The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Tice’s party may deal Conservati­ves a terminal blow in general election

- By John Curtice

THURSDAY’S election results have been every bit as disappoint­ing for the Conservati­ves as they might have feared.

The party is so far losing one in two of the seats they have been trying to defend. When all the results are in, it is at risk of suffering the catastroph­ic 500 losses of council seats that some analysts had predicted.

The party’s vote fell by 32.1 percentage points in Blackpool South, making it the party’s third worst ever performanc­e in a parliament­ary by-election.

With 16.9 per cent of the vote – its best performanc­e yet – Reform appears to have done much of the damage.

Moreover, in the local elections the Conservati­ve vote fell most heavily in those wards where Reform fielded a candidate. The only silver lining for Tory HQ was that Reform only contested one in six of the wards where there was an election on Thursday. A full slate would have been even more devastatin­g.

Meanwhile, some of the evidence underneath the bonnet of the headlines will particular­ly worry the party.

First, detailed ward-by-ward results collected by the BBC suggest that on average support for the party is down on last year’s local elections. That slippage is consistent with the message of the opinion polls that, rather than closing the gap on Labour, the party has actually lost ground over the last twelve months.

‘Reform only contested one in six wards. A full slate would have been even more devastatin­g’

Second, the fall in Conservati­ve support is proving to be highest in the party’s heartlands. The better the Conservati­ves did locally in 2021, when the majority of the seats being contested on Thursday were last fought, the greater the fall in their support now.

This pattern fits with the evidence of recent MRP polling, which suggested that the Conservati­ves could win even fewer seats in the upcoming general election than the 165 to which they fell in 1997.

Third, Labour advanced most strongly by squeezing the Liberal Democrat vote in wards where the Conservati­ves were attempting to fend off a challenge from Labour. If these patterns persist, it could cost the party dearly in the next general election.

Downing Street will be buoyed by the news that came in from the Tees Valley yesterday, where Ben Houchen has been re-elected for a third term as Mayor.

But on the evidence so far, possible isolated successes should not distract from the broader message that has just been sent from the local ballot boxes – the Conservati­ve party is still in a very deep electoral hole.

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