Daily Mail

Tories could open new HQ in the North

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

THE Conservati­ve Party is considerin­g setting up another base outside London following its election wins in the North and Midlands.

officials said they were looking at whether to establish an office to ‘better reflect the party’s new geographic make-up’.

The building would be a visible symbol of the Tory presence in previously Labour heartlands.

on the day after his election triumph, Boris Johnson pledged to earn the trust of Labour voters who ‘lent him’ their votes.

A Tory spokesman said: ‘Following the strong and historic result in December, there were a series of early discussion­s about how our structures better reflect the party’s new geographic make-up.

‘This includes a project to look at potential sites for another CCHQ [Conservati­ve central headquarte­rs] office outside of London.

‘Nothing has been confirmed and any changes would be made in consultati­on with staff.’

The Prime Minister saw unexpected victories in constituen­cies such as Blyth Valley – a seat never held by the Tories since its 1950 inception – Blackpool South and West Bromwich East.

According to the Conservati­ve Home website, a Downing Street source confirmed a big shake-up to the party structure as a result.

‘There will be a small office in London but maybe up by King’s Cross,’ the No 10 insider said.

The report said Downing Street wanted the new venue to be ‘somewhere reasonably close to a university with good maths/ physics department­s (we should get a data team up there), good train links, well-placed in political terms’.

At present CCHQ is spread across two floors of 4 Matthew Parker Street, a commercial property a short walk from Parliament.

During the Thatcher years, the Tories were based in Smith Square.

The idea of getting out of London is not limited to the Tories. Labour leadership candidate Lisa Nandy has said she wants the party to leave Southside, its premises in Victoria, close to Westminste­r, for a location in its former heartlands as part of efforts to reconnect with voters it lost at recent elections.

Announcing her leadership pitch earlier this month, she said: ‘We can’t just keep changing the man at the top and making decisions from Victoria in London and think we can fix things for people.’

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