logo
Local election results live: Badenoch sorry for Tory ‘bloodbath' as Farage gloats Conservatives are finished

Local election results live: Badenoch sorry for Tory ‘bloodbath' as Farage gloats Conservatives are finished

Independent03-05-2025

Kemi Badenoch has apologised for the local elections 'bloodbath' as Nigel Farage has gloated the Tories are 'finished'.
All 23 councils have now been announced, with Reform UK winning 10, the Liberal Democrats three, and another 10 now under no overall control – while Reform's Sarah Pochin also dramatically beat Labour in a by-election for Runcorn and Helsby by six votes, overcoming a majority of more than 14,000 a year ago. And Mr Farage's party also won two mayoral elections.
Writing in the Telegraph, the Conservative leader admitted predictions the local elections were going to be a 'bloodbath' for her party had been correct, as she said: 'I'm deeply sorry to see so many capable, hard-working Conservative councillors lose their seats.'
Speaking of the Tories, Mr Farage told new councillors in Staffordshire: 'They are over, they are finished, they have literally been gutted in these counties, it is a position from which they will never, ever recover.'
Reform won in Lincolnshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire, Kent, North Northamptonshire, West Northamptonshire and Nottinghamshire councils, which were all previously Tory-run. It took control of Durham and Doncaster councils, where Labour was previously the biggest party.
Across the local councils the BBC reports that Reform has gained 677 councillors, the Lib Dems 163 and the Greens 45. The Conservatives have lost 676, Labour 186.
Maskell urges Labour to scrap winter fuel and welfare policies that 'are pushing voters away'
Labour MP Rachael Maskell has urged her party to scrap winter fuel and welfare policies that she said are pushing voters away.
The York Central MP told BBC Breakfast that Labour has 'special responsibilities' to serve the needs of people.
She said: 'We're not any other political party, we were created to serve the needs of people across working areas of our country so that people had a real voice of the kind of change that they wanted to see.
'I think it's now time, if Labour are going to go further faster, to pick up that voice, to put our fingers on the pulse and to understand that that responsibility that the 1945 government set out putting that safety net in place at the welfare state is on our watch and is our responsibility.
'So, scrapping these proposals to push disabled people into hardship is an absolutely crucial part of that change, showing that we're going to be listening to the country and protecting the people at their time of need.
'Of course we want to get more people into work. Of course the changes to the health system is really crucial … but also we've got to help people and care for people as we go on that journey.'
She added: 'People went cold last winter and that's not what a Labour government should be doing.
'We have got that mandate, I believe, as a party to look at how we can better redistribute wealth, as opposed to taking out of the pockets of the poorest.'
Tara Cobham3 May 2025 09:31
Labour MP suggests local election losses due to her party failing to live up to its values
A Labour MP has suggested that voters shunned her party in local elections because it has failed to live up to the values the public expects from a Labour government.
York Central MP Rachael Maskell said Labour needs to be driven by 'a framework of values, which is about protecting people, helping people to move forward in their lives and ensuring you've got those public services ready and working so that people can have that support when they need it'.
'That is what Labour governments do,' she told BBC Breakfast.
'I believe that when Labour does not meet that sweet spot, that expectation that people have of a Labour government, then they start to look in less favourable places for where that help comes from.
'Yesterday, many people were searching for that response, to find that protection, to get that support.
'But, sadly, if Labour were not offering that, they would look in other places.
'That's why Labour have got to learn from the results yesterday and ensure that we do meet the needs of people in this country in very, very trying times.'
Tara Cobham
Reform will find out there are 'no simple answers', senior Tory MP warns
Reform UK will find out there are 'no simple answers' to local public finances and have to make 'difficult choices' after the party surged in local elections, a senior Tory MP has said.
Richard Fuller, shadow chief treasury secretary, said it was now up to Nigel Farage's party to see if they can deliver in the areas where they have won council seats and mayoral polls.
He told GB News: 'We have to acknowledge Reform did very well yesterday.
'They won the Runcorn by-election off Labour. They've won some mayoralties and now they will get the chance to show what they can actually do when they give them power.
'So, no longer pointing at problems, but actually there to try and find solutions, albeit on a local level, to help the people in Lincolnshire or Hull, where they have taken over the mayoralties.
'And other areas where they have taken control of the council.
'They'll find out, Reform will find out, I think, that there are no simple answers locally to public finances at local government level, they'll have to make some difficult choices and the local public will … hold them to account for the decisions they make.'
