The Columbus Dispatch

Pressure on PM Johnson after by-election party loss

- Danica Kirka

LONDON – U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party suffered a stunning defeat in a parliament­ary by-election that was viewed as a referendum on his government amid weeks of scandal and soaring COVID-19 infections.

Liberal Democrat Helen Morgan overturned a Conservati­ve majority of almost 23,000 votes from the last election to win Thursday’s contest in North Shropshire, a rural area of northwest England that has been represente­d by a Conservati­ve almost continuous­ly since 1832. The election was called after the former Conservati­ve member of Parliament resigned following allegation­s of improper lobbying.

The result will heap pressure on Johnson just two years after he was reelected with a seemingly unassailab­le 80-seat majority in the House of Commons. His authority has been dented in recent weeks by allegation­s that he and his staff attended Christmas parties last year while the country was in lockdown, efforts to shield his ally in the lobbying scandal and suggestion­s that he improperly accepted donations to fund the lavish refurbishm­ent of his official residence.

“Tonight the people of North Shropshire have spoken on behalf of the British people,” Morgan said in her victory speech. “They said loudly and clearly, ‘Boris Johnson, the party is over. Your government, run on lies and bluster, will be held accountabl­e. It will be scrutinize­d, it will be challenged, and it can and will be defeated.’ ”

Thursday’s result is the second byelection defeat for the Conservati­ves this year. The Liberal Democrats, England’s third-largest party, in June won a by-election in Chesham and Amersham, a constituen­cy northwest of London that had also been a traditiona­l Conservati­ve stronghold.

John Curtice, a pollster and professor of politics at the University of Strathclyd­e, said the Conservati­ve defeat in North Shropshire was “pretty

spectacula­r by historical standards,” noting that the party’s support plunged 34% from the previous election in 2019.

The only time the party suffered a bigger drop during a by-election was in 1993, when it was riven by internal division, he said. The Conservati­ves lost power to the Labour Party during the next general election in 1997.

“There is no doubting the size of this rebuff to the Conservati­ves and further evidence that the party has indeed now hit something of an electoral hole in the wake of those various scandals,” Curtice told GB News.

But whether this decline in Conservati­ve support will spell the end of Johnson’s government is unclear.

Johnson on Friday took responsibi­lity for the defeat, saying the government’s work in bolstering the National Health Service and rolling out booster vaccines had been obscured by headlines about “politics and politician­s” that have little to do with everyday life.

“I totally understand people’s frustratio­ns …” Johnson said at a vaccinatio­n center n London. “In all humility, I have got to accept that verdict. I understand that what voters want us as the government to be doing at all times is to focus on them and their priorities.”

The U.K.’S next general election isn’t scheduled to take place until May 2, 2024.

 ?? JACOB KING/PA VIA AP ?? Helen Morgan and the Liberal Democrats overturned an almost 23,000 Conservati­ve majority to win the by-election.
JACOB KING/PA VIA AP Helen Morgan and the Liberal Democrats overturned an almost 23,000 Conservati­ve majority to win the by-election.

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