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December 9, 2021
May 7, 2021
Britain's governing Conservative Party won a new seat in parliament on Friday, ousting the Labour Party in the northern English town of Hartlepool with a sweeping special election victory that tightens its grip on traditional opposition-voting areas.
The victory in the former industrial port town gives Prime Minister Boris Johnson an even larger majority in parliament and a boost for his strategy during the Covid-19 crisis and Brexit.
Conservative Jill Mortimer beat Labour's candidate by 15,529 votes to 8,589, securing what less than a decade ago would have been seen as an impossible feat of dislodging the main opposition party from one of its heartland seats.
"There's no hiding from the fact this is a shattering result for Labour, absolutely shattering," Labour lawmaker Steve Reed, a member of Starmer's top team, told the BBC.
"It tells us that the pace of change in the Labour Party has not been fast enough. We need to quicken it up."
The Conservatives described it as an historic day.
The vote was triggered by the resignation of a Labour lawmaker in March, and is one of dozens of votes which took place on Thursday.
Labour had held Hartlepool for decades. Election analysts said it was the biggest swing of votes to the governing party at a by-election since World War Two.
The results of the other contests will be released over several days because coronavirus restrictions have complicated the counts. Early results indicated the Conservatives had gained seats on English councils, which look after local services.
The Hartlepool result continues a trend set by Johnson in the 2019 parliamentary election when he struck directly at Labour's heartlands, the "Red Wall" areas of northern and central England, to win a commanding majority in parliament.
Labour had tried to manage expectations over the vote, saying that Thursday's elections would always be difficult at a time of the coronavirus pandemic, which has boosted support for the government because of its rapid vaccine rollout.
But the loss is painful for Starmer, who has struggled to increase his appeal to the electorate despite heavy criticism of the Conservative government over its initially sluggish response to the pandemic and allegations of sleaze.
He has accused Johnson and his party of cronyism, questioning the financing of the prime minister's apartment, which an election watchdog is investigating. Johnson says he paid for the refurbishment and followed all the rules.
Starmer has tried to shift his party towards the center ground after two defeats under the left-wing leadership of Jeremy Corbyn. But the Hartlepool defeat drew immediate criticism from some members of the party's leftist faction.
"Not possible to blame Jeremy Corbyn for this result," said lawmaker Diane Abbott, a Corbyn ally. "Keir Starmer must think again about his strategy."
Source: NBC News
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