Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Conservati­ves lose hundreds of seats in U.K. midterm vote

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON — Britain’s governing Conservati­ves suffered local election losses Friday in their few London stronghold­s and other parts of the U.K. — results that will pile more pressure on Prime Minister Boris Johnson amid ethics scandals and a worsening economic picture.

Voting held Thursday for thousands of seats on more than 200 local councils decided who will oversee garbage collection and the filling of potholes, but was also an important barometer of public opinion ahead of Britain’s next national election, which must be held by 2024.

The left-of-center opposition Labour Party, which has been out of power nationally since 2010, won control of Wandsworth, Barnet and Westminste­r, three London boroughs long held by the Conservati­ves, and also made gains in Wales and Scotland, as well as some regions of England.

Mr. Johnson’s party also lost ground to the centrist Liberal Democrats in the Conservati­ves’ southern England heartlands, where many middle-class voters are opposed to Brexit — a cause Mr. Johnson championed — and dismayed by lockdown rule-breaking by the prime minister and sexual misconduct allegation­s against other senior Tories.

With results in from most districts in England, Scotland and Wales, the Conservati­ves had lost more than 450 council seats and lost control of 10 local authoritie­s to either Labour or the Liberal Democrats.

“We are hemorrhagi­ng support in parts of the country. There’s some serious issues going on,” said Conservati­ve lawmaker Tobias Ellwood.

The election came after months of turmoil for Mr. Johnson, in which he became the first prime minister to be sanctioned for breaking the law in office. He was fined 50 pounds ($62) by police for attending his own surprise birthday party in June 2020 when lockdown rules barred social gatherings.

“The issue of ‘partygate’ kept coming up as a reason why many Conservati­ve supporters were staying at home or were switching to a protest vote,” said Conservati­ve lawmaker David Simmonds.

Mr. Johnson has apologized but denies knowingly breaking the rules. He faces the possibilit­y of more fines over other parties — police are investigat­ing a dozen gatherings — and a parliament­ary investigat­ion into whether he misled lawmakers about his behavior.

The prime minister tried to shrug off the losses as midterm blues.

“We had a tough night in some parts of the country,” Mr. Johnson said. “But on the other hand, in other parts of the country, you are still seeing Conservati­ves going forward and making quite remarkable gains in places that haven’t voted Conservati­ve for a long time, if ever.”

In some comfort to the Conservati­ves, Labour did not make big gains outside of the capital, especially in workingcla­ss northern England — areas that Mr. Johnson successful­ly wooed in the 2019 election with promises to improve local economies and opportunit­ies after Britain’s exit from the European Union.

 ?? Daniel Leal/Associated Press ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson visits the Field End Infant school Friday in South Ruislip, London.
Daniel Leal/Associated Press British Prime Minister Boris Johnson visits the Field End Infant school Friday in South Ruislip, London.

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