Partial results show losses for Starmer’s party in local polls

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London, May 8: Partial results on Friday from local elections in England showed big losses for Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s governing Labour Party and gains for the hard-right party Reform UK.
The votes are being widely seen as an unofficial referendum on Starmer, whose popularity has plummeted since he was elected less than two years ago.
Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, won hundreds of local council seats in working-class areas in England’s north, such as Hartlepool, that once were solid Labour turf. The picture will change throughout Friday as results come in from the majority of local councils, including Labour strongholds like London. Votes will also be counted in contests for semiautonomous parliaments in Scotland and Wales.
A Labour rout could trigger moves by restive party lawmakers to oust a leader who led them to power in July 2024. Even if Starmer survives for now, many analysts doubt he will lead the party into the next national election, which must be held by 2029.
Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy cautioned the party not to topple the prime minister, saying, “You don’t change the pilot during the flight.”
The Green Party also hoped to increase its vote share and win hundreds of council seats in urban centres and university towns. The results reflect a fragmentation of British politics after decades of domination by Labour and the Conservatives.
The Conservative Party is also expected to lose ground, with the centrist Liberal Democrats making some gains.
Farage said the results marked “an historic change in British politics.” Reform, running on an anti-establishment, anti-immigration message, is also eyeing breakthroughs in Scotland and Wales, though pro-independence nationalists, the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru, are more likely to form governments in Edinburgh and Cardiff.
Starmer’s popularity has plunged after repeated missteps and U-turns on policies such as welfare reform. His government has struggled to deliver promised economic growth, repair tattered public services and ease the cost of living – tasks made harder by the US-Israeli war with Iran, which has choked off oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. (AP)

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