London – The Hard-Right Party reform led by the Nigel Farage has taken a seat in Parliament from the UK Governing Labor Party and has won hundreds of local council seats from the opposition Conservatives in the elections that Farage was appreciated as a turning point on the two parties’ Poultically Domination.
Sarah Pochin of the renovation was identified as the winner of the North -West England Runcorn and HalsSai’s seat, after which he defeated the labor candidate Karen Shore by narrowing the margin.
It was a significant defeat for labor, which was easily won the district in last year’s national elections. Special elections were held because labor lawyer Mike Amesbury was forced to leave after being convicted of allegedly scratching an element in a drunk anger.
Farage said that “this is a very, very big moment” that shows that reform can win against both the labor and right-off-century anti-conservative.
“It identifies the end of the two-party politics because we know it for more than a century,” he said.
Runcorn renovated the victory, which was about 5% of the vote in the last year’s national elections, compared to five of the 505 seats in the House of Commons and 120 for conservatives.
However, the reform seems to have the speed. National surveys now suggest that the support of the labor and conservatives equal to or the conservatives, and it is hopeful to displace conservatives as the main party of the country before the next national election by 2021.
Local elections held in many regions of England on Thursday were a wonderful rejection 10 months after Prime Minister Care Starmer’s center-left labor government was elected a landslide.
The party’s party is targeting the working class voters who once supported labor. Starmer’s popularity has been submerged because his government is fighting to start a lazy economy. The government has raised minimum wages, strengthens the rights of the workers and pumped money in the state-funded health system-but has increased the employer’s taxes and reduced the welfare benefits.
Starmer said he understood why many voters were dissatisfied.
“My response is: We got it,” he said. “We will go more and faster about the change that people want to see in the scene is decormined.”
The results were even a big push for the Conservatives, whose voters switched to reform in the drop.
When these regions last voted four years ago, the renovation did not exist, won hundreds of municipal seats in the elections for the six mayors, and most of the 23 local councils were in control of Tory.
The renovation won the control of several county-level local authorities, including Central England’s previous Conservative Stronggolds Staffordshire and Lincolnshire, Durham in the north and Kent of the southeast Kent.
Former Conservative Legislator Reform candidate Andrea Jenkins won the newly built mayor of the Greater Lincolnshire area of East-central England. Labor holds three more mayar power and the Conservatives won one.
The victory will bring the pressure of reform to transport, garbage collection, holes and other illegal demands of daily politics.
Conservative Leader Kemi Badenoch, who can now face a party uprising, posted on X that he was “Determined to win the public confidence and the seats we lost.”
The results give a partial snapshot of voters’ feelings. London, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have not selected many regions. Voting for local elections is usually much less than national elections.
And reform is not the only story. The central liberal Democrats gained gains by winning more prosperous, socially liberal voters away from conservatives.
The latest, a senior hard-right politician, who was led by Reform UK Farage, was important to exclude Britain from the European Union through a referendum of the 2016 2016. A charismatic preacher, he is a divided person who says that many migrants have come to the UK “Alien to us” from culture.
The long-lasting political themes of the reform farage-the powerful border, the immigration resistor-US mixed with the principles of reminding President Donald Trump’s administration. During the campaign, Farage said that he had planned “a doz for every county” in England, inspired by the controversial expense-slashing agency of Elon Mask.
John Curtis, a political scientist at the University of Strothcide, says the results have shown that long -term Britain’s politics by the two major parties has been fragmented.
He told the BBC, “Reform is now creating a major threat to both conservative and labor.
On whether the two-party domination will continue, “the question mark has barely three or four times larger,” said Curtis.
Leave a Reply