Doubts over Corbyn 'bubbling up' again after local election result falls short
A good Labour result would have been a net gain of 150 seats - but they ended up with 58 more councillors and one council down.
Friday 4 May 2018 23:09, UK
Jeremy Corbyn's 29-seat gain in the 2017 snap election put New Labour grandees and moderate Labour MPs in their place.
Those who scoffed at the prospects of him winning at the ballot box were silenced.
"We're all Corbynistas now," tweeted Matt Zarb-Cousin, Mr Corbyn's former spokesperson, as the results broke overnight.
The matter was settled: Mr Corbyn had won Labour's civil war and the moderates were in the retreat.
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But the local election results have opened those fissures once more. Labour moderates are nervous.
Nervous that Labour didn't manage to turn target Tory councils like Westminster and Wandsworth in the capital red.
Nervous that the anti-Semitism row led to the party's failure to take control in Barnet.
Nervous that the internal battles in local parties is beginning to put some supporters off.
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In Haringey, the Liberal Democrats picked up six seats from Labour after a bitter power tussle for control of the council between Momentum activists and the incumbent Labour leader.
"It hit us badly," said one of Labour's London MPs.
And for those outside the metropolitan bubble, alarm that white working class towns like Dudley, Nuneaton and Peterborough are turning to the Tories rather than Corbyn's Labour.
"After eight years of an unpopular government in crisis we should be romping home," said one Labour MP, representing a northern, working-class constituency.
"Particularly worrying trends in white working-class areas."
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Labour insisted they had made "solid progress" in this set of local elections; on course to secure Labour's best results in London, control of Plymouth, the largest party in the Tory jewel of Trafford.
Team Labour pointed out that, if these results where extrapolated out to a general election, Labour would be the largest party in Parliament - with a gain of 12 seats, according to Sky's election analyst Michael Thrasher.
But, whatever the spin, Corybn's Labour has fallen short of expectations.
A good result for Mr Corbyn would have resulted in a net gain of 150 seats. He ended the day with 58 more councillors and one council down.
The Tories were expecting heavy losses.
In the end they lost 30 council seats, with 149 of 150 councils declared and two councils down.
At this stage in the electoral cycle you would expect Labour to have a more decisive lead - and yet these results confirm that the gridlock of the general election is unbroken.
Chuka Umunna, a Corbyn critic, told Sky News the party should hold an internal inquiry into the local campaign, warning that the results cannot leave the party confident of success at the next national poll.
His appeal was, predictably, rebuffed by Mr Corbyn's office.
Local elections are a notoriously unreliable indicator of parties' national standing, but be in no doubt that in Leave-voting, working neighbourhoods and marginal seats, MPs' doubts over Jeremy Corbyn will be bubbling up once more.
The party will certainly not change course because his stranglehold is simply too strong, but get set for more turbulent times between the leadership and his unwilling parliamentary followers.