More stories

  • in

    London Mayoral Election 2024: When will the winner be announced?

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailLondoners went to the polls on Thursday, 2 May to elect a mayor and 25 London Assembly members. Around six million people were registered to vote in this year’s election, which decides who will be in charge of the capital for the next four years. The ballot boxes were moved from more than 3,600 polling stations across the capital, staffed by around 12,000 people, to 14 counting centres in the city overnight.But the results are unlikely to be declared until late on Saturday, as verification of the votes does not start until Friday morning at 9am.Counting of the votes then starts at 9am on Saturday, with three ballot papers needing to be counted.The mayoral votes will be counted first, followed by the constituency London Assembly members, and then the London-wide Assembly members.The first results should emerge around midday and it is thought the winner may be clear by as early as 1.30pm on Saturday. But the official announcement is expected to take place in the late afternoon or evening at City Hall – and could be pushed back if there are any delays.This year there was a new voting system, first past the post (FPTP), similar to what is used in general elections. In previous mayoral elections voters could make a first and second choice for mayor, however this time people only received one vote.The London mayoral candidates were officially announced on Thursday 28 March, with 13 candidates running for office. Here are all the candidates below.Sadiq Khan – Labour PartySadiq Khan More

  • in

    Tory chairman Richard Holden asked if it is time to ‘get out brandy and revolver’ as party braced for worse loss in 40 years

    Tory chairman Richard Holden was asked if it is time to “get out the brandy and a loaded revolver’” as his party is set for a “catastrophic” election loss.Britain’s top polling guru Professor Sir John Curtice said the election “could be one of the worst, if not the worst, Conservative performances in local government elections of the last forty years.Appearing on LBC on Friday (3 May), presenter Nick Ferrari asked Mr Holden if now is the time to “get out the brandy and a loaded revolver”.Mr Holden laughed and replied: “Certainly not, no.” More

  • in

    Independent readers slam senior Tories amid alleged plot to replace Rishi Sunak with Penny Mordaunt

