Minggu, 18 Februari 2024

It's one of Greater Manchester's most sought after places to live... but disquiet is brewing - Manchester Evening News

It's a series of quaint towns and villages nestled between Stockport town centre and the Peak District.

The Hazel Grove constituency, made up of the town of Marple as well as Romiley, Hazel Grove, Offerton and other areas, is one of the most sought after places in Greater Manchester to live and visit.

Average houses prices in the SK7 area are more than £400,000, and streams of people can found on any given day walking along the Peak Forest Canal or through the many countryside routes.

READ MORE: Stockport residents face council tax hike

But Hazel Grove is shaping up to be one of the fiercest contests when the general election rolls around later this year.

New data from the Climate Coalition's Local Intelligence Hub has revealed that Hazel Grove is one of a handful of 'battleground' seats which could be decided on green issues.

According to the research, 75 percent of voters in the area think that losing natural spaces is a top concern, and want to see their new MP focus on this vital issue.

So where does this leave the future of Marple and Hazel Grove?

Voters in the town told the M.E.N that green issues will be at the front of their mind when they're standing at the ballot box.

Patricia Buckley, 73, has lived in the town for 43 years but says it has seen better days.

Road signs in Marple
Hazel Grove will get a new MP after William Wragg steps down

She said: "People are very worried about building too many houses on the green belt, this is important here. I want to keep these spaces.

"Public transport is another issue, it takes too long to get anywhere and the trains don't always run so it's difficult to plan a day out because you might not be able to get back."

Ms Buckley added that she hasn't yet made her mind up about which way she'll vote when the election comes, but "it will probably be Lib Dem."

'It looks really old and tired - like a town from the 1960s'

Edward Pritchard, 82, lives in nearby Marple Bridge and is another voter who is yet to be swayed.

He said: "To be honest I'm not very happy with the Lib Dems or the Conservatives.

"Green issues are very important to me, we are in a green area. I think traffic is an issue but it can't be avoided. But I would like to see it back to how it used to be, with less cars around."

Caroline Clark, 68, said the town has seen better days and is desperate for some investment, not least in transport and shops.

She said: "Marple looks really old and tired, it's like a town from the 1960s. I don't like the lack of investment here and there are too many charity shops around.

"The train services have become infrequent too, but what I really want to see is my swimming baths back, I used to go there three times a week."

Charity shops in Marple
A resident said there are too many charity shops in Marple

There are plans in place to reopen a new community leisure hub in Marple, to replace the former baths which closed in 2018.

Her companion Elanor Coyne, 69, agrees that the environment should be a top priority for Hazel Grove's next MP.

She said the traffic can be "very bad at times" and that the lack of bins along the canal means people have to travel a long way to get rid of their rubbish.

Paul Athans, 34, is the Conservative choice to become Hazel Grove's next MP.

The Liverpool-born candidate lives in Marple and summarised the constituency as a place where people will pro-actively take action to protect the environment.

A CGI of what the planned Marple Leisure and Community Hub could look like

He said green issues and energy security are some of his top priorities.

He told the M.E.N: "I come from a defence background, I was an army officer, so I look at everything from a defence and security perspective.

"For me energy security is the most important thing. If we've seen anything in the past two years, when Russia has a stranglehold on oil and gas supplies for Europe, energy prices go up.

"If you can produce your own energy and use renewable, or nuclear, using that mix is far better and reduces the impact of hostile states."

'A clean air zone is going to punish people'

One of the key issues he wants to tackle is traffic congestion in the area.

He added: "Where we are here, there isn't the transport infrastructure in place for people to be able to use it. Half the time you're stuck in traffic around Hazel Grove, especially through Marple, it's a massive problem.

"One of the things we're campaigning for is the A6-M60 bypass, my view is that if you reduce congestion you can reduce pollution. A clean air zone is just going to punish people."

Caroline Clark (right) and Elanor Coyne (left) in Marple
Caroline Clark (right) and Elanor Coyne (left) say Marple could do with more funding

On housing, Mr Athans has campaigned for "more affordable" homes in Hazel Grove - built on brownfield land and empty commercial spaces - including in Compstall Mill which he said has "fallen into wreck and ruin."

