
Farage hails election results, as Labour and Tories digest losses
BBC NEWS
By Suzanne Leigh
03/05/25
EPA Nigel Farage speaking to Reform UK supporters. He is wearing a white shirt and navy blazer, and a red, white and blue tie. He has grey hair.EPA
Nigel Farage has hailed Reform UK’s gains in Thursday’s elections as “unprