Nigel Farage has claimed that Reform UK has overtaken the Conservatives as the main party of opposition after his party narrowly won a byelection, a mayoralty and about two dozen council seats in early results on Friday.
The Reform leader said the results from Runcorn and Helsby, Greater Lincolnshire and a handful of local elections around England showed his party should now be taken seriously as a prospective party of government.
As initial council results showed Labour losing seats, Keir Starmer said he understood votersâ disillusionment but that the answer was to âgo further and fasterâ on what the government had already done.
Farage, speaking to reporters in Runcorn, where the party won with a majority of just six votes, said: âWeâve dug very deep into the Labour vote and, in other parts of England, weâve dug deep into the Conservative vote. After tonight, thereâs no question, in most of the country we are now the main opposition party to this government.â
Reform won in Runcorn and Helsby with a 17-point swing away from Labour, overturning a majority of more than 14,000. The Conservatives slumped from 16% of the vote at last yearâs general election to 7% in this contest, narrowly finishing ahead of the Green party in third place.
Meanwhile, Andrea Jenkyns, the former Conservative MP, won the newly created Greater Lincolnshire mayoralty with a majority of 44,000 votes.
In a victory speech punctuated by angry attacks on her opponents, Jenkyns said: âI take my hat off to our leader, Farage. I know one day he will make a great prime minister.â
By 1pm on Friday, Reform had won 23 council seats â while Labour had lost 10 and the Conservatives seven â and took control of Staffordshire council, formerly held by the Tories. Labour did manage to hang on in three closely watched mayoral contests, however, winning in Doncaster, North Tyneside and the West of England.
With the bulk of council results still to come in, the Liberal Democrats and Greens were bullish about making gains, with the Lib Dems in particular predicting they could take numerous council seats in Conservative heartlands, as well as in places such as Shropshire.
The results have bolstered findings from national polls, which put Reform ahead of Labour and the Conservatives, with support increasingly atomised between the five main UK-wide parties.
John Curtice, the polling expert and professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, told the BBC: âWeâve never previously had a situation where, even at an interim stage, weâve got a party other than Conservative or Labour not just with more votes, but with more [council] seats than anybody else.â
Starmer, speaking to reporters during a visit to a defence factory in Luton, said: âWhat I want to say is, my response is, we get it. We were elected in last year to bring about change ⊠I am determined that we will go further and faster on the change that people want to see.â
In Runcorn, which was contested after the sitting Labour MP Mike Amesbury was convicted of punching a constituent, Farageâs party sought to make immigration the key issue, raising fears over small boat crossings, houses of multiple occupancy and even Turkish barbers.
The party also attacked Labourâs cutting of the winter fuel payment â an issue raised repeatedly by voters â as well as its early release of prisoners and the rising cost of energy bills.
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In Doncaster, the re-elected Labour mayor, Ros Jones, also highlighted cuts to the winter fuel allowance as stoking votersâ anger, as well as reductions in disability payments and a rise in national insurance.
Asked whether Starmer was listening to her voters, Jones said: âI would say no. They havenât actually realised, because the people of Doncaster know how hard life can be, and itâs about delivering for them.â
One Labour MP said: âItâs all very well for No 10 to say weâve got to keep delivering. The problem is that itâs the stuff weâve delivered that people hate.â
A series of Labour backbenchers, mainly on the left of the party, went public with their concerns, saying cuts to benefits and the winter fuel allowance had damaged the party.
The MP for Liverpool Riverside, Kim Johnson, said Runcorn was âa warning we canât ignoreâ, adding: âVoters want change â and if we donât offer it with bold, hopeful policies that rebuild trust, the far right will.â
The Conservatives were also under pressure after what appears to have been a disappointing night. In Greater Lincolnshire, the party came a distant second. And in the West of England mayoral contest, the Tories came fourth, behind the Reform candidate, Arron Banks, who told the Times during the campaign he thought the mayoralty was a âmeaningless jobâ.
Nigel Huddleston, the co-chair of the Conservatives, told the BBC: âThis is always going to be difficult for us. We lost two-thirds of our MPs at last yearâs general election. We do have the humility to recognise that we are in the recovery phase.â