Britain’s governing Labour Party has lost a seat to Nigel Farage’s Reform Party in a municipal government by-election (special election). Reform candidate Anita Stanley won the Bilston North seat on Wolverhampton Council, gaining 652 votes, nearly 200 more than Labour, who only narrowly surpassed the far-left Green Party. The Conservative Party secured 257 votes, finishing fourth in the contest.
Zia Yusuf, Chairman of Reform UK, referred to the win as a “stunning victory.” Since the general election on July 4, Labour has lost about one-third of the 100-plus council seats it was defending in by-elections. Over this period, Labour has lost 21 councilors, while the Conservatives have gained 14. Reform has secured two seats and has also seen a few sitting councilors in Essex and Scotland join its ranks. Lee Anderson, a Member of Parliament (MP) for Reform, remarked that the victory in Wolverhampton signifies a continuing shift in British politics. “The political tsunami continues. And more defections incoming,” he said.
In addition to threatening Labour by appealing to its former working-class base, Reform directly threatens the Conservative Party, which governed the country for 14 years from 2010 to this July. In particular, Reform has been outflanking the notionally center-right establishment party on immigration, tax cuts, and other issues it has been failing on after lurching to the left.
Farage previously put out a call to all 1,352 Conservative councilors facing re-election, urging them to leave their “busted flush” party and join Reform.
Image courtesy of Stuart Mitchell, IncMonocle.