Boris
Johnson leads Tories to historic general election win
The SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, said the result meant the prime minister “must accept that I have a mandate to offer Scotland the choice of an alternative future”.
The SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, said the result meant the prime minister “must accept that I have a mandate to offer Scotland the choice of an alternative future”.
Boris Johnson is congratulated at the count in his Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency. Photograph: Andrew Parsons/i-Images
Gamble of
triggering snap poll to unite Brexit vote pays off, decimating Labour’s support
by Heather
Stewart Political editor
Fri 13 Dec
2019 06.08 GMTLast modified on Fri 13 Dec 2019 06.45 GMT
Boris
Johnson has clinched a historic Conservative general election victory, winning
a string of seats from Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party in its traditional
heartlands.
Johnson’s
gamble of triggering a snap poll in the hope of uniting the Brexit vote in
leave-supporting seats across Wales, the Midlands and the north of England paid
off spectacularly, setting him on course for the Tories’ strongest performance
for decades.
An
unapologetic Corbyn used his acceptance speech in Islington North to attack the
media’s portrayal of him and his party, and insist the party’s policies had
been “extremely popular”.
Corbyn
conceded it had been “a very disappointing night for the Labour party with the
result that we have got”, and suggested Brexit had overshadowed other issues.
He said he would not lead his party into another general election, but that
Labour needed a “period of reflection”, which he would remain in place to
oversee.
The shadow
chancellor, John McDonnell, appeared pale and shocked when confronted with the
figures on the BBC. Asked whether he and Corbyn would stand down if it proved
accurate, he said: “We will see the results in the morning and decisions will
be made then.”
The former
mining constituency of Blyth Valley in Northumberland was an early Conservative
gain, bearing out the exit poll’s prediction. It had been held by Labour since
its creation and was No 116 on the Tory target list.
Scores of
other long-held Labour seats, including Workington, Wrexham and Bishop
Auckland, turned blue as the night went on, and by shortly after 5am the
Conservatives had secured a majority.
The exit
poll was updated as the night went on, and by 5am was projecting a slightly
smaller Conservative majority of 74 with a 45% share of the vote, which would
be the Tories’ highest since 1970.
Johnson,
speaking at his own count in Uxbridge, said: “This one nation Conservative
government has been given a powerful new mandate to get Brexit done – and not
just to get Brexit done but to unite this country and to take it forward.”
He later
told a gathering of aides at Conservative party headquarters: “Many of us has
dreamed of a day when the Conservative party genuinely speaks for every part of
the country. We have won from Workington to Woking … including seats the
Conservatives have not won for 100 years or more. Wrexham. Tony Blair’s old
seat in Sedgefield. We turned Redcar Blue-car.”
He later
suggested the Conservative party would have to change to reflect the interests
of its new seats across the Midlands, north of England and Wales.
“We must
understand now what an earthquake we have created. The way in which we have
changed the political map in this country. We have to grapple with the
consequences of that. We have to change our own party. We have to rise to the
level of events. We have to rise to the challenge that the British people have
given us.”
He is now
expected to push his Brexit deal through parliament, with a second reading
before Christmas, exploiting his new-found freedom to operate without the
support of the DUP or the ERG.
As the
scale of the defeat began to sink in, staunch Corbyn loyalists were quick to
blame Brexit for the party’s performance, while others pointed the finger at
the leader’s personal unpopularity.
Ignore democracy and to be quite honest the
consequences will come back and bite you up the backside.
Ian Lavery
Labour’s
chair, Ian Lavery, a Corbyn ally, said: “What we are seeing in the Labour
heartlands is people very aggrieved at the fact the party basically has taken a
stance on Brexit the way they have – 17.4 million voting for Brexit and
basically being ignored is not a good recipe,” he said. “Ignore democracy and
to be quite honest the consequences will come back and bite you up the
backside.”
But the
former Labour cabinet minister Alan Johnson said: “It’s Corbyn. Jeremy Corbyn
was a disaster for Labour – everyone knew that he couldn’t lead the working
class out of a paper bag.”
Appearing
on ITV with Jon Lansman, the founder of the pro-Corbyn group Momentum, Johnson
said: “I want this cult out of the party. I want Momentum gone.”
There was a
significant redrawing of the electoral map in Scotland, too, with the Lib Dem
leader, Jo Swinson, losing her East Dunbartonshire seat, as the SNP made
significant gains, also taking seats from Labour.
The SNP
leader, Nicola Sturgeon, said the result meant the prime minister “must accept
that I have a mandate to offer Scotland the choice of an alternative future”.
There were
few bright spots for Labour, but in a rare gain the party took Putney, a
remain-voting seat in the capital. Several Labour frontbenchers lost their
seats, including the shadow Brexit minister, Jenny Chapman, the shadow Scotland
secretary, Lesley Laird, and the shadow environment secretary, Sue Hayman.
Laura
Pidcock, a Corbyn loyalist who had been tipped as a potential future leader,
was also unexpectedly defeated by the Tories in the former mining seat of North
West Durham.
Independents
who left the traditional parties this year in an effort to reclaim the centre
ground of politics were comprehensively wiped out, with Anna Soubry, Chuka
Umunna and Luciana Berger all losing their seats.
Caroline
Flint, who lost her Don Valley seat to the Tories, said “those influential
Labour figures living in north London postcodes” should accept that “Labour
cannot simply be a party of big cities and university towns, or just a party of
the young”.
Labour also
lost Sedgefield to the Tories. Phil Wilson, who had represented Tony Blair’s
former seat since 2007, appeared emotional as he said it would be difficult for
the party to re-establish a bond with the voters.
“I
genuinely believe that the Corbyn leadership is the issue in this election and
to say that it isn’t is delusional,” he said. “Brexit is an issue but for every
one person who raised Brexit on the doorstep with me, five people raised the
leadership of the Labour party. But it isn’t just Jeremy Corbyn, it’s his
worldview – they don’t see him as being patriotic, they see him as being anti-west.”
He said
Corbyn should take a “long hard look at himself and what he’s allowed to happen
to the Labour party”.
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