“Almost every” council the Conservatives won in 2021 could be lost in this year’s local elections, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch has conceded.
Speaking at the launch of her party’s campaign, Ms Badenoch said the votes four years ago followed the COVID vaccine rollout – helping her party to 14 council gains and holding another 49.
On 1 May, across England, more than 1,600 council seats will be up for re-election, alongside six mayors.
The Tories face being squeezed by Reform on their right, as well as a blend of Liberal Democrats and independents.
Ms Badenoch warned party members: “It will be the first time since the general election, the greatest defeat in all parties’ history, that we fight these seats.”
Map the 2024 election results on to the upcoming council ones, and the Tory leader admitted “we lose almost every single one”.
Image: Kemi Badenoch is not optimistic about her party’s chances. Pic: PA
‘People have lost trust in politics’
Labour are also likely to perform poorly, as local election results tend to reflect public opinion towards the national governing party.
Measures like inheritance tax on farms, benefit cuts, planning reform, reducing winter fuel payments and others could weigh heavily on Sir Keir Starmer’s chances.
It was put to Ms Badenoch that lots of these protest votes look set to go to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.
Asked about the differences between the Tories and Reform by Sky News deputy political editor Sam Coates, Ms Badenoch said: “Loads of other parties just tell people what they think they want to hear.
“We think through and make sure that we are providing a credible plan that can be delivered.
“A lot of people have lost trust in politics because politicians make promises and do deliver.”
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0:56
Badenoch asked if she’s different to Reform
‘This is not a protest vote’
But the Tory leader acknowledged the party faces “a challenge on the right”, which she said was partly down to its record in government in recent years.
“The protest votes are going to Reform,” she said.
“But at the end of the day, this is not a protest vote – these are local elections.”
The Tory leader instead urged people to vote for who will sort out bin collections, fix potholes and run local services well – which she said would be the Conservatives.
She unveiled the slogan for her party’s campaign as “lower taxes, better services”.
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Mr Farage described that as “comical”, saying the Tories’ track record was of “higher taxes and crumbling services”.
The Reform leader is eyeing big gains in May, and said: “After decades of mismanagement, Conservative councils across the country are buckling under the pressure.”
Lib Dem deputy leader Daisy Cooper said Ms Badenoch’s speech was a “desperate attempt to shore up the crumbling Conservative vote as people in the home counties turn to the Liberal Democrats”.
She said her party is focusing on the cost of living, river sewage, and the NHS and social care.
Government whips will be overestimating the number of Labour rebels over welfare cuts as a form of “expectation management”, Dame Harriet Harman has said.
Speaking to Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the Labour peer and former deputy leader shed light on some of the dark arts that have traditionally been associated with government whipping operations – whereby MPs are encouraged to vote in line with the government.
Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves are facing a looming rebellion over the chancellor’s decision to impose nearly £5bn worth of welfare cuts, as outlined in the spring statement on Wednesday.
Dame Harriet said the “first thing” the government whips will be doing is suggesting that the rebellion will be larger than it is – so it looks less damaging when smaller numbers emerge.
“You’ll see floating around that there’s going to be 50 Labour MPs rebelling against their own government within a year of having been elected on a Labour manifesto,” she explained.
“And probably that’s because they think they’ll be considerably fewer than that. And they’re just setting the expectation.”
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Alongside this, Dame Harriet said there has always been talk about whips – who are responsible for enforcing party discipline – “blackmailing people with private information”.
She said that while this used to be the case when she was first elected as an MP in the 1980s, it would not be happening under the current government.
However, she said the whips will have a “spreadsheet of every single one of the 411 Labour members of parliament because the whips’ job is to get the government business through”.
“They’ll be identifying those who think that they might be at risk of voting against or abstaining,” she said.
“And they will talk to them, and they’ll be reminding them that actually, they really need to be supporting the government and think about the good things the government’s doing – think about the waiting lists coming down in your area.
“Don’t destabilize the government when we’ve only just started, because you know you want to focus the minds of everybody in your constituency on the fact that things are getting better in some areas.
“So they’ll be saying: ‘You promised you’d be voting with the whip. How can you be breaking that promise?'”
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5:04
Beth Rigby looks at the key moments from Reeves’s spring statement
Debbie Abrahams, the MP for Oldham East and Saddleworth and the chair of the work and pensions select committee, said: “All the evidence points to cuts in welfare leading to severe poverty and worsened health conditions. How will making people sicker and poorer get people into jobs?”
