55 resultsfor “Reform UK party election performance”
UK](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/brexit-party) on the right as well as the Greens on the left. As of 7.30pm on Friday, there were at least 26 English councils where [Labour](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/labour) had dropped
Reform’s rise also reflects the decline of the Conservatives and a wider realignment on the right, where it is increasingly “setting the agenda” with a harder line on issues like migration, John McTernan, political
UK](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/brexit-party) conference in 2024 and was mooted as a potential London mayoral candidate. But he appeared to to be cut loose by the party, which sought to distance itself from
elected to the Welsh Parliament while the [Scottish Greens also won their first-ever constituencies](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c78k79xm2mzo) at the Scottish Parliament. Polanski said some people were voting for the Greens as they were "disillusioned
UK was higher in the 100 places in England with the biggest increases in persistent High Street vacancy relative to the rest of the country. This is based on parliamentary seats they won, or came
Reform's rivals have described their campaign as a "binfire", with candidates lost over offensive views and Scottish party leader Malcolm Offord having to apologise for a homophobic joke years ago. The Greens have plenty
election. Labour has previously faced criticism from its political opponents after failing to hit targets set out in its April 2022 Covid recovery plan. Its overall record on the NHS after 27 years in power
UK to see him when he was gravely ill, but she felt compelled to refuse for fear she would not be allowed back into the country. During this period, her international stature grew amid widespread
perform in the Commons that day will decide whether or not they keep their job – but they are very, very rare. The best example in modern times is Margaret Thatcher
performance in Gorton and Denton, plus disastrous results in the local election, could “unlock that route back”. The confidence of hindsight, however, masks what has been a fraught week for team Burnham. As the guessing
UK terror threat ‘severe’ after antisemitic attacks”. The Green leader provides the **Telegraph’s** angle: “Met accuses Polanski of stoking tensions”. Top story in the **Financial Times** is “ECB and BoE warn of rate rises
UK politics is now so different, so atomised, to make headline polling almost irrelevant. One senior Lib Dem said: “A lot of people seem to be misreading the way things are going. We think
party has realised quite how different it’s going to be with Plaid in charge now,” Bethan says. “We are heading into uncharted waters.” In the first official call between ap Iorwerth
elections for English councils in May.](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c62nq678nyzo) Luke Tryl, UK director of polling company More in Common, says: "It's clear that the public judge their local area and community by the state
performance in the local elections, citing the international crisis over the Iran war. But the [Guardian’s revelation last week that Mandelson failed secured vetting](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/apr/16/revealed-mandelson-failed-vetting-but-foreign-office-overruled-decision) for the US role has put Starmer