Reform of the British peaks such as conservatives lose seats: 4 local elections for collection restaurants
While the votes in the local elections of England were still counted on Friday, the reform of the British British party of Nigel Farage arose as the biggest winner of the first major polls since then Labor was swept into the government Last summer.
Voters have selected councilors for around 1,600 municipal seats in 23 areas, as well as six regional mayors.
Here are four take -away restaurants of a night in which the two large political parties of Great Britain suffer considerable losses.
Reform UK is a serious power in British politics.
The right -wing populist party led by Mr. Farage won a special election In Runcorn and Helsby, in the northwest of England, giving it five legislators in parliament. The party also won the mayor in Greater Lincolnshire, a new position, and receives council seats throughout the country.
The party was initially called the Brexit party, but formally renamed itself after Great -Britain withdrew from the European Union.
The results on Friday indicated that the efforts of the reform to increase his image as a party with one issue and to rely on fruits. Brexit is now rarely discussed by his politicians who have focused on A hard line about immigration.
Reform disputed his highest number of seats ever in the local elections, after a series of regional political meetings in which those present were encouraged to register as candidates and were quickly screened with the help of artificial intelligence.
Mr Farage seems to have learned from President Trump about campaign strategy by keeping events through thousands of people in recent months.
England is in a new era of multi -party politics.
Although reform was the biggest winner, the conservatives and labor were the biggest losers. The two parties, who have dominated British politics for decades, not only lost municipal seats to reform, but also on the central liberal Democrats and the left -wing green party.
Luke Tryyl, executive director of More in Common UK, a political research group, said that the results reflected the ‘total disillusion’ of many voters.
“In our focus groups there is just a real sentence that the status quo works for anyone, and what you see in the results is that frustration is happening,” he said. “If you look at British politics since the Brexit the audience is on the button and say,” We want change “. They don’t have the feeling that they have it, and the result is that politics is spreading the typical mainstream.”
Mr Tryyl said that for many voters he had interviewed, choosing reform a “roll of the dice” was because of deep accident with the last conservative government and so far with the performance of Labor.
The turnout was low. Only 46 percent of the eligible voters participated in the Runcorn Special Election and 30 percent in the race for the Greater Lincolnshire Mayor.
Labor had a bad night, but it could have been worse.
While the ruling party lost various large races and council seats, there were some silver rans for Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The special election of Runcorn was lost in reform with only six votes after a dramatic recounting, while Labor retained three mayor positions in Doncaster, North Tyneside and the west of England.
The results seemed to continue an international trend of established governments in the polls.
Akash Paun, program director of the Institute for Government Research Institute, said that local elections had long been a ‘vehicle for protest voices’.
“Even less than a year after the Labor Government, it is quite clear that there is a lot of dissatisfaction and frustration,” he said. “There was no long honeymoon that new prime ministers seem to expect.”
Mr Paun said that while the general elections of last year were praised as a ‘Labor -shift’, the party received only 34 percent of the national vote.
“In the first place there was no huge wave of support,” he noticed.
The conservatives are in a difficult place.
Less than a year after losing a record 251 parliamentary seats in the general elections, the party is confronted with the loss of hundreds of municipal seats.
Attacked by reform on the right and the liberal democrats on the left, the tories are confronted with what some experts describe as an existential crisis.
Patrick English, director of political analyzes at Yougov, a polling station, said A “very high watermark” in 2021It was influenced by a wave of support for what was seen at the time as Boris Johnson’s competent handling of the Covid Pandemie.
But, he added: “The context in English local elections is that if you are the opposition, you should do it well and you should win. But the conservatives are not doing well because they are fighting for their political life on the right with the threat of reform.”
The current leader of the Tories, Kemi Badenoch, is Not in general popularBut there is no clear successor, and party officials fear a new round of struggle.
The conservative parliamentary group has shrunk so considerably that party bosses have increased the threshold for provoking a trust voice in the leader, so Mrs Badenoch can stay in the post for a while.