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    Labour’s youngest councillor, 18, wins seat a week before her A-level exams

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailOne of the youngest councillors ever to be elected in the UK has won her seat just a week before she is due to take her A-level exams.Daisy Blakemore-Creedon, 18, was elected to Peterborough City Council after beating the sitting Tory councillor Andy Coles in the Fletton & Woodston ward.The Labour candidate said she was “overwhelmed” by the local support when she gained 940 votes to beat her opponent by 282 ballots.Just one day after her victory, she told The Independent that she had thrown herself into her new role and had already begun to carry out her new duties – despite having to sit exams next week.“I wasn’t expecting to win as it was quite a short campaign, so I was feeling very overwhelmed when it happened,” she said. “My priorities as a councillor are supporting the community – especially those who are the most disadvantaged.”Blakemore-Creedon’s campaign team with Labour candidate Andrew Pakes More

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    Orbán challenger in Hungary mobilizes thousands at a rare demonstration in a government stronghold

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email A rising challenger to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held what he called the largest countryside political demonstration in the country’s recent history on Sunday, the latest stop on his campaign tour that has mobilized thousands across Hungary’s rural heartland.Some 10,000 people gathered in Debrecen, Hungary’s second-largest city, in support of Péter Magyar, a political newcomer who in less than three months has shot to prominence on pledges to bring an end to problems like official corruption and a declining quality of life in the Central European country.Supporters endured a brief but unexpected rain shower ahead of the afternoon demonstration, turning the city’s central square into a sea of umbrellas. They waved Hungarian flags bearing the names of towns and villages across the country from which they had come.“Today, the vast majority of the Hungarian people are tired of the ruling elite, of the hatred, apathy, propaganda and artificial divides,” Magyar told the crowd. “Hungarians today want cooperation, love, unity and peace.”Magyar, a former insider within Hungary’s ruling Fidesz party, has since February denounced the nationalist Orbán as running an entrenched “mafia state,” and declared war on what he calls a propaganda machine run by the government.His party, TISZA (Respect and Freedom), has announced it will run 12 candidates in June 9 European Union elections, with Magyar appearing first on the party list. TISZA has also announced it will run four candidates in local council elections in the capital Budapest.His appearance on Sunday in Debrecen, a stronghold of Orbán’s ruling Fidesz party, reflected the focus his fledgling campaign has placed on the Hungarian countryside, where Orbán is popular.The Mother’s Day event was the latest stop on a tour of the country where Magyar has appeared in dozens of cities, towns and villages, often drawing thousands of supporters — numbers that few Orbán opponents have ever been able to mobilize in rural areas.Addressing the crowd, he said that “government propaganda” had tried to discredit his movement as “just a downtown Budapest media hack,” and criticized Hungary’s traditional opposition parties as having abandoned rural Hungarians. “We’ve heard for 14 years from the opposition that it’s impossible in these circumstances to defeat Orbán, that it’s not worth traveling to the countryside, that young people aren’t interested in politics, that you can’t break down the walls of propaganda,” he said. “But look around! What’s the truth?”Katalin Nagy, who traveled several hours to the rally, said she finds Magyar credible “because he comes from the inside.”“He’s aware of the things that are really causing problems in this country, and I think he can provide solutions to problems so that we can come out of the hole that this country is currently in,” she said.Recent polls show that Magyar’s party may have become the largest opposition force little more than a month before the election. Pollster Median this week measured TISZA at 25% among certain voters, with Orbán’s Fidesz well ahead at 45%.Governing party politicians have dismissed Magyar, who describes himself as a moderate conservative, as a leftist in disguise, and suggested that foreign interests lie behind his rise. Orbán and has party have ruled Hungary with a constitutional majority since 2010. More

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    New Brexit border checks chaos ‘masked’ by bank holiday weekend as businesses face delays and red tape