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailAs an alleged right-wing plot to replace Rishi Sunak with Penny Mordaunt made the headlines this week, we asked you who you thought should take the reins of the Tory Party.The discussion centred on the UK’s general political landscape, with Independent readers expressing their disillusionment with all the major parties, pointing to failures in governance, broken promises, and a detachment from public interests.Criticism, however, was mainly squared at Tory leadership since 2010 — from David Cameron to Rishi Sunak and from Theresa May to Boris Johnson.As for future prospects, Penny Mordaunt’s potential leadership was questioned, with concerns about her voting record and lack of experience for the role of Prime Minister.Overall, there was a compelling mood of discontent towards the current political climate, with a call for meaningful change and accountability.Here’s what you had to say:‘The Tories are the past’It does not really matter who is Tory leader. The party will lose badly whenever the election is called. I personally will not vote for the party whoever they have as leader. A lot of voters are simply turned off our politicians so who leads a particular party is of no interest. We want our public services fixed, and be made to feel there is hope for the future. The Tories whether under Sunak or someone else are the past. I personally have no enthusiasm for Labour. I am hearing far too little that will differentiate them from what the current government has done or said. I live in a safe Labour seat so I will not be adding to their majority. Mine will be a third-party vote as it has been for the past 50 years.49niner‘Corruption and dodgy deals have become the standard’Nobody can save the Tory party if the electorate comes to its senses! They’ve caused misery for so many and still are. Brexit has torn through UK society. The instigator of that – a weak PM who hoped to solve his internal party problems is now prancing around the world as foreign secretary, despite having run away after losing to the right wing anti-EU brigade factions. The Tories have underfunded and run down all the essential services in the UK. People pulling their own teeth out who can’t see a dentist, cancer patients unable to see doctors, schools underfunded and the education system failing so many. Infrastructure: roads, transport, school buildings and hospitals crumbling not to mention the shortage of affordable housing. Serious crime, particularly in the cities seemingly out of control. Then there’s the total mishandling of the migrant issue. Crazy schemes going nowhere. Their Rwanda scheme doing nothing more than confirming the UK’s pariah status as it intends to ignore international law. Their sole focus has been on greater enrichment of themselves and their friends. Corruption and dodgy deals have become the standard. Lies flow freely and many government ministers have been promoted to jobs way above their ability. Doing jobs they know little or nothing about. The electorate can only watch on as they fly around the world in their private jets and helicopters feeling important and feeding their ego as children go hungry and the only growth industry (if you can call it that) is food banks!Ambigirls‘It’ll take a miracle to save the Tories’As Penny Mordaunt has worked as a magician’s assistant, she could try to use those same skills to try to assist the Tory party from defeat. But seriously it’s going to take more than magic and conjuring tricks to stem prospective Tory losses. Sunak has been trying to pull the same old rabbits out of hats like coshing immigration and stamping out benefit scroungers to get a few voters on his side. But it hasn’t generated the same excitement it might have done; voters are a little more sophisticated than they used to be, which means pulling the wool over their eyes isn’t as easy. The polls stand at 20% for the Tories, 46% for Labour. It’ll take a miracle to save the Tories. It’s too late to oust Sunak even if anyone at this late stage were interested in replacing him. Many are intending to leave, around 67 MPs have given notice. Now what about the Tories on the other side of the House like Starmer, Reeve, Steering?Benitas‘Tory assault on human rights’My lasting memory of Mordaunt will be when she became disabilities minister, this was at a time when the disabled were being vilified and ‘tortured’ by the Tories. In all the time she was the minister I checked very carefully at what she was doing, or not, all I could find that she actually did was to be on a swimming-based TV show and then auction off her swimsuit. At this time the Government was twice found guilty of breaching the human rights of the disabled by our own High Courts and subsequently sanctioned by the UN for this. We are all surely now aware of the Tory assault on all our human rights. Human rights that are being consistently eroded under 14 years of Tory Governments. In fact, it was one of May’s 2017 campaign pledges to take away everyone’s human rights, something she tried to do twice.TomSnout‘Concerning state of affairs’The political system in our country is broken. The Labour, Conservative, and Lib Dem parties no longer represent the interests of those who elected them. The Labour Party, once known for supporting working people, now have disdain for them. Meanwhile, the Conservative Party are a shambles. As for the Lib Dems, they are little more than a punchline. It’s a concerning state of affairs when the major political parties fail to connect with or adequately serve the people they’re supposed to represent.”AndrewAndrew‘Sunak is probably the best they have left’In 2010 our nation was in a reasonable state and fed up with New Labour. The coalition kept things up, but austerity didn’t do the nation good. Many other nations tried austerity, but abandoned it sooner or later as ineffective. Cameron/Osborne lacked the intellect to change tack. May tried to square the circle of a ‘damage free Brexit’ and failed. Then the decline set in seriously. Johnson couldn’t be bothered to govern. He was in it for the glamour alone. Truss/Kwarteng brought in Cloud Cuckoo economics. Then finally the Tories selected a halfway competent PM, but they needed a brilliant one, ergo he failed.Does the Parliamentary Conservative Party have anyone among them whohis more than halfway competent? No, they have not. Boris Johnson chased all those away before the 2019 elections. Sunak is probably the best they have left and he has shown to be grossly inadequate. The Tories are toast.RebootedyetagainHans2‘Why not let them all fall into the fissure?’The Tories have always had a fissure running right down their middle. When they start warring then it’s the electorate that ends up paying the bill. Why not let them all fall into the fissure?Mark_My_Words‘All in the same camp’Penny Mordaunt’s USP is that she appears more relatable and less swivel-eyed loon than her probable fellow contenders. Of course, that’s a relative comparison. A cursory examination of her voting record reveals her right-wing sympathies: Almost always voted for a reduction in spending on welfare benefits. Almost always voted against paying higher benefits over longer periods for those unable to work due to illness or disability. Consistently voted for making local councils responsible for helping those in financial need afford their council tax and reducing the amount spent on such support. Generally voted for reducing housing benefit for social tenants deemed to have excess bedrooms (which Labour describe as the ‘bedroom tax’) Generally voted against raising welfare benefits at least in line with prices. Generally voted against increasing the state pension age for women more slowly. Consistently voted for increasing the state pension age. Ms Mordaunt may not signal quite the same obvious repugnance as Braverman, Badenoch, Patel et al, but she’s definitely in the same camp.PinkoRadical‘Actual hydrogen balloons’Mordaunt is a working-class conservative who is socially more liberal than the ERG/UKIP tendency. Since Cameron, the Conservatives have reliably chosen, not so much lightweights, more actual hydrogen balloons. From that point of view Mordaunt would be an improvement. But she does not have anything like the experience to be PM. When you look at past Conservative PMs, Churchill had a vast depth of experience in cabinet roles, Heath was extremely intelligent, but Thatcher had constantly to come up with stunts to stay in power – monetarism, taking on the miners, the Falklands, selling council houses off cheap to potential Conservative voters, supporting Gorbachev – and then fell foul of the poll tax, a major misjudgement aimed at keeping retired single occupant Conservative voters happy and taxing council house tenants with children living at home. Mordaunt would be subject to enormous pressure from the barking right which she lacks the experience and depth of support to resist, which is presumably why they want her. Her job would be to lose the election so she could be replaced by a headbanger, especially if she loses her seat.If she declines, she has a chance of becoming leader of the opposition and feeling her way into the role against a demoralised Conservative Right – provided she keeps her seat.Erbium‘Bottom of the barrel’Given the fact the bottom of the barrel has been scraped so hard and so frequently (only to come up with dross) I suggest installing an AI instance. It would be unlike ‘real’ politicians as it’s been fed with data and opinions of thousands of people; not just the ones that allegedly have a fat wad of cash to wave around. Based on that, we might even get some reasonable decisions!Rittnorf‘PM4PM’You mean like Cameron did. Then May. Then Johnson. Then Truss. Then Sunak. What makes Mordant a more viable alternative? PM4PM…catchy slogan. But then Johnson had a similar catchy slogan…BJ4PM.SWPete‘Dire smorgasbord of incompetence’None of the pictured candidates would save the Tories or make a credible Prime Minister. Past performances at the dispatch box suggest that Mordaunt would make the most effective leader of the opposition but she is not certain to retain her seat. Opting for any right wing candidate will bring the Tories even more into conflict with a buoyant Reform Party. That’s a battle worth fighting only if they can win it and be assured that the right wing bandwagon that some parts of the electorate are signed up to will become more widespread. That’s the logical assessment but if we’ve learnt anything from this iteration of the Conservative Party it’s that all logic goes out of the window as blind panic overtakes reason. So in reality any of this dire smorgasbord of incompetence could be parachuted in to replace Sunak!MythicalkingSome of the comments have been edited for this article. You can read the full discussion in the comments section of the original article.All you have to do is sign up, submit your question and register your details – then you can then take part in the discussion. You can also sign up by clicking ‘log in’ on the top right-hand corner of the screen.Make sure you adhere to our community guidelines, which can be found here. For a full guide on how to comment click here. More

