As scandals overshadow vote, UK PM Johnson faces election test
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[May 05, 2022] By
Andrew MacAskill and Elizabeth Piper
LONDON (Reuters) -Voters in Britain went to
the polls in local government elections on Thursday where they are
expected to punish Prime Minister Boris Johnson over a cost-of-living
crisis and fines for breaking his own COVID-19 lockdown rules.
The elections are seen as a test of support for Johnson, who became the
first British leader in living memory to have broken the law while in
office when he was fined last month for attending a birthday gathering
in his office in 2020.
A sharp rise in global energy prices that has pushed up consumers' gas
and electricity bills is now also feeding through to the cost of goods
in shops, putting more pressure on household budgets.
A poor set of results will increase pressure on Johnson, who has been
under pressure for months and faces three investigations and the
possibility of more police fines over his attendance at other
lockdown-breaking gatherings.
"These elections are without doubt the biggest test of Boris Johnson
since the 2019 general election and come after what has been a very
difficult time for him and his government," said Tony Travers, a
professor at the London School of Economics.
But some lawmakers among Johnson's governing Conservatives say that
while the party may perform badly in some of its traditional supportive
regions in southeast England, critics may not have the numbers to
trigger a coup against the prime minister.
"I don't think they have the numbers. It's not wise to move until you do
have the numbers," one Conservative former minister said on condition of
anonymity, referring to several unsuccessful attempts to oust Johnson's
predecessor Theresa May.
COST OF LIVING
Votes will decide almost 7,000 council seats across the United Kingdom,
determining the makeup of 140 local government authorities, which are
responsible for the day-to-day provision of public services.
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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrives with his dog Dilyn to
vote at a polling station during the local elections, in London,
Britain May 5, 2022. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
On Thursday morning Johnson, accompanied by his dog
Dilyn, went to a polling station at Methodist Central Hall a short
walk from his Downing Street residence to cast his vote.
The results will not directly affect Johnson's practical ability to
govern because the vote does not cause seats in parliament to change
hands.
But with the main opposition Labour Party trying to press its
criticism of the government's response to the cost-of-living crisis,
a poor performance could embolden critics in his party who wonder if
he is still an electoral asset ahead of the next general election
that must be held before the end of 2024.
Adding to borrowers' woes, the Bank of England is likely to raise
interest rates to the highest level in 13 years on Thursday as it
battles high inflation.
An analysis by pollster Find Out Now and political consultancy
Electoral Calculus suggested the Conservatives could lose some 800
council seats and Labour could gain control of about 20 councils.
Academics Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher say a loss of 350
Conservative seats would be bad for the Conservatives.
"Unless the results are catastrophically bad, I expect Johnson will
be damaged, but he will continue to limp on," Travers said. "At the
moment, he is helped by the lack of any obvious successor."
Two of the key results in London will be Wandsworth and Westminster,
both traditionally Conservative strongholds that now could be within
reach of Labour.
Results are expected to start coming in from the early hours of
Friday.
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill and Elizabeth Piper; Editing by
Bernadette Baum and Hugh Lawson)
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