Tara Cobham3 May 2025 08:38
Main party leaders now under pressure after Reform sweeps to victory in local elections
Sir Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch face pressure to reverse their parties' fortunes after the local elections saw Reform UK make major gains across England.
Nigel Farage hailed the results as 'the end of two-party politics' and 'the death of the Conservative Party' as Reform picked up 10 councils and more than 600 seats in Thursday's poll.
Conservative figures sought to deny that the results were 'existential' for the party.
But, squeezed between Reform and the Liberal Democrats, the Tories lost more than 600 councillors and all 15 of the councils it controlled going into the election, among the worst results in the party's history.
Mrs Badenoch herself apologised to the defeated Conservative councillors, adding: 'I am going to make sure that we get ourselves back to the place where we are seen as the credible alternative to Labour.'
Meanwhile, several Labour figures called on the Prime Minister to change course after Reform won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election by six votes and took control of the previously Labour-run Doncaster Council.
Backbench MP Emma Lewell, who has represented South Shields since 2013, said it was 'tone deaf to keep repeating we will move further and faster on our plan for change.
'What is needed is a change of plan.'
Tara Cobham3 May 2025 08:18
Mapped: Momentous night for Reform UK
Alex Croft3 May 2025 07:30
Comment | It was a bad night for Labour – but even worse for the Tories
It shouldn't make a difference to assessing Reform's performance whether it won the Runcorn by-election by six votes or lost by six, but in practice, it makes all the difference in the world.
It confirms that a government that is still new is so deeply unpopular that it cannot hold one of its safest seats. A landslide general election win that matched the giddiness of Blairphoria just 10 months ago has turned into the humiliation of defeat at the hands of Nigel Farage.
It confirms that Morgan McSweeney, Sir Keir Starmer's chief of staff and architect of his general election victory, is right to see Farage as the main threat to the Labour government – but it also shows how ineffective Labour's attempt to fight Reform on the issue of immigration has been.
It was a bad night for Labour – but even worse for the Tories
Nigel Farage's success was humiliating for Keir Starmer but ultimately more threatening to Kemi Badenoch, writes John Rentoul
Alex Croft3 May 2025 06:29
National vote projections give Reform large lead
Two national vote share projections, which estimate the result if the entire nation had voted in a general election yesterday, show a significant read for Nigel Farage's reform.
The BBC's Projected National Share had Reform on 30 per cent, with Labour the second largest party at 20 per cent.
The Lib Dems would come third with 17 per cent while the Conservatives would have dropped down to be the fourth most popular party, at just 15 per cent of the vote. The Greens would sit at 11 per cent.
Meanwhile, Sky's National Estimated Share put Reform at 32 per cent of the vote. Labour and the Tories were the next largest parties, at 19 per cent and 18 per cent respectively.
The Lib Dems would take 16 per cent of the vote, and the Greens seven.
Alex Croft3 May 2025 06:01
Local elections in pics: All smiles for Reform as Labour and Tories suffer trouncing
Alex Croft3 May 2025 05:00
Farage criticises leaders aiming to 'please everybody'
Nigel Farage took aim at leaders who want to 'please everybody' in favour of having opinions.
He told the PA news agency: 'Politics is about choices, having opinions, you like an individual you like what they stand for, and over the last few years it's become about leaders who want to please everybody and stand for nothing in particular.'
'It's pretty straight forward where I am on nearly all issues and if people like it that's great and if they don't it's called democracy.'
Alex Croft3 May 2025 04:00
Comment | We are witnessing the slow death of Conservative England
Associate editor Sean O'Grady writes:
As things stand, the question of the leadership of the Conservative Party, the oldest and most successful force in democratic politics in human history, feels almost like an irrelevance – because whether Kemi Badenoch survives or who might replace her are second-order questions in the context of these more fundamental societal changes.
The Tory party, in other words, seems doomed, whoever is in charge – even if there will always be some hope it can recover. Great swathes of the country the Tories could always rely upon – Lincolnshire, and Staffordshire, for heaven's sake – have fallen to the Farageistas.
At the general election, the Tories lost ground to Labour and the Liberal Democrats – Cambridgeshire, Oxfordshire and Devon – and they're not recovering any of it now. It's hard to see what leader or agenda could emerge that would allow them to do so; and a pact with Farage, which he feels no need to bother with, would simply be an act of surrender to the Reform insurgency.
In these local and council elections, we've witnessed another seizure in the slow death of Conservative England – and it's not going to be the last.
Alex Croft3 May 2025 03:00

