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Brexit test for May as Brits vote in local polls

Brexit test for May as Brits vote in local polls

May 03, 2018 | 10:18 PM
Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip arrive at a polling station to vote in local elections in central London yesterday.
Voters in England cast their ballots yesterday in local government elections expected to show rising support for Prime Minister Theresa May’s opponents in London and add to questions about her ability to follow through on her Brexit plan.The election results, due to start being declared in the early hours of today, will be viewed as a gauge of public support for May as she faces a possible revolt over her strategy for leaving the European Union.A poor set of results is unlikely to spark internal calls for her resignation, but could weaken her authority over a Conservative party deeply divided about the right approach to Brexit ahead of several key parliamentary tests of unity on future customs arrangements with the EU.“Winning elections keeps people together, losing causes dissent,” said Rob Wilson, a former Conservative lawmaker, writing for a grassroots party website ConservativeHome.The vote will decide more than 4,400 council seats, determining the makeup of 150 local government authorities who are responsible for the day-to-day provision of public services.They do not affect seats in parliament, where May has only a slim working majority thanks to a deal with a smaller party.The headline-grabbing results in the capital, where over 40% of the seats are being contested, are forecast to see a swing toward the opposition Labour Party, reinvigorated under socialist Jeremy Corbyn and fighting a campaign focused on the effects of eight years of Conservative-led spending cuts.A Survation poll on Wednesday in London showed Labour 20 percentage points ahead of the Conservatives. Both May and Corbyn were pictured casting their ballots early yesterday.In final online campaign videos, May said her party was delivering local services whilst keeping taxes low.Corbyn’s said the government had failed schools and hospitals, and had not tackled a housing crisis.May’s party could lose control of some of the eight London boroughs it currently runs out of 32 in total.This would reflect both weariness over cutbacks that affect citizens’ daily lives and broader issues like Brexit and the treatment of migrants.Holding Conservative strongholds in London’s Westminster and Wandsworth boroughs is seen as the dividing line between a bad day and a terrible day for May.Expectations are low enough that May could lose seats elsewhere, but still emerge with credit.Results in the London borough of Barnet, which has no overall political control, could provide a boost for May if criticism over anti-Semitism in Labour affects the votes of its large Jewish population and prevents Corbyn’s party from taking control there for the first time.“I think some of the predictions about the outcome (have been) a bit wild, but we will be campaigning across the country, as we have been, to return more Labour councillors and have more Labour councils to protect people from the impact of Tory (Conservative) austerity,” a Labour spokesman said.The outcome outside the capital is likely to be less clear-cut. May was punished right across the country in a general election last summer, losing her parliamentary majority after a campaign that alienated core voters with unpopular social policy and saw her style criticised as robotic and impersonal.
May 03, 2018 | 10:18 PM