  • in

    Watch: Keir Starmer hails ‘incredible’ Blackpool election win

    Sir Keir Starmer has hailed Labour’s “incredible” victory in the Blackpool South local election.Visiting Blackpool on Friday (3 May), following Labour’s win, Sir Keir said victory in Blackpool South was “truly historic” and the “most important result” nationally.Meanwhile, Britain’s top polling guru Professor Sir John Curtice said the election “could be one of the worst, if not the worst, Conservative performances in local government elections of the last forty years.Asked if the results were “catastrophic” for the Tories, Sir John said: “Not far from it”. More

  • in

    Former Conservative chair blasts ‘gutter politics’ of Tory London mayoral candidate Susan Hall

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailA former Tory cabinet minister has accused the Conservative mayoral candidate for London of “gutter politics” following her controversial campaign.Former Conservative party chair and peer Sayeeda Warsi criticised mayoral candidate Susan Hall, who has been acccused of divisive politics and Islamophobia.Baroness Warsi – who served as Tory chair between 2010 and 2012 – said on X/Twitter: “Why is it that with every London Mayoral election we manage to find a candidate worse than the last and manage to sink that little bit more into gutter politics. “Look @andy4wm [Tory West Midlands mayor Andy Street] and learn @Conservatives – how inclusive and decent politics can be done. Be more #Street and less #Susan.”Mr Street’s mayorality is on a knife-edge as voters in the West Midlands went to the polls on Thursday. With the results of key mayoral contests yet to be declared, one Tory MP told The Independent that a move against Mr Sunak is “likely” if either Mr Street or Tees Valley mayor Ben Houchen lose their jobs.Speaking on his Political Currency podcast, former chancellor George Osborne said: “If Andy Street loses in the West Midlands, that’s pretty bad …[but] If Ben Houchen loses it will be armageddon – because at that point, people will say, ‘We are absolutely headed now for a massive landslide defeat’.”Baroness Warsi has slammed the Tory candidate for London mayor More

  • in

    ‘No solace’ for Rishi Sunak amid brutal local election losses, polling guru Sir John Curtice warns