He has also praised the work of the government for introducing new laws banning bosses at water companies from getting a bonus if the firm is found to have committed serious criminal breaches.

Councillor Lisa Smart is the Lib Dem candidate for the constituency.

Her name has been on the ballot paper three times previously, and each time her number of votes has grown, chipping away at the Conservative majority.

'We are incredibly lucky'

Ms Smart, who lives in Romiley, said one the things she is most proud about is having helped to stop housebuilding on the green belt.

She said: "We are incredibly lucky to live in a part of the world which has so many beautiful green spaces. We have to protect them so that people can share their benefits both today and tomorrow.

"I am proud of the work that we have managed to achieve as Lib Dems on the council to stop housebuilding on the greenbelt. We are able to preserve our green belt by creating housing on existing sites and previously developed land – not in the fields and meadows that surround our towns and villages."

Brabyns Park, Marple Locks

Ms Smart has called for stronger measures to stop sewage being dumped into rivers, and worries whether the government really understands the danger of the problem.

She added: “Pollution from water companies is such a threat to our environment and it beggars belief that more has not been done at a national government level.

"I created the first ever investigation by a local council in the UK into the impacts of sewage dumping, as huge volumes of sewage are dumped into the River Goyt and plans to create a new woodland on the Chadkirk Country Estate were destroyed by sewage leaks.

“The council has now come up with plans to create a new wildflower meadow on the site in Romiley – delivering environmental and biodiversity benefits despite the problems being ignored by the current Conservative government."

With the Conservatives facing recent by-election defeats to Labour in Wellingborough and Kingswood, the party may face their greatest challenge yet in the marginal seat of Hazel Grove, especially with Reform UK set to be on the ballot.

Whichever way the result goes, Hazel Grove voters have made clear that they want to see their towns and villages given a new lease of life, and have their green spaces protected for the future.

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2024-02-18 05:28:00Z
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David Carrick: Rapist PC stripped of full state-funded pension - bbc.co.uk

David CarrickHertfordshire Police

Rapist police officer David Carrick has been stripped of his full state-funded pension, the mayor of London has confirmed.

Carrick, 49, was jailed last February after he admitted dozens of rapes and sexual offences against 12 women.

He was ordered to serve a sentence of at least 30 years and was also sacked from the Metropolitan Police.

Sadiq Khan said Carrick, of Stevenage, would lose 65% of his pension, the maximum reduction legally allowed.

"David Carrick blatantly abused his position of trust as a police officer to carry out his appalling crimes," Mr Khan said.

"I have been very clear that steps should be taken to remove the employer contributions of his Met Police pension."

Under case law and in line with Home Office guidance, only the police contributions to an officer's pension can be forfeited, not the officer's own contributions.

The guidance states pension forfeiture can only be applied for when an officer has a conviction "committed in connection with their service as a member of a police force".

The offence also has to have been certified by the Home Secretary as "liable to lead to a serious loss of confidence in the publics service" or "gravely injurious to the interests of the state".

Mr Khan's deputy mayor for policing and crime, Sophie Linden, said: "It is absolutely right we have taken every step we can as quickly as we can.

"He didn't deserve to wear the uniform of an officer, he doesn't deserve the pension of an officer."

David Carrick in court
Julia Quenzler / BBC

In 2001, Carrick joined the Met before becoming an armed officer in the Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection unit in 2009.

He pleaded guilty at Southwark Crown Court to a total of 49 offences, including 24 counts of rape, between 2003 and 2020.

Carrick had been repeatedly reported to the Met and Hertfordshire Police before his eventual arrest.

The Met's deputy assistant commissioner, Stuart Cundy, reiterated an apology to Carrick's victims: "Offending of such an appalling nature must have wide reaching consequences and it is right that the decision has been taken to subject Carrick to the maximum pension forfeiture allowed in law."

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2024-02-18 06:58:24Z
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Sabtu, 17 Februari 2024

Prince Harry 'willing to take temporary royal role while King is ill' - The Independent

The Duke of Sussex is willing to step into a temporary royal role while his father undergoes cancer treatment, it has been reported.

Reports say Harry has told friends he would step into such a role while Charles is unwell.

The duke and his father are said to have had several “warm exchanges” since the King’s illness was diagnosed, it was claimed.

Harry, who stepped down as a working royal alongside his wife the Duchess of Sussex in 2020, is a counsellor of state but is not expected to take up any of the King’s duties while he recovers.

A royal source has also told the newspaper that Charles, 75, is keen to reconcile and see more of his son, and believes doing so would benefit the monarchy.

The source told The Times: “On all practical levels it makes perfect sense for the family to come together to support the King while he’s sick.

“Much has been said on both sides in recent years, but that has never diminished the fundamental bond of blood, and there are now pragmatic aspects to consider, with the King and Kate’s wellbeing ­paramount in this.

“The details of the Clarence House meeting and subsequent conversations are private, but the feeling is that this arrangement could work.”

Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, talks with skeleton athletes during an Invictus Games training camp

A written plan would need to be drawn up by the King and his aides before Harry could return to any official duties and would not receive public funds, the newspaper said.

It comes after Harry suggested the King’s illness could lead to a reconciliation with his father in an interview with a US breakfast show.

Harry also said I “love my family” and that he was “grateful” to be able to spend time with his father when he flew back to the UK last week.

The duke’s whirlwind visit to see Charles for around 45 minutes prompted speculation the two men, estranged since the duke stepped down as a working royal, may be on the point of rebuilding their relationship.

In the interview, aired on Good Morning America, it was suggested a family illness could have a “re-unifying effect”, and when Harry was asked “is that possible in this case?” he replied: “Yeah, I’m sure.”

The duke and his wife Meghan are in Canada staging a number of events with Invictus competitors to mark a year to go until Harry’s Invictus Games, for wounded and sick veterans and military, is staged in the country.

They are being followed by a film crew led by Will Reeve, the son of the late Superman star Christopher Reeve, who interviewed Harry in the winter sports town of Whistler, which is hosting the 2025 Invictus Games alongside Vancouver.

Britain’s Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex visit the Whistler Sliding Centre

Gesturing towards Invictus competitors, Harry added: “Throughout all these families I see it on a day-to-day basis, the strength of the family unit coming together.

“I think any illness, any sickness brings families together.”

Buckingham Palace has not given details about Charles’s cancer and Harry declined to divulge any information when asked about his “outlook” on the King’s health, replying “that stays between me and him”.

But he said he would be visiting his father in the future: “I’ve got other trips planned that would take me through the UK or back to the UK, so I’ll stop in and see my family as much as I can.”

There was no meeting between the duke and his brother, the Prince of Wales, last Tuesday after Harry spent time with Charles at Clarence House.

The breakdown in the bond between the royal brothers can be traced back to the early period of Harry’s relationship with wife Meghan when his then fiancee had a falling out with the Princess of Wales in the run-up to their wedding.

Britain Royals Camilla

Since stepping down as working royals in 2020 and moving to California, the Sussexes have aired allegations and grievances against the monarchy and members of the royal family which have also soured relations.

Speaking to Reeve, Harry said: “Look, I love my family.

“The fact that I was able to get on a plane and go and see him and spend any time with him, I’m grateful for that.”

The duke was asked about his life in America, something he described as “amazing”, and whether he had contemplated becoming a US citizen, with the royal saying he had “considered” it.

Harry added: “The American citizenship is a thought that has crossed my mind but certainly not something that’s a high priority for me right now.”

Asked how he “processed” what was going on with his family in the UK, the royal replied: “I have my own family, as we all do. My family, and my life in California is as it is.”

Meghan and Harry are bringing up their two children Prince Archie, aged four, and two-year-old Princess Lilibet in the celebrity enclave of Montecito in California.

The duke said: “The kids are doing great, the kids are growing like all kids do very, very fast. They’ve both got an incredible sense of humour – make us laugh and keep us grounded every single day, as most kids do.

“I’m just very grateful to be a dad.”

During the interview, footage was shown of Harry trying the skeleton bobsleigh, one of the winter sports being introduced at the Invictus Games next year for the first time.

Harry said hosting the biennial Games, or the one year to go events, were his “…annual fix, to be amongst this community and have a laugh, have fun – no matter which nation they’re from the banter’s the same.

“I get a lot of energy just from being around these guys.”

Buckingham Palace declined to comment.

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2024-02-17 08:02:37Z
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Reform party hopes of snatching working class vote doomed, say top pollsters - The Independent

Reform UK’s hopes of stealing working class Labour voters away from Keir Starmer’s camp at the next general election has been met with scepticism from leading pollsters, The Independent can reveal.

The rebranded Brexit party, led by Richard Tice and co-founded by Nigel Farage, has labelled itself "the party of the working class", declaring it is now the real home of Labour supporters.

But Britain’s top pollster Sir John Curtice has poured cold water on the claims, predicting that their prospects in Labour heartlands remain slim.

The most recent by-elections saw Reform make a significant dent in the Conservative vote – taking a third of the overall vote share in both Wellingborough and Kingswood.

But the party have not yet proven they can land a blow on Labour. In Wellingborough, despite Reform receiving 13 per cent of the vote share, Labour still overturned a Conservative stronghold with the largest by-election swing since 1994 and a majority of 6,436 votes.

Sir John, who is professor of politics at Strathclyde University, told the Independent that the crucial factor that distinguishes those who switch to Reform is that “they still believe in Brexit”.

Although he conceded that Labour’s vote is not “wholly invulnerable” to the ex-Brexit Party, that vulnerability is “limited” because around three quarters of Labour’s vote stems from people who “want to be inside the European Union.”

He said: “If you’re discontenting of the Tories and you change your mind about Brexit then you tend to go to Labour. If, however, you’re discontented with the Tories but you’re still a Brexit believer you tend to switch to Reform.”

Tice has built the party as a populist right-wing alternative to the Conservatives, campaigning for closed borders, lower taxes and a roll back of net-zero targets. Reform has also claimed that the party is currently delivering “phase one“ of its project, which is “destroying the Conservative party”, and will next become a credible alternative to Labour.

Sir Keir Starmer meanwhile, is attempting to ensure the working class vote by putting Labour’s New Deal for Workers – a series of reforms aimed at strengthening worker’s rights in the UK – front and centre of his campaign, while also pledging to take a tougher approach to law, order and immigration.

Labour are currently polling 12-points ahead of the Conservatives as voters of all demographics abandon the Tories after fourteen turbulent years in government.

Mr Tice has warned the country faces “Starmergeddon” if it elects Labour, stating that “only Reform UK is now the party of the working class, who will stop mass immigration, who will scrap net zero, who will help solve the cost of living crisis.”

While pollsters say Reform is nibbling away at a certain piece of the 2019 Conservative vote, characterised by working class voters in traditional Labour heartlands who voted overwhelmingly for Boris Johnson and who became known as ‘the Red wall’, they refute the party’s chances of damaging Labour.

Scarlett Maguire, director at polling and political research company JL partners, acknowledged that while Reform are “pulling away about 21 per cent or so of people who voted Conservative in 2019”, the party is “just not pulling away Labour voters in the same way.”

Ms Maguire added that in the research conducted by her company suggested “69 per cent of current Reform voters voted Conservative in 2019, while just 4 per cent voted Labour”.

Clacton-on-Sea - the seat that former Brexit party leader Nigel Farage is rumoured to be considering should he run as a Reform candidate - is only polling at 18 per cent – inviting scepticism about the party’s prospects in Westminster.

Conservative peer and psephologist Lord Hayward similarly dismissed Mr Tice’s chances, emphasizing the ethnic diversity of Labour’s working-class voter base – a group Reform has alienated through its hostile stance on immigration and diversity.

A 2019 Ipsos MORI poll estimated that Labour won the votes of 64 per cent of all Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) voters in 2019, while just 20 per cent voted for the Conservatives.

“It would therefore be an interesting concept for a party that’s majored its campaign at essentially the white working class 2019 Tory voters, suddenly setting out to capture a group of people that effectively their campaign has set about alienating,” Lord Hayward told the Independent.

A Labour source also dismissed Reform UK’s chances, saying that the party were only concerned about fighting the Conservatives: "We’re focused on winning elections and to do that we need to beat the Tories. We’re not wasting our time worrying about whatever Richard Tice is saying to get attention this week.”

Reform UK have been approached for comment.

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2024-02-17 08:28:18Z
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Met Office issues East of England yellow weather warning - BBC

Flood sign in water

The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for rain that covers the entire East of England.

It said disruption was expected due to rain forecast in Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk, Northamptonshire and Suffolk.

The warning is in place between 15:00 GMT on Saturday and 18:00 on Sunday.

Flooding to "a few homes and businesses is likely", and spray and rain fall on roads could cause some delays, it said.

The warning applies to all of England.

"An area of persistent and occasionally heavy rain is expected to move from west to east across the warning area during Saturday and Sunday, falling on already saturated ground," it added.

Flooded road

The Met Office asked people to check if their property was at risk of flooding and to check road conditions, as "spray and flooding on roads" could increase journey times.

Some interruption to power supplies was likely, it added.

It recommended people kept up to date with the weather forecast in their area.

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Jumat, 16 Februari 2024

Wellingborough and Kingswood by-elections: More to do despite wins, says Keir Starmer - BBC

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Keir Starmer has said Labour has "more work to do" after it inflicted two by-election defeats on the Conservatives.

The party overturned majorities of 11,220 in Kingswood and 18,540 in Wellingborough, where the 28.5% swing was the second biggest from the Tories to Labour in any post-war by-election.

Sir Keir said he was "proud" of the results, but did not "want to get into the warm bath of saying: 'Job done'".

Rishi Sunak said "midterm" polls were "always difficult" for governments.

Speaking in Harlow, Essex, the prime minister said "the circumstances of these elections were of course particularly challenging".

The Wellingborough by-election was triggered by the ousting of disgraced former MP Peter Bone and the Kingswood poll by incumbent Chris Skidmore standing down in protest at government plans for new North Sea oil and gas licences.

"I think if you look at the results, very low turnout, and it shows that we've got work to do to show people that we are delivering on their priorities and that's what I'm absolutely determined to do, but also shows that there isn't a huge amount of enthusiasm for the alternative in Keir Starmer and the Labour Party, and that's because they don't have a plan.

"When the general election comes, that's the message I'll be making to the country. Stick with our plan, because it is starting to deliver the change that the country wants and needs," Mr Sunak added.

The turnout in Kingswood was 37% of registered voters, while in Wellingborough it was 38% - both around half the figure in 2019, but close to the average for by-elections in this Parliament.

Labour leader Sir Keir said the country was "crying out for change", telling BBC Breakfast his party was "a different party" to what it had been in 2019. He said voters "can see that we've got the answers to their problems."

But he added: "I would say this particularly to my team, there is more work to do. There is always more work to do." He said he had told them to "fight like we're five points behind".

Sir Keir said Labour were "credible contenders" for the general election, but "that is all we are."

The results mean the Tories - who are trailing a long way behind Labour in national opinion polls ahead of a general election due this year - have suffered 10 by-election losses in this parliament, more than any other government since the 1960s.

In Wellingborough, Labour's Gen Kitchen, a former London councillor who works in the charity sector and grew up in Northamptonshire, secured a comfortable majority of 6,436.

Meanwhile, the Tories suffered their biggest drop in vote share in any by-election since at least the Second World War.

Ms Kitchen said: "The people of Wellingborough have spoken for Britain. This is a stunning victory for the Labour Party and must send a message from Northamptonshire to Downing Street."