    Sign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UKSign up to our Brexit email for the latest insightThe director general of Britain’s leading trade body has described Tory ministers as “smart” for using the bank holiday weekend to mask the impact of a new Brexit borders checks system, which is set to add delays, red tape and costs to many imports.Marco Forgione, director general of the Institute of Export and International Trade (IoE&IT), was commenting on the second phase of the controversial new Border Target Operating Model (Btom) system to check animal and plant exports, which was introduced on Wednesday (30 April).There have already been reports of garden centres and other businesses “stockpiling” plants and goods to avoid the initial chaos of the system, which was brought in as a result of Brexit.Mr Forgione told The Independent: “The government was smart to introduce the checks on what is a bank holiday in the EU, as there is a reduction in traffic.“The point is what will happen in the coming days and weeks. A lot of businesses also completed their movements before the checks came in… inventory management, you might call it stockpiling.”New border checks came in on Wednesday 30 April More

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    John Swinney suggests Labour would do a deal with the SNP in a hung parliament after a general election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe SNP “leader-in-waiting” John Swinney has said he believes Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer would do a deal with his party after the next general election.The remarks come as polling expert Professor Michael Thrasher told Sky News that the country is heading for a hung parliament after the next general election based on the results at the polls this week.Sir Trevor Phillips challenged both Mr Swinney and Labour’s campaign chief Pat McFadden over the potential for a Labour/ SNP pact on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips.Mr McFadden, who started his career in Scottish politics, made it clear he was opposed to the idea, telling Sir Trevor: “No!”Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer after the regional mayoral elections More

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    Tories warned not to embrace rightwing extremism after disastrous local elections

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailTory MPs have been warned that they did not get an electoral dubbing because they “were not right wing or extreme enough” as a battle over the party’s future begins.The defeat of former Tory Mayor Andy Street in the West Midlands late on Saturday night has reopened questions over whether the party “is conservative enough” or should change leader from Rishi Sunak.But Boris Johnson’s former director of communications Guto Harri joined Mr Street in warning against a “drift to the right.”Rishi Sunak’s leadership is under fire More

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    What we learned from local votes ahead of looming UK general election