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kemi Badenoch says office managers should be able to ban women from wearing face coverings
Kemi Badenoch says office managers should be able to ban women from wearing face coverings

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Kemi Badenoch says office managers should be able to ban women from wearing face coverings

Office managers should be able to ban employees from wearing burkas, Kemi Badenoch has said. The Tory leader hit out at the Islamic traditional dress and said she had 'strong views about face coverings' and would not allow people into her constituency surgeries if they wore them. Her remarks came after Reform's chairman Zia Yusuf quit following a row over the subject after his colleague MP Sarah Pochin urged the Prime Minister to ban the burka 'in the interests of public safety'- before rejoining on Saturday night. Mrs Badenoch said Britain could enforce a ban on burkas but what needs to be addressed are pressing issues around integration. She added that sharia courts and first-cousin marriage are an 'insidious' barrier to integration. She said: 'If you were to ask me where you start with integration – sharia courts, all of this nonsense sectarianism, things like first cousin marriage – there's a whole heap of stuff that is far more insidious and that breeds more problems. 'My view is that people should be allowed to wear whatever they want, not what their husband is asking them to wear or what their community says that they should wear.' She added: 'If you come into my constituency surgery, you have to remove your face covering, whether it's a burka or a balaclava. 'I'm not talking to people who are not going to show me their face, and I also believe that other people should have that control. 'Organisations should be able to decide what their staff wear; it shouldn't be something that people should be able to override.' France is just one of a number of countries that have already banned the burka. But Mrs Badenoch said: 'France has a ban and they have worse problems than we do in this country on integration. So banning the burka clearly is not the thing that's going to fix things.' If employers started to tell staff to remove any religious clothing, they could face legal issues under equality and human rights laws on the grounds they were being discriminating. An organisation would have to demonstrate its ban was for a legitimate reason, such as ensuring health and safety or enabling effective communication.

So much for smashing the gangs! Starmer claims the secret to solving the small-boat crisis is a crackdown on people smugglers, but soft-touch French judges let them walk free from court with merely a slap on the wrist
So much for smashing the gangs! Starmer claims the secret to solving the small-boat crisis is a crackdown on people smugglers, but soft-touch French judges let them walk free from court with merely a slap on the wrist

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

So much for smashing the gangs! Starmer claims the secret to solving the small-boat crisis is a crackdown on people smugglers, but soft-touch French judges let them walk free from court with merely a slap on the wrist