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The by-election came after former Tory MP Mr Bone was kicked out by voters in a recall petition, following his suspension from Parliament over bullying and sexual misconduct allegations, which he denied.

Mr Bone had held the constituency since 2005, increasing his majority since then to turn it into a safe Tory seat.

His partner, Northamptonshire councillor Helen Harrison, was selected by local members as the Tory candidate to replace him.

Ms Harrison told the BBC she would be "back and fighting again for the general election".

The Tories also faced a challenge from the right with Reform UK, which achieved its best by-election result since it rebranded from its previous name, the Brexit Party, in 2021.

The party came third in both by-elections, picking up 13% of the vote in Wellingborough and 10.4% in Kingswood.

Mr Sunak warned that a vote for anyone other than the Conservatives was a vote for Sir Keir, because the general election would be "between me and him, between the Conservatives and Labour".

A source close to Conservative critics of the prime minister said Labour was "storming to a huge victory and we have an insurgent party on the right polling above 10%".

"Cue [former Brexit Party leader] Nigel Farage's intervention two months out from a general election and we're facing an extinction level event," the source added.

Bar chart showing the results of the Wellingborough by-election with vote share for the top six parties: Labour 45.9% up 19.5 points, Conservative 24.6% down 37.6 points, Reform UK 13% up 13 points, Lib Dem 4.7% down 3.1 points, Independent 3.7% up 3.7 points, Green Party 3.4% down 0.1 points

Labour secured a majority of 2,501 over Tory candidate Sam Bromiley in the South Gloucestershire seat of Kingswood, near Bristol.

In his victory speech Damien Egan, who resigned as mayor of Lewisham in London to fight the seat where he grew up, said 14 years of a Conservative government had "sucked the hope out of our country"

He blamed "Rishi's recession" for leaving people "paying more and getting less".

The constituency had been held by former Tory MP Mr Skidmore since 2010, until he quit over the government's climate policies.

Bar chart showing the results of the Kingswood by-election with vote share for the top six parties: Labour 44.9% up 11.5 points, Conservative 34.9% down 21.3 points, Reform UK 10.4% up 10.4 points, Green Party 5.8% up 3.4 points, Lib Dem 3.5% down 3.5 points, UKIP 0.5% up 0.5 points

Conservative MP and former cabinet minister Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, who represents the nearby seat of North East Somerset, said the Kingswood result was "not as bad as I'd expected".

He told the BBC a lot of Tory voters appeared to have stayed at home and suggested more could turn out at a general election, which he said "focuses people's minds in a different way to a by-election".

However, the results pile further pressure on the prime minister following the latest official figures on Thursday which showed the UK economy fell into recession at the end of last year.

It also comes at the end of a difficult week for Labour, after the party dropped its flagship pledge to spend £28bn a year on green projects and was forced to withdraw support for its candidate in the upcoming Rochdale by-election over comments he made about Israel and Jewish people.

Sir Keir denied being slow to act, saying: "I did something that no leader of the Labour Party has ever done before, which was to remove a candidate in a by-election where they can not be replaced because I was determined to take decisive action in relation to antisemitism."

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Wellingborough and Kingswood by-elections: Double blow for Sunak as Labour wins - The Independent

Kingswood and Wellingborough by-elections key statistics and benchmarks

Rishi Sunak has suffered a double blow after losing both the Kingswood and Wellingborough by-elections.

Labour overturned majorities of 11,220 and 18,540, delivering the Government's ninth and tenth by-election defeats of the current Parliament and securing its second largest swing from the Conservatives ever.

Gen Kitchen secured Wellingborough with 45.8 per cent of the vote, while Damien Egan won Kingswood with 44.9 per cent of the vote.

The results provided Labour with a boost after a U-turn on the party's pledge to spend £28 billion on green projects and an antisemitism row that forced it to drop its candidate for another by-election in Rochdale in two weeks' time.

The twin defeat piles more pressure on the prime minister following the news that the UK entered a recession at the end of 2023.

