Spread of Tory losses leads former minister to say there’s ‘no such thing as a safe seat any more’

The Conservatives are facing one of their worst local election results in 40 years, with striking Labour gains across England and Wales in key battlegrounds they need to secure victory at the general election.

The spread of the Conservative losses led one former minister to claim there was “no such thing really as a safe Tory seat any more”, but the prime minister appeared committed to clinging on until polling day, with rebels in his own party lacking the support to oust him.

The polling expert Prof John Curtice of Strathclyde University said the results added up to “one of the worst, if not the worst” performances by the Conservatives in four decades.

The party is expected to lose up to 500 seats when all votes are counted, with Labour advancing in areas of both the “red wall” north won by the Tories under Boris Johnson and the traditional southern Conservative heartlands.

  • @Altofaltception@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    Reminder that the Tories have had 2 Prime Ministers in power without holding an election.

    Edited to clarify: yes there have been 3 PMs since 2019, but 2 of them were not elected.

  • @fluxion@lemmy.world
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    7728 days ago

    Wow, apparently in some places there are consequences for completing tanking your country’s economy and global standing. Which that was true everywhere

    • @thetreesaysbark@sh.itjust.works
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      2928 days ago

      It’s taken a lot of tanking for people to wake up.

      Also these are just council seats. I can only hope it translates to the GE. The past few years however has taught me to hold no expectations for how the public will vote.

  • @then_three_more@lemmy.world
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    3128 days ago

    We need to make sure whenever the General Election is we keep up this momentum. I want them to have a wipe out that makes Canada 1993 look like a good result for conservatives. Leave the fuckers with 2 MP’s.

    When the time comes remember to vote tactically. In our system you often don’t get the luxury of voting for who you want, you vote against who you don’t want.

    https://tactical.vote/

  • Flying SquidM
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    2528 days ago

    I know he’s from Alaska, but can we pretend for this thread that Riker is from Milton Keynes?

  • RubberDuck
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    2228 days ago

    Isn’t this also the swing back from the previous sweeping wins they had last time around. People where angry then blaming labor… only to find that it just got worse.

    • @cynar@lemmy.world
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      928 days ago

      A depressing number also decided, I voted labour, and nothing changed (when they didn’t win). I’m going to try conservative now.

  • @Milk_Sheikh
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    1828 days ago

    Me: Haha get fucked Tories, this is what you deserve for the absolute dereliction of leadership and results

    Also me: I hope this translates to the general and isn’t just the usual protest vote for local elections

  • @casmael
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    1828 days ago

    Removed by mod

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    828 days ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The party is expected to lose up to 500 seats when all votes are counted, with Labour advancing in areas of both the “red wall” north won by the Tories under Boris Johnson and the traditional southern Conservative heartlands.

    Labour also ousted a number of Tory police and crime commissioners, and took control of at least seven new councils, including in Buckinghamshire, Essex, Hampshire and Sussex in the south of England.

    Despite heavy losses for the government, the Conservatives pointed to pockets of success such as the Tory mayor Ben Houchen holding on in Tees Valley, and Andy Street likely to keep his mayoralty in the West Midlands on Saturday.

    He accused Labour of trying to “stroll back in” to Tees Valley and said he was sure that the region’s voters would stick with the Tories at a general election – despite a swing in the mayoralty suggesting the opposition would have won all parliamentary seats in the area.

    Kwasi Kwarteng, the Conservative MP and former chancellor, told LBC that there was “no such thing really as a safe Tory seat any more” but he also said it was not the right time to change leader as “stability and consolidation” were needed.

    Andrea Jenkyns, the only Conservative MP who has publicly acknowledged sending a letter of no confidence in Sunak, instead called for a “war reshuffle” to bring back former ministers Suella Braverman, Robert Jenrick, Priti Patel and Jacob Rees-Mogg.


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