French judges were last night accused of 'going soft' on criminals orchestrating a wave of small-boat crossings to Britain after a string of convicted people smugglers were allowed to dodge prison. An investigation by The Mail on Sunday can today expose how criminals convicted of involvement in people trafficking have been allowed to walk free with a slap on the wrist by French courts – even when they were caught red-handed. In one of the most shocking cases, a married couple were last week handed suspended sentences and allowed to return home to Germany despite being caught with an inflatable dinghy, 50 life jackets and phones full of the numbers of migrants willing to pay thousands of pounds to make the perilous Channel crossing to England. And in another astonishing verdict, a suspected Iraqi people smuggler allegedly involved in last weekend's record number of small-boat crossings was 'given the benefit of the doubt' and acquitted by a French court, even though police found a 20-seat inflatable boat in the boot of the car he was in. A delighted Ibrahim Hussein, 36, blew kisses at the three judges who cleared him. Details of the extraordinary leniency by judges in northern France come as Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch last night demanded the freedom to deny migrants benefits – a move currently restrained by European human rights laws. Writing in today's MoS, Mrs Badenoch said it was 'fundamentally unfair' that after five years migrants can claim the same benefits as UK citizens regardless of whether they have paid taxes. French police officers were last weekend photographed on a beach idly watching as dozens of migrants waded into the Channel and climbed on to a dinghy. Writing in today's MoS, Mrs Badenoch said it was 'fundamentally unfair' that after five years migrants can claim the same benefits as UK citizens regardless of whether they have paid taxes France is reportedly poised to demand millions of pounds in extra cash to help intercept Channel migrants. Ministers are close to agreeing a deal to lift a ban on French police stopping boats in shallow water. But president Emmanuel Macron is expected to demand that the UK stump up even more money to pay for the law enforcement. The UK is already paying Paris £480million over three years to stop the Channel crossings. Now our exclusive investigation of the French courts can reveal: A man from Azerbaijan was convicted of people smuggling after being caught delivering an 18ft inflatable boat and its engine – but walked free from court in Dunkirk with a suspended sentence. A Bosnian who admitted transporting four boats to smugglers escaped with an eight-month suspended sentence. The woman, 19, who lived in Germany, said she had just passed her driving test and 'wanted to get away to France'. A 19-year old from Chad also got a suspended sentence in Boulogne on Wednesday after collecting hundreds of thousands of pounds from UK-bound migrants. Critics last night warned the paltry sentences risked torpedoing Keir Starmer's repeated pledge to 'smash the gangs' in a bid to secure the UK's borders. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'So much for Starmer's vow to smash the gangs. Despite being paid hundreds of millions of pounds, the French are clearly barely lifting a finger to stop this evil trade in illegal immigrants which has led to dozens of deaths. 'The French are taking Starmer and the UK taxpayer for a ride.' And Alp Mehmet, of Migration Watch UK, said French judges had 'gone soft', adding: 'It's a disgrace. These pathetic and weak judgments make it open season for these ruthless criminals.' There were extraordinary scenes in a court in Dunkirk last Monday when Afghans Idris Osman, 37, and his wife Tahmina, 36, walked free after being convicted of involvement in a people smuggling operation. Family members, who had travelled from their home in Germany, cheered after the couple were handed eight-month suspended sentences and banned from France for ten years. Three days earlier, they were arrested after their German-registered Mazda was seen close to a beach at Leffrinckoucke, near Dunkirk. A search revealed an inflatable boat, outboard motor, cans of fuel and 50 life jackets. Brazen Idris Osman attempted to blame his wife, saying: 'She's the one who has the contacts with the man who organised the trip – a Kurd named Djmal. I thought we were going to Belgium for a wedding and that we were transporting a recreational boat.' The couple were paid around £3,600 for the trip, the court heard. On the same day, Syrian Taher Al Arrag, 45, and Iraqi Ibrahim Hussein, 36, appeared in a French court accused of offences related to people smuggling last weekend. Some 1,200 migrants arrived in the UK last Saturday – a record for a single day this year. Pictured: a group of people believed to be migrants carry a boat which may be used to cross the Channel. The social media footage comes as Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch last night demanded the freedom to deny migrants benefits – a move currently restrained by European human rights laws French gendarmes stopped the pair in an Opel Vectra in Neufmoulin, near Abbeville. In the boot, police found five 20-litre cans of fuel, a 20-seat inflatable boat, an outboard engine and 35 life jackets. Both said they were going to use the boat to get to Britain themselves, despite leaving their families in Germany. Hussein, who had been in the passenger seat, was acquitted after judges gave him the 'benefit of the doubt'. Al Arrg was convicted of 'aiding the illegal movement of foreigners' and jailed for a year, with the possibility of parole after two months. In another case, a man from Azerbaijan, referred to only by the initials RR, was arrested on May 25 after his car spun out of control during a police chase. Officers found a boat, fuel and 42 life jackets in the car. He was also arrested on May 18 while delivering a boat and its engine to a beach. But at a court in Dunkirk on May 30, judges gave him a one-year suspended sentence. Germany is a key part of the supply chain for boats used by the gangs. Boats from Turkey with Chinese-sourced engines are transported to German warehouses before being covertly moved to the French coast.

More than nine of out ten of the Tory rank-and-file want Kemi Badenoch to purge 'wets' from the party in order to meet the challenge of Nigel Farage and Reform UK
More than nine of out ten of the Tory rank-and-file want Kemi Badenoch to purge 'wets' from the party in order to meet the challenge of Nigel Farage and Reform UK

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

More than nine of out ten of the Tory rank-and-file want Kemi Badenoch to purge 'wets' from the party in order to meet the challenge of Nigel Farage and Reform UK

More than nine out of ten Tory supporters want Kemi Badenoch to mount a purge of 'wets' in the Tory party in order to meet the challenge of Nigel Farage, new polling has found. According to a survey by the Popular Conservatism group, known as PopCon, 92 per cent of Conservative members and voters agree that there should be a 'big shake-up' in the party, including 'getting rid of the wets who aren't really Conservative' and 'getting rid of the MPs who are big state, pro-EU and arrogantly elitist'. The poll offers support for Ms Badenoch, with 93 per cent agreeing with her vow to abandon Net Zero targets. A total of 91 per cent want to quit the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), while 89 per cent want to reverse Sir Keir Starmer 's EU deal. Despite the party languishing in the polls, Ms Badenoch receives backing for her approach. However, 42 per cent of her supporters want her to establish a formal relationship with Reform. Separate polling published today by Lord Ashcroft in The Mail on Sunday reveals that voters do not think Sir Keir is sincere when he promises to cut immigration.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store