Western Daily Press (Saturday)

TORIES LEFT PONDERING THE FUTURE

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IT was always going to be a difficult night for the Tories, but was it bad enough to warrant a change in the occupant of No 10?

That will be the question unhappy Conservati­ve MPs will be pondering over the coming days as they weigh up whether Boris Johnson is the leader to take them forward to the next General Election.

The headlines certainly make grim reading, with the flagship Wandsworth council - reputedly Margaret Thatcher’s favourite among those to fall.

Analysis for the BBC by Professor Sir John Curtice calculated that if the whole country had been voting on Thursday, Labour would have been five points ahead - its biggest local election lead in a decade.

For grassroots Tories who lost their seats, the cause of their woes was clear with voters still angry over lockdown parties in No 10 in breach of Covid regulation­s.

The issue of trust in the Prime Minister, who said repeatedly that no rules had been broken, was said to have come up regularly on the doorstep.

The party is also under pressure over the cost-of-living crisis.

Conservati­ve MPs in the South and the South West may also be looking nervously at the strong performanc­e of the Liberal Democrats following their recent by-election successes.

Against that, allies of Mr Johnson say this was always going to be a difficult set of elections, coming midway through the parliament­ary electoral cycle, with some losses already “priced in”.

Crucially, they argue that while Labour did well in London, elsewhere in the country it was not making the sort of gains that would put Sir Keir Starmer on the road for victory at a General Election.

For some Tory MPs, Mr Johnson’s position has been untenable since he was fined for his attendance at a 56th birthday bash in the Cabinet Room and they have been calling openly for him to go.

However, some of those demanding Mr Johnson’s resignatio­n at the start of the year have since withdrawn their letters arguing that the crisis in Ukraine is the wrong time for a prolonged leadership struggle.

There is also the issue of a successor. Former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt and the present incumbent Liz Truss have been touted as possible candidates. But the previous frontrunne­r, Rishi Sunak, has also now been fined and has been badly damaged by disclosure­s over his wife’s “non dom” status and that he held a US green card while Chancellor.

A No 10 insider said there was simply no better option than Mr Johnson.

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