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Labor and Conservatives brace for bigger losses after U-turn allows 30 local council elections

A minister has tried to defend local government secretary Steve Reed against opposition calls for him to resign over his U-turn on the postponement of May’s local elections.

Stephen KinnockThe care minister said Reed had done an “excellent job”.

Kinnock was being interviewed on behalf of the government this morning and asked about Reed’s position, telling Sky News:

Steve Reed is doing an excellent job as secretary of state, pushing the Pride in Place program, pushing reforms for tenants, tearing up all the bureaucracy and regulations that prevent us from building things in this country.

Steve is doing an excellent job as foreign secretary and will continue to do so and serve the British people.

Kinnock also said the LBC government’s legal advice initially said the delay was justified. He continued:

This legal advice has now changed. This is not ideal. I’m not going to stand here and treat you like one, but we are a government that operates on the rule of law.

Inside Times, Max Kendix And Oliver Wright One factor that led to the change of heart, they say, was that while governments have postponed local elections on a case-by-case basis in the past, Reed argued that this round of elections was relatively pointless anyway. They report:

There was another difference compared to last year. Local government secretary Steve Reed had been actively promoting the idea of ​​canceling elections this year before announcing which areas, if any, would be covered.

Public will support canceling ‘meaningless’ election, Reed says in The Times “zombie” councils – calling them “time-consuming.”

Sources suggest that such statements contribute to the lawyers’ final evaluation. They recently hit back at ministers with a stern warning: if you keep delaying, you may have to fight Reform UK in court and there’s a good chance you’ll lose.

The decision taken yesterday means that the Labor Party and the Conservative Party are now preparing for even bigger losses in the local elections.

Inside I, Will Hazell reports:

According to a survey conducted by JL Partners TelegramWith the elections now due, Labor is expected to lose control of six councils: Blackburn and Darwen, Cannock Chase, Exeter, Preston, Thurrock and Worthing.

And a report In quotes from the Financial Times Professor Sir John CurticeThe leading election expert said the biggest impact of the U-turn would be on four county councils – Norfolk, Suffolk, East and West Sussex – three of which are currently controlled by the Conservatives. “These are big councils where all the seats are up for grabs and these are the sort of areas that should emulate the successful performance of Reformation last year,” Curtice told the paper.

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