The results also mean the Government has now suffered the most by-election defeats of any government since the 1960s, surpassing the eight defeats suffered by John Major in the run-up to Tony Blair's 1997 landslide victory.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer hailed the victories, saying: "These are fantastic results in Kingswood and Wellingborough that show people want change and are ready to put their faith in a changed Labour Party to deliver it.”

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Reform UK want Labour in Downing Street, Tory party chairman says

Reform UK want to see Sir Keir Starmer in Downing Street, the Conservative Party chairman said.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Richard Holden said: “Their ambition is to block Conservatives winning seats and therefore put Keir Starmer into Downing Street.

“They’ve made it very clear, you’ve read out that statement from them, that’s what Reform UK want to do, they want to see Keir Starmer in Downing Street and not have a Conservative government.”

He added: “Reform aren’t challenging realistically for seats. This general elections is going to be a battle between the Conservatives and the Labour Party.

“All Reform are going to do, as they’ve said themselves, is help put Keir Starmer and Labour into Downing Street.”

Asked if Prime Minister Rishi Sunak needs to appease the right of the Conservative Party, Mr Holden said: “If the right of the British politics and the centre and centre-right – that broad church which is the Conservative Party – doesn’t unite, then we will see a Labour victory.”

He added: “I believe we have every opportunity to win the next general election, I think we definitely can do it, but that means we have got to come together as a party, unite in the best interests of the country, deliver those things that we’ve promised, work together as a party to do that.”

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 08:00
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Conservative Party chairman Richard Holden said both by-election results were “very disappointing”.

Mr Holden told Sky News: “Very disappointing results – no need to shy away from that – in both Kingswood and Wellingborough.

“I think one of the most disappointing things for me though is the turnout in the by-elections was so significantly down compared to the previous general elections in both seats. I want to see people actively participating in democracy.

“I think that shows we’ve got a lot to do to get people out there and enthused to vote again, and probably the Opposition have a similar challenge.”

He added: “I think we’ve got to look at both these by-elections in the context in which they happened as well.

“We had an MP in Kingswood who stood down and also obviously in Wellingborough we had a parliamentary investigation, which led to a recall petition which led to an MP being forced to stand down.

“Not ideal circumstances for any form of by-election for any party.”

He also told BBC Breakfast that people were “keeping their vote at home” and insisted voters stayed at home rather than switching their votes.

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 07:43
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Watch: moment Labour’s Damien Egan is announced the winner of the Kingswood by-election

This is the moment Labour’s Damien Egan is announced as the winner of the Kingswood by-election.

As the party overturned a Conservative majority of more than 11,000, Mr Egan claimed “The Tories have sucked the hope out of our country”.

In his victory speech in the early hours of Friday morning, Mr Egan thanked the activists who helped him win and the people of Kingswood for putting their trust in him.

He said: “It’s a trust that I promise to repay, to show you that politics can be different and it can make a difference.”

Watch Labour’s Damien Egan win Kingswood by-election: ‘Tories sucked hope out of UK’

This is the moment Labour’s Damien Egan is pronounced the winner of the Kingswood by-election. As the party overturned a Conservative majority of more than 11,000, Mr Egan claimed “The Tories have sucked the hope out of our country”. In his victory speech in the early hours of Friday morning (16 February), Mr Egan thanked the activists who helped him win and the people of Kingswood for putting their trust in him. He said: “It’s a trust that I promise to repay, to show you that politics can be different and it can make a difference.”

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 07:33
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‘People going directly from Conservative to Labour'

Veteran Labour MP Sir Chris Bryant said that he had spoken to people in Kingswood who had voted Labour for the first time in their lives, as Labour took the win in the by-election.

Speaking from the Kingswood count, Mr Bryant said: “I am delighted. I had a moment this afternoon when I all thought it was going wrong because of the rain and it was pouring down and I was sopping wet and I wasn’t sure how I was going to get into a suit.

“But people came out and they voted. A lot of switchers – people going directly from Conservative to Labour. One man said to me today he was 65 and had voted Conservative all his life, including during the Tony Blair years, and today was the first time he voted Labour.”

