Boris gets a bloody nose in Bexley: Tory majority is slashed n by-election 

Boris gets a bloody nose in Bexley: Tory majority is slashed from 19,000 to just 4,478 and lose 13% of the vote since 2019 in by-election in James Brokenshire’s old seat

Conservatives held Old Bexley And Sidcup by-election but with reduced majority



<!–

<!–

<!–<!–

<!–

(function (src, d, tag){
var s = d.createElement(tag), prev = d.getElementsByTagName(tag)[0];
s.src = src;
prev.parentNode.insertBefore(s, prev);
}(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/1.17.0/async_bundle–.js”, document, “script”));
<!–

DM.loadCSS(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/gunther-2159/video_bundle–.css”);


<!–

Boris Johnson was given a by-election bloody nose this morning as the Tory majority in the safe seat of Old Bexley and Sidcup was slashed from 19,000 to less than 4,500.

The vote – which was called following the death of former cabinet minister James Brokenshire in October – took place amid a whirlwind of sleaze allegations against the government.

Tory candidate Louie French took the seat with 11,189 ahead of his Labour rival on 6,711, a majority of 4,478.

Boris Johnsonwill face new questions about his leadership in the wake of the result

The by-election was contested by Louie French for the Tories (pictured at the results today) and Daniel Francis for Labour, as well as Simone Reynolds for the Lib Dems, Jonathan Rooks for the Greens, and Richard Tice for the Reform Party.

The by-election was contested by Louie French for the Tories and Daniel Francis for Labour, as well as Simone Reynolds for the Lib Dems, Jonathan Rooks for the Greens, and Richard Tice for the Reform Party.

The result is likely to raise further questions over Mr Johnson’s leadership after weeks of turmoil and growing backbench anger at his handling of sleaze claims and the Covid crisis.

Votes were counted through the evening after polls closed at 10pm last night

Labour had hoped Sir Keir Starmer’s shadow cabinet reshuffle earlier this week could boost the party’s chances of an unlikely victory

Chief Whip Mark Spencer reportedly told Tory MPs on Tuesday night to take part in a ‘dawn raid’ on the constituency to boost support and get out the vote.

OLD BEXLEY & SIDCUP BY-ELECTION RESULT 

Conservative: 11,189

Labour: 6,711

Reform: 1,432

Green: 830

Lib Dem: 647 

English Democrat: 271

UKIP: 184 

Rejoin EU: 151

Heritage: 116 

Christian: 108

Monster Raving Loony: 94 

TOTAL: 21,787    TURNOUT: 33.6%

CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY: 4,478 

Advertisement

Tory sources feared voter apathy would see the party’s majority shrink, with one telling The Telegraph: ‘There is no love for Labour… we have seen no switchers to Labour at all.’

Labour candidate Mr Francis told the newspaper that he believed the shadow cabinet reshuffle had provided a boost.

He suggested Yvette Cooper’s return to the Labour frontbench as shadow home secretary had cut through with voters.

He said: ‘There are people citing that and talking about the reshuffle, and certainly in the case of the shadow home secretary, that’s an example of somebody who is back in a high profile post.’

Conservative MP Mr Brokenshire, 53, died from lung cancer in October, with tributes paid from across the political spectrum.

He represented Old Bexley and Sidcup from 2010, having been initially elected as the MP for Hornchurch in 2005. Mr French, a Tory councillor of eight years, served as deputy leader of Bexley council from 2018 to 2021 and following his selection, he said: ‘James Brokenshire was a friend and mentor to me and it’s an honour to have been selected as the Conservative candidate for Old Bexley and Sidcup, where I hope to carry on his excellent work.

‘I will campaign to ensure that outer London areas like Old Bexley and Sidcup are not forgotten or left behind by the mayor of London and City Hall.

‘And I will work to improve access to GPs and healthcare services, building directly on James’ work with Queen Mary’s Hospital, so residents can get a face-to-face GP appointment at a time that suits them.’

Mr Francis is also a councillor and formerly led the Labour group on Bexley council.

In a message on Twitter, he said he had lived in the area for 20 years and vowed to work ‘tirelessly’ for the community if elected.

On the Labour Party website, he wrote: ‘I will make sure our communities are safer by reducing speeding on our main roads, tackling anti-social behaviour and putting more police on our streets.

‘I will revitalise our high streets by standing up to Conservatives cuts and supporting Labour’s call to scrap business rates.

‘And I will push for the increase in investment our area needs, at every level of government.

‘So on December 2, let’s use this one-off opportunity to send the Conservatives a message. Let’s tell them we’ll no longer be taken for granted.’

Mr Tice, who is former chairman of the Brexit Party, announced his candidacy in a bid to send Mr Johnson a ‘powerful message’ about the impact of his Government’s policies after the Conservative administration raised the tax burden to the highest level since the 1950s.

The leader of the Reform Party – formerly known as the Brexit Party – said he would be standing on a ticket of low taxes and pledged to campaign for a referendum on the target of achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Other candidates competing for the seat included Elaine Cheeseman for the English Democrats, Richard Hewison for Rejoin EU, David Kurten for the Heritage Party, John Poynton for Ukip, Carol Valinejad for the Christian Peoples Alliance, and Mad Mike Young for the Official Monster Raving Loony Party.

The Conservatives will face a second by-election later this month in North Shropshire following the resignation of Owen Paterson.  

Advertisement

Loading

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow by Email
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Share