchen can win — Street was 14 points behind in one poll, two points ahead in another; Houchen was tied with Chris Mcewan, his Labour opponent, in the only representa­tive poll so far in Tees Valley.

Street is campaignin­g in green and purple colours, with little Conservati­ve branding, proving that an independen­t-minded mayor with good name recognitio­n can buck the national trend. (Before Labour partisans accuse him of being embarrasse­d by his party, they should note that Andy Burnham is running for re-election in Greater Manchester as “Andy”, without any Labour branding.)

Street’s slogan, “Lots Done, More To Do...”, is an example, borrowed from Tony Blair in 2001, of the kind of campaign that Sunak wanted to run in the general election, had he not been weighed down by the 14-year Tory record and the ill-judged five promises he made last year.

Even so, if Street and Houchen win, it will suggest there is some life in the Tory parrot yet. And if Driscoll wins in the North East, it will make the case that support for Keir Starmer’s Labour Party is lukewarm — more an anti-tory reflex than a positive vote for change. Driscoll is a soft Corbynite who was excluded without explanatio­n by Labour HQ from running as the official Labour candidate for the new mayoralty.

These are the kind of arguments that I believe Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, is urging Sunak to consider.

 ?? ?? Rishi Sunak
Rishi Sunak
 ?? ?? Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer

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