A Progressive Alliance between Labour, Liberal Democrats and Greens would see 58 seats wiped from the Conservative’s majority, new polling figures have revealed.
Electoral Calculus research run on behalf of the Constitution Society found Boris Johnson’s party would return just 307 MPs if the three parties joined forces.
That’s down significantly from the number of MPs they currently have following a landslide election victory in December 2019.
MRP Poll – LAB/LDM/GRN Electoral Pact:
WITH: 307 (-58)
LAB: 238 (+36)
SNP: 48 (=)
LDM: 25 (+14)
GRN: 9 (+8)
PLC: 4 (=)Via @FindoutnowUK & @ElectCalculus, 4-6 Jun.
Changes w/ GE2019.Only England/Wales was polled. pic.twitter.com/fop4qGYJFa
— Election Maps UK (@ElectionMapsUK) June 15, 2021
Oxfordshire
In the local elections in May, Liberal Democrat, Labour and Green councillors in Oxfordshire agreed to “put their differences aside” in the interest of local residents to form a coalition.
With no party winning the 32-seat majority required leaders from the parties have formed the Oxfordshire Fair Deal Alliance that is anchored in “the principles shared across our manifestos, with climate change and the environment at their heart.”
It echoes a similar allegiance struck in Stroud, which was renewed after the May 6th election.
Cllr Doina Cornell said the alliance has “achieved so much for the district over these last nine years, protecting and investing in our communities instead of cutting back.”
Labour drubbings
On the national front, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has embarked on some serious soul searching following drubbings for the party across the regions.
Labour lost control of eight councils and shed some 326 councillors all told, with the biggest defeats coming in Hartlepool, where a Conservative MP was elected for the first time in 62 years, and in County Durham, which saw Labour lose overall control of the council for the first time since 1925.
It follows on from the 2019 general election which saw Labour suffer one of its worst results in living memory.
The election saw much of the so-called Red Wall turn blue, with seats such as Workington, Tony Blair’s former constituency of Sedgefield and Bolsover, which had been Dennis Skinner’s seat since 1970, fall to the Conservatives.
The scale of the defeat, which was underpinned by ongoing Brexit issues, has led many people to suggest that the only way forward for Labour is through an alliance with other parties.
Related: ‘Three Bellends’ pub renamed ‘Two Helmets’ in fresh pop at government
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