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe UK’s top election expert has said the Conservatives could lose up to 500 seats in what is looking like their worst performance in four decades at the local elections.Polling guru Professor John Curtice said that the results far thus far – including the Blackpool South by-election – has meant “we’re probably looking at certainly one of the worst, if not the worst, Conservative performance in local government elections for the last 40-years”.Sir John said that the Tories look likely to lose around half of the seats they are defending, around 500.Asked if that result would be “catastrophic” for the party, he told Radio 4’s Today programme: “Not far short of it. I am not sure I would quite go that far but let’s put it together. Blackpool South, the third biggest swing in post-war by-election history, and the point is it is not an isolated event.“This is now the fifth parliamentary by-election in which we have seen swings of over 20 per cent from Conservative to Labour. The last time we had swings of that size with any degree of regularity was the 92-97 parliament. Tony Blair didn’t get as many as that and we know what happened in 1997.“The local elections, of course the Conservatives, as they have rightly been pointing out, were defending a very high baseline, losses did seem inevitable.“But so far they are basically losing a half of the seats they are trying to defend. If that continues they may end up losing 500 or so seats which was the thing they were meant to avoid.”Sir John’s comments come as the Conservatives are bracing themselves for yet more disappointment as the results from the local council elections trickle in.Labour has also hailed a “seismic” by-election win in Blackpool South. Labour took the seat from the Conservatives with 58.9 per cent of the vote share.Labour’s candidate Chris Webb received 10,825 votes, with the Tories trailing far behind with just 3,218 and Reform behind with just 3,218.Sir Keir Starmer said Labour’s win, in the contest to replace ousted Tory MP Scott Benton, was “truly historic” and the “most important result” nationally.Counting is under way in the 107 councils in England that held elections on Thursday, with the first results declared overnight and more to come later on Friday. Thus far, Labour have the key battlegrounds of Hartlepool, Redditch, Sunderland and Thurrock.Sir John Curtice warned the Conservative party against taking comfort in any wins in Teesside and West Mids More

  • in

    Tories set to lose half of seats they are defending in ‘ near catastrophic’ local election result

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe UK’s top election expert has said the Conservatives could lose up to 500 seats in what is looking like their worst performance in four decades at the local elections.Polling guru Professor John Curtice said that the results far thus far – including the Blackpool South by-election – has meant “we’re probably looking at certainly one of the worst, if not the worst, Conservative performance in local government elections for the last 40-years”.Sir John said that the Tories look likely to lose around half of the seats they are defending, around 500.Asked if that result would be “catastrophic” for the party, he told Radio 4’s Today programme: “Not far short of it. I am not sure I would quite go that far but let’s put it together. Blackpool South, the third biggest swing in post-war by-election history, and the point is it is not an isolated event.“This is now the fifth parliamentary by-election in which we have seen swings of over 20 per cent from Conservative to Labour. The last time we had swings of that size with any degree of regularity was the 92-97 parliament. Tony Blair didn’t get as many as that and we know what happened in 1997.“The local elections, of course the Conservatives, as they have rightly been pointing out, were defending a very high baseline, losses did seem inevitable.“But so far they are basically losing a half of the seats they are trying to defend. If that continues they may end up losing 500 or so seats which was the thing they were meant to avoid.”Sir John’s comments come as the Conservatives are bracing themselves for yet more disappointment as the results from the local council elections trickle in.Labour has also hailed a “seismic” by-election win in Blackpool South. Labour took the seat from the Conservatives with 58.9 per cent of the vote share.Labour’s candidate Chris Webb received 10,825 votes, with the Tories trailing far behind with just 3,218 and Reform behind with just 3,218.Sir Keir Starmer said Labour’s win, in the contest to replace ousted Tory MP Scott Benton, was “truly historic” and the “most important result” nationally.Counting is under way in the 107 councils in England that held elections on Thursday, with the first results declared overnight and more to come later on Friday. Thus far, Labour have the key battlegrounds of Hartlepool, Redditch, Sunderland and Thurrock.Sir John Curtice warned the Conservative party against taking comfort in any wins in Teesside and West Mids More

  • in

    Watch: Labour election victory announced in Blackpool South

    This is the moment Labour was announced victorious in the Blackpool South parliamentary by-election on Friday (3 May).In the contest triggered by the resignation of former Tory MP Scott Benton following a lobbying scandal, Labour’s Chris Webb secured 10,825 votes, a majority of 7,607.Tory David Jones came in second with 3,218 votes, just 117 ahead of Reform UK’s Mark Butcher.Mr Webb said: “People no longer trust the Conservatives. Prime Minister: do the decent thing, admit you’ve failed and call a general election.”The 26.33 percent swing was the third biggest from the Conservatives to Labour at a by-election since the Second World War. More