• 9 months ago
Rishi Sunak faced a dual setback with defeats in both the Kingswood and Wellingborough by-elections on Friday. Labour overturned substantial majorities of 11,220 and 18,540, marking the Government’s ninth and tenth by-election losses of the current Parliament and achieving its second largest swing from the Conservatives in history.

Gen Kitchen clinched Wellingborough with 45.8% of the vote, while Damien Egan secured Kingswood with 44.9%. These results offered Labour a boost amid controversies over a £28 billion green project pledge reversal and an antisemitism row, leading to the withdrawal of their candidate for the upcoming Rochdale by-election.

The twin defeats escalate pressure on the Prime Minister, especially following the UK's recession announcement in late 2023. Reform UK garnered significant support from dissatisfied right-leaning voters, achieving over 10% of the vote for the first time in a by-election. Reform deputy leader Ben Habib obtained 13% of the vote in Wellingborough, while Rupert Lowe secured 10% in Kingswood. This outcome also signifies that the Government has now endured the most by-election defeats of any administration since the 1960s, surpassing John Major's eight losses preceding Tony Blair's 1997 landslide victory.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00 Rishi Sunak and the Conservative Party have faced a dual setback with defeats in both
00:06 the Kingswood and Wellingborough by-elections this Friday. Labour overturned substantial
00:12 majorities of 11,220 and 18,540, marking the government's ninth and tenth by-election
00:20 losses of the current Parliament and achieving its second largest swing from the Conservatives
00:26 in history. Wellingborough was clinched with 45.8% of the vote, while Damien Egan secured
00:33 Kingswood with 44.9%. The twin defeats escalate pressure on the Prime Minister, especially
00:40 following the UK's recession announcement in late 2023. This outcome also signifies
00:46 that the government has now endured the most by-election defeats of any administration
00:51 since the 1960s, surpassing John Major's eight losses preceding Tony Blair's 1997 landslide

Recommended