And Leeds MP Richard Burgon added: “Making cuts instead of taxing wealth is a political choice, and taking away the personal independence payments from so many disabled people is an especially cruel choice.
“A disabled person who can’t cut up their own food without assistance, and can’t go to the toilet without assistance, and can’t wash themselves without assistance will lose their personal independence payment.”
Sir Keir Starmer has unveiled what he says is a major transport boost to stop the North being “held to ransom” by a Victorian-era system.
The prime minister said the £2.15bn investment was a “downpayment for growth” in northern England and a “vote of confidence” in its “world-beating industries”.
Some £415m of the total will be used to improve rail services between Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds and York.
Number 10 also said local leaders would get more than £1bn to boost transport, while an additional £270m will be provided to bolster buses and £330m set aside for road maintenance.
The prime minister is due to visit a factory in the North on Friday to urge regions to speed up projects such as a mass transit system in West Yorkshire, a new rail station in Liverpool’s Baltic Triangle area, and the redevelopment of Bury Interchange.
“The North is home to a wealth of talent and ingenuity,” said Sir Keir.
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“But for too long, it has been held to ransom by a Victorian-era transport system which has stifled its potential.”
He added: “I lived in Leeds for years, I get that this has real-world impacts – missed appointments, children late to school, work meetings rescheduled – all leading to insecurity and instability for working people.
“My government won’t stand by and watch. We are rolling up our sleeves, and today’s downpayment for growth is a vote of confidence in the North’s world-beating industries.”
Image: The PM says poor transport leads to ‘insecurity and instability for working people’. Pic: Reuters
The multibillion-pound TransPennine Route Upgrade will reduce journey times between Manchester and Leeds from 50 to 42 minutes, while people will save 10 minutes from Manchester to York.
Electrification of the line has been long-delayed.
Sir Keir said it was time industry in the region “had a government on their side to get the North motoring again”.
He said the government was spending “double as much on local transport in the North than the South”.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said reliable and affordable public transport links are “essential for kickstarting economic growth and putting more money in people’s pockets”.
She added: “The transport system outside of London and the South East has been plagued by delays and cancellations, frustrated by strikes and failing infrastructure because upgrades that were promised were never delivered.”
South Carolina has become the latest US state to dismiss its lawsuit against crypto exchange Coinbase over its staking services, which had accused the crypto exchange of offering unregistered securities.
The lawsuit was officially dismissed in a joint stipulation between the crypto exchange and the South Carolina Attorney General’s securities division on March 27.
“South Carolina just joined Vermont to dismiss its unfounded staking lawsuit against Coinbase,” the firm’s chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, said in a March 27 X post.
“This is not just a victory for us, but for American consumers and we hope it’s a sign of things to come in the few states left that restrict staking.”
South Carolina and Vermont were two of 10 US states that took legal action against Coinbase’s staking services on June 6, 2023 — the same day that the federal securities regulator filed its lawsuit against the crypto exchange.
The other eight US states that filed enforcement action similar to South Carolina were Alabama, California, Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, Washington and Wisconsin.
Grewal said he hoped to see other states follow suit, and that South Carolina residents lost an estimated $2 million in staking rewards as a result of the lawsuit.
“The 52 million Americans who own crypto deserve commonsense consumer protections and clear rules,” he said. “We applaud South Carolina for standing up for justice and hope the remaining states with bans on staking will take notice.”
South Carolina introduces Bitcoin reserve bill
Meanwhile,a state lawmaker has just introduced the “Strategic Digital Assets Reserve Act of South Carolina” on March 27, which could see the state treasurer allocate up to 10% of certain state funds to cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC).
Unlike most US state crypto reserve bills, North Carolina’s House Bill 4256, introduced by Rep. Jordan Pace, mentioned Bitcoin on several occasions for the Strategic Digital Assets Reserve that the bill seeks to establish.
The treasurer would be able to add Bitcoin to South Carolina’s General Fund, the Budget Stabilization Reserve Fund any other investment fund that they manage.
While no mention of stablecoins, non-fungible tokens, Ether (ETH) or any other crypto tokens was made, the House bill said the Strategic Digital Assets Reserve wouldn’t be limited to Bitcoin.
According to Bitcoin Law, 42 Bitcoin reserve bills have been introduced at the state level in 19 states, and 36 of those 42 bills remain live.
Earlier this month, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order to create a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a Digital Asset Stockpile, both of which will initially use cryptocurrency forfeited in government criminal cases.