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Millions of voters in England cast ballots Thursday in an array of local elections, the last big test before a looming U.K. general election that all indicators suggest will see the Labour Party return to power after 14 years in the wilderness.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was barely able to point to any big success for his Conservative Party, confirming that the electoral coalition that gave the party a big win in the 2019 general election has frayed, if not completely dissolved, in the wake of a series of political dramas and the cost of living crisis.For Labour leader Keir Starmer, the results provided confirmation of what opinion polls have shown for two years — that Labour has recovered from its 2019 low and is on course to win the election comfortably.Here are five things we learned: WILL SUNAK FACE A REBELLION? It’s possible.Though the Conservatives lost around half the 1,000 council seats they held, and suffered a huge defeat in the special parliamentary election in Blackpool South, a coastal resort town in the northwest of England, it looks as though Sunak will not face a revolt just yet from anxious lawmakers in his party. That’s largely because the Conservative candidate in the mayoral contest in Tees Valley in the northeast of England hung on when the result was announced on Friday, albeit with a much depressed vote. That helped soothe some concerns despite losses elsewhere. However, the defeat of the Conservative incumbent in the West Midlands on Saturday could prompt another bout of jitters among lawmakers increasingly concerned about their ability to hold onto their seats in a general election.Overall, the results show that Sunak hasn’t improved the Conservatives’ overall position following the damage caused by the actions of his predecessors, Boris Johnson, who was effectively ousted, and then replaced by Liz Truss. WHEN WILL THE GENERAL ELECTION BE? Probably in the fall.In the U.K., the date of the general election rests in the hands of the prime minister. It has to take place by January, and Sunak has repeatedly said that his “working assumption” was that it would take place in the second half of 2024. Though that theoretically could take place as soon as July, most Conservative lawmakers have indicated that the best time would be in the fall, when recent tax cuts may register with voters, inflation has fallen further, and interest rates may have been cut — helping to fuel an economic feelgood factor. Waiting till the fall may also give the government a chance to cut taxes again in another budget. Conservatives will also be hoping that the controversial plan to send some asylum-seekers to Rwanda will have got off the ground and that there is evidence that it is acting as a deterrent for those seeking to make the dangerous crossing in small boats across the English Channel from France to England. IS LABOUR HEADED FOR POWER? It looks like it.In historical terms, Labour has a mountain to climb, if it’s going to form the next government. Its performance at the last general election in 2019 was its worst since 1935. Starmer has tried to bring the party back to the center of U.K. politics after the leadership of veteran left-winger Jeremy Corbyn. Starmer’s approach has clearly worked if Thursday’s results are anything to go by. Labour won control of councils in England that the party hasn’t held for decades, and was successful on a massive swing away from the Conservatives in Blackpool South, which if repeated at the general election would lead to a big majority. Labour won in areas that voted for Britain’s departure from the European Union in 2016 and where it was crushed by Brexit-backer Johnson, such as Hartlepool in the northeast of England, and Thurrock in southeast England. It also seized control of Rushmoor, a leafy and military-heavy council in the south of England where it had never won, showing that it has a broad base of support.It’s fair to say that enthusiasm levels are far lower than those that heralded the arrival of Labour’s Tony Blair before the 1997 general election. That may be partly because of the more challenging economic backdrop, but Starmer, formerly a human rights lawyer, lacks the razzmatazz of his predecessor. WILL IT BE A LANDSLIDE? It’ll be tough.One of the contributing factors to Blair’s landslide victory in 1997 came from so-called tactical voting, whereby some voters put aside their political preference and vote for whoever has the best chance of defeating the party they oppose the most. In 1997, that was the Conservatives. Tactical voting has reemerged and was evident somewhat in Thursday’s elections where Conservative candidates lost out to other parties, not just Labour, but also to the centrist Liberal Democrats and also to the Green Party. The Conservatives may also be outflanked from the right, with Reform U.K. poised to stand candidates across Britain. In Thursday’s elections, it was a minimal presence but where the party did stand, it clearly took votes away from Conservative candidates. That was notable in Blackpool South, where the Reform candidate was just shy of usurping the Conservatives into second. Should Reform, which claims to be tougher on issues such as immigration and on Brexit, do as well in a general election, then it could lead to other parties, notably Labour, defeating Conservatives. DOES LABOUR HAVE A GAZA PROBLEM? It certainly looks like it. In some areas with large Muslim populations, such as Blackburn and Oldham in northwest England, Labour candidates appear to have suffered as a result of the leadership’s strongly pro-Israel stance over the conflict in Gaza. Though Labour’s vote share was clearly impacted, but the effect on its performance in a general election remains unclear, as those seats with a big Muslim population generally have big Labour majorities. More

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    Labour’s youngest councillor, 18, wins seat week before A-Level exams

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailOne of the youngest councillors elected in the UK has won her seat just a week before she’s due to take her A-level exams.Daisy Blakemore-Creedon, 18, was elected to Peterborough City Council after beating the sitting Tory councillor Andy Coles in the Fletton & Woodston ward.The Labour candidate said she was “overwhelmed” by the local support when she gained 940 votes to beat her opponent by 282 ballots.Just one day after her victory, she told The Independent that she had thrown herself into her new role and had already begun to carry out her new duties – despite having to sit exams next week.“I wasn’t expecting to win as it was quite a short campaign so I was feeling very overwhelmed when it happened,” she said.“My priorities as a councillor are supporting the community – especially those who are the most disadvantaged.”Her political journey began when she was just ten-years-old when she would attend protests with family and went on to join the Labour party in 2020 aged just 14 More

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    Manchester mayor Andy Burnham wins more votes than rivals combined

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailAndy Burnham has vowed to “make big things happen” after he won a third successive term as the mayor of Greater Manchester with more votes than all his opponents combined.The Labour candidate won by a landslide with 63.4 per cent of the vote – miles ahead of runner-up Conservative candidate Laura Evans with 10.39 per cent.Reform gained 7.46 per cent of the vote, ahead of the Greens with 6.92 per cent and Lib Dems with 4.25 per cent.“I’m overwhelmed and humbled that so many people have again given me their support,” he said upon his victory.“I’m always conscious that people who perhaps will usually vote for other parties at a general election have lent me their support.”Andy Burnham has been re-elected as Greater Manchester mayor (Peter Byrne/PA) More