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 07:20
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Who is Gen Kitchen? Labour’s new MP for Wellingborough

And Labour figures are confident that Ms Kitchen’s win, beating Tory candidate Helen Harrison by more than 6,000 votes, puts the party on course for a landslide under Sir Keir Starmer later this year.

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 07:05
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Who is Damien Egan? Labour’s new MP for Kingswood

Damien Egan has won the Kingswood by-election, overturning a 11,200 majority held by the Conservatives to give Labour a further boost ahead of the general election.

Mr Egan’s win, beating Tory candidate Sam Bromiley by 2,501 votes, was not a great surprise locally for a seat last held by Labour in 2005.

The Cork-born MP has been supported by notable visits from the likes of Sir Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves and Dawn Butler.

But it is his local roots which have been a key part of his campaign. So here The Independent looks at who is Mr Egan?

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 06:56
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Key numbers and statistics in full

As the Conservatives face a double blow in the Kingswood and Wellingborough by-elections, they become the party to have lost more by-elections in a single parliament than any government since the 1960s.

Here are the key statistics and historical benchmarks from the results of Thursday’s by-elections:

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 06:55
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What do the losses mean for the Conservatives?

Defeats in Thursday’s by-elections in Kingswood and Wellingborough mean the Conservatives have lost more by-elections in a single parliament than any government since the 1960s.

The Tories have clocked up 10 such defeats since the 2019 general election – two more than the eight suffered by the 1992-97 Conservative government led by John Major.

It is more than any previous government since the 1966-70 Labour administration of Harold Wilson, which endured 15 losses.

Even accounting for the Conservatives’ one by-election gain this parliament – winning Hartlepool from Labour in 2021 – the double defeat on Thursday brings the party’s overall by-election scorecard to nine net losses, which is still worse than any government since 1966-70.

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 06:39
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Good morning, here’s the latest

The Tories suffered a devastating double by-election defeat overnight with Labour taking huge majorities in both the Gloucestershire seat of Kingswood and the Northamptonshire seat of Wellingborough.

In Wellingborough, Labour’s Gen Kitchen won 45.92 per cent of the vote while her Conservative opponent Helen Harrison won just 24.57 per cent.

It marks the second-largest swing to Labour since the Second World War.

Similar results were seen in Kingswood were the Labour candidate Damien Egan won 44.94 per cent of the vote compared to the 34.88 per cent the Conservative’s Sam Bromiley received.

Upon his election, Mr Egan said: “Our country is at a crossroads. Under the Conservatives we can choose more managed decline, more chaos, more division or we can choose a changed Labour Party.”

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer also weighed in on the results and said: “The Tories have failed. Rishi’s recession proves that. That’s why we’ve seen so many former Conservative voters switching directly to this changed Labour Party.”

<p>Gen Kitchen won the Wellingborough by-election with the second-largest swing from the Conservatives to Labour since the Second World War (Joe Giddens/PA)</p>

Gen Kitchen won the Wellingborough by-election with the second-largest swing from the Conservatives to Labour since the Second World War (Joe Giddens/PA)

Athena Stavrou16 February 2024 06:16
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Sir Keir Starmer: ‘These are fantastic results'

Sir Keir will not be doing a media round on Friday morning as he attends the funeral of the late Rochdale MP Sir Tony Lloyd.

But speaking about tonight’s results, he said: “These are fantastic results in Kingswood and Wellingborough that show people want change and are ready to put their faith in a changed Labour Party to deliver it.

“By winning in these Tory strongholds, we can confidently say that Labour is back in the service of working people and we will work tirelessly to deliver for them.

“The Tories have failed. Rishi’s recession proves that. That’s why we’ve seen so many former Conservative voters switching directly to this changed Labour Party.”

<p>Sir Keir is joined by musician Feargal Sharkey as he canvasses voters by phone for the Wellingborough and Kingswood by-elections</p>

Sir Keir is joined by musician Feargal Sharkey as he canvasses voters by phone for the Wellingborough and Kingswood by-elections

Alex Ross16 February 2024 05:37

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