Boris Johnson set to demolish ‘Red Wall’ with three election victories in Labour heartlands

Boris Johnson is on a hat-trick! Keir Starmer faces mounting pressure as Prime Minister looks set to demolish ‘Red Wall’ with three more victories in Labour heartlands

  • The Conservatives are on the brink of a historic victory in Hartlepool by-election
  • They are confident in the mayoral races in the West Midlands and Tees Valley
  • The elections mark a major test for Mr Johnson and Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer

Boris Johnson is on course to take a wrecking ball to the Red Wall again today by securing a hat-trick in Labour’s former heartlands.

The Conservatives are on the brink of a historic victory in the Hartlepool by-election, as well as the two key mayoral races in the West Midlands and Tees Valley.

Today’s bumper set of local elections, which have been dubbed ‘Super Thursday’, mark a major test for both Mr Johnson and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer.

Boris Johnson is on course to take a wrecking ball to the Red Wall again today by securing a hat-trick in Labour’s former heartlands

Ballots will be cast in every part of Great Britain, with elections for the Scottish and Welsh Parliaments, London Assembly, and Hartlepool by-election. More than 5,000 council seats in England will also be contested, along with 13 mayoralties and 39 police and crime commissioner positions.

There was growing alarm in Labour last night that Mr Johnson will further demolish what is left of the so-called Red Wall.

A Tory win in Hartlepool would be only the second time in 38 years that the Government has snatched a seat from the Opposition in a by-election.

Lord Mandelson yesterday said he will ‘go into a meltdown’ if the constituency, where he was MP from 1992 to 2004, turns blue for the first time in its 47-year history.

Sadiq poll lead shrinks over London’s knife crime crisis 

Londoners’ fears about the capital’s crime crisis have seen Sadiq Khan’s lead over his Tory mayoral rival Shaun Bailey shrink.

The Labour candidate is set to win a second term – but worries following a spate of knife killings could deprive him of a first round victory in today’s election.

An Opinium survey yesterday showed 52 per cent of Londoners think tackling knife crime should be the next mayor’s top priority.

The London election has tightened, with a YouGov poll yesterday giving Mr Khan a 12-point lead, based on first preference votes, down from 21 points a month ago. It suggested Mr Khan will win the contest in a second round run-off with Mr Bailey by 59 per cent to 41 per cent.

Knife crime in the capital has increased by more than 60 per cent between May 2016, when Mr Khan took office, and March last year, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Sir Keir last night pledged to ‘carry the can’ if Labour fares badly at the ballot box, but insisted his focus is on ‘winning the next General Election’.

‘When things go right, the leader takes the plaudits; when they don’t go right, the leader carries the can and takes responsibility,’ he said.

‘That’s what I will do with these elections, as I will do in everything that the Labour Party does.’

Mr Johnson sought to downplay expectations as he insisted it will be a ‘very tough set of elections’ for the Tories.

The Prime Minister joined West Midlands mayor Andy Street for a cycle ride on a canal path in Stourbridge. Mr Street, the former boss of John Lewis, is expected to be re-elected, along with Ben Houchen, who is Tory mayor in Tees Valley.

In an eve-of-poll message last night, Mr Johnson argued the pair had done more in a few years than Labour did in the decades it had a stranglehold on the regions.

He said: ‘It’s Conservative mayors who are bringing new investment and local jobs to their areas. A new freeport and green jobs are on their way to Teesside and new trams, Metro lines and station upgrades to the West Midlands.

‘More has been delivered by Conservatives in four years than complacent Labour politicians have delivered in decades.’

Earlier, Mr Johnson tried to calm talk of the Tories winning the Hartlepool seat, saying it would be a ‘very tough fight’.

As Sir Keir’s hard-Left critics sharpened their knives, his allies insisted he be given more time to turn around Labour’s fortunes.

As Sir Keir's hard-Left critics sharpened their knives, his allies insisted he be given more time to turn around Labour's fortunes

As Sir Keir’s hard-Left critics sharpened their knives, his allies insisted he be given more time to turn around Labour’s fortunes

Shadow work and pensions secretary Jonathan Reynolds said parts of the UK were a lot ‘warmer’ towards Labour than they were in the General Election. 

Speaking on BBC Radio 4, he said: ‘We hope the public will see how we have changed since 2019 – we have a new leader, we have a new direction, but to be frank it’s not been the easiest of years to make those wider messages. That’s just how it is, there’s no use complaining about that.’

Mr Reynolds added: ‘It’s a lot warmer for Labour than it was in 2019. People might not be totally convinced yet but they want to have that conversation.’ 

Sturgeon: I’ll only hold fresh vote if PM gives green light

Nicola Sturgeon has denied she will hold a ‘wildcat’ referendum if the SNP wins a majority in today’s Holyrood elections.

The First Minister dismissed a claim by Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross that she plans to organise an illegal independence ballot if Boris Johnson refuses to give formal consent for one.

During a BBC Scotland leaders’ debate Miss Sturgeon insisted: ‘No we won’t.’ 

Nicola Sturgeon has denied she will hold a 'wildcat' referendum if the SNP wins a majority in today's Holyrood elections

Nicola Sturgeon has denied she will hold a ‘wildcat’ referendum if the SNP wins a majority in today’s Holyrood elections

She also accused Mr Ross of spreading ‘smears and untruths’ about her position. 

Polls suggest the SNP’s chances of majority are on a knife edge.

Mr Johnson, who has not campaigned north of the border in the run-up to the election, was asked if he would grant a referendum if Scots elect a majority of independence-supporting MSPs.

He said: ‘I think that most people in Scotland [and] around the UK feel this is not the time … to have a reckless, and I think irresponsible, second referendum.’