Last thursday by elections

Last thursday was a good day for Conservatives. The party held two Council seats and won one from the Lib Dems. Reform won one from Labour. These were seats in what has often been Conservative territory, but the results were good with a poor showing for the two left of centre parties.

13 Comments

  1. Ian Wragg
    March 30, 2026

    Wait till May 7th and the predicted bloodbath. Starmergeddon has said he won’t resign if liebour are wiped out. That’s good, he’s the best recruiter for Reform.

    Reply
    1. Mick
      March 30, 2026

      38 Days and counting to watch the liebour party implode and hopefully the demise of this far left socialist government tic toc

      Reply
    2. Ian B
      March 30, 2026

      @Ian Wragg – 2TK is supported by the majority in Parliament, they have no other choice. His ‘Plan’ of destroy, destroy, destroy is what they have agreed on. Local elections have no bearing on that. Here in the UK Local Councils are told what they can and cannot do, and handed their wages by Parliament, so what ever the vote its of no consequence. Can you imaging this massive majority in Parliament that are working against the nation and its people would vote for themselves to have a general election? The UK doesn’t not allow regular general elections as expected from a democracy, that would mean a confirmation on the direction that Parliament is taking us.
      Love them or hate them, the USA as a democracy would have had 3 elections for their House of Representatives before we see our next one.

      Reply
      1. Christine
        March 30, 2026

        There are 121 Labour MPs, including 2TK and most of the cabinet, who admit to being members of the Fabian Society, whose core beliefs are greater equality of power, wealth, and opportunity; citizenship, liberty, and human rights; and multilateral international cooperation. Everything Labour does is to work to achieve these goals. No wonder the country is in such a mess.

        Reply
  2. Rod Evans
    March 30, 2026

    Let’s hope your contention that the Conservative wins do represent a push back against the left……
    KB needs to declare Net Zero is cancelled then she would recover some traditional Conservative supporters.

    Reply
  3. Steve Bullion
    March 30, 2026

    I could support Kemi Badenoch – she has been doing a very good job of holding Labour to account.

    I’m still concerned that the left wing of the Tories is as dominant as ever, and I’d like the Tories to admit not just that they had lost their way since Thatcher but were pursuing internationalist labour style policies which were destructive.

    And yes, we should leave the ECHR – let’s see how many of her back benchers will agree to that.

    After labour failed to even suggest or include many things in their manifesto that they pursued with vigour after getting the key to #0 I for one will be taking a closer look at election manifestos for all leading parties at the next GE.

    Reply
  4. Mick
    March 30, 2026

    I know Reform and Tories said there will be no pack in the coming local and national elections I do think they are going to have to come to terms on this issue that they will have to do a deal or we are faced with another socialist government again along with the not so Green Party which would totally make us close to a third world country if not already, so we can only hope there is some sort of back room negotiation going on to save Great Britain from the hard leftists that are trying to run it now

    Reply
  5. Ian B
    March 30, 2026

    Unfortunately, with the best will in the world it hard to tell what the outcome would be in a general election. With the up-and-coming local elections even then the results there would do nothing more than confuse the picture, at best all that can be expected is a protest vote against the establishment. As a protest vote you finish up with the crowd that lays low and when they do get involved say what ever needs to be said in that one constituency – I am of course meaning the crowd that calls itself the Liberal Democrats. So far overall the LibDems appear to have done better than the so-called established crowd

    Why do I say that? The established teams are spending so much time and effort slagging of the ‘Reform’ thinking that’s where their base is moving, forgetting that they are highlighting what they have themselves got wrong. If they are causing hesitation the voter is still not clamouring to them. Did the voters of Gorton and Denton really want the ‘Greens’ or just none of the ‘others’ no one even now knows what the ‘Greens’ mean.

    Here in Wokingham, generations of a really good Conservative Council and Conservative MP both fulfilling their jobs exceptionally well – wiped out as if they never existed. The place is now a mess, literally, dirty streets no services just a defunct failing area. I always think the signs as you enter the borough suggesting something in bloom or other, should read ‘tomorrows slum today’.

    Reply
  6. Narrow Shoulders
    March 30, 2026

    My Conservative Council in Hillingdon does as good as job as they can, although 5% increase in Council tax this year does given me pension expense concerns.

    I will be voting on local issues on 7 May.

    Reply
  7. Donna
    March 30, 2026

    Although I am not a LibDem, I do find LibDem Peer Mark Pack’s reporting on council by elections useful.

    The Tories managed to win three local by-elections last week. They took Stanford from the LibDems, which seems to be because a large percentage switched from LibDems to Reform. They held on in two, but were down 21% in Sevenoaks and 20% in Axholme.

    Reform won Brumby from Labour with 52%.

    The rolling total for the year is:
    Reform + 69
    LibDems + 20
    Cons – 24
    Labour – 53

    https://www.markpack.org.uk/174682/council-by-election-results-scorecard-2025-2026/

    Reply
  8. Keith from Leeds
    March 30, 2026

    A little bit of good news, but lets wait until the May elections to see whether the UK voters are really prepared to vote for change.

    Reply
  9. Rodney Needs
    March 30, 2026

    For me local elections are about local policy not national. What’s happening regarding things like speeding social housing plus others. I need a local councillor that is going to take action on local items.

    Reply
  10. Jolyon Culbertson
    March 30, 2026

    Do you think the Conservatives have yet been forgiven for the tremendous failures of the last 5 years of their term in office? I don’t hear much apologising to go with the new better policies. I was visited by a local LibDem member who asked me why I would expect different results in the future from a Surrey Council if Conservatives are elected when they had put the council in huge debt in the past 20 years of running the Council. I think he was referring to the stupid investments in commercial property by at least two boroughs in Surrey. Hard to answer. Have Conservatives actually learned the lessons? Of course the other question is whether LIbDems or Reform have better plans. So far no question they don’t but it still leaves a doubt that needs to be answered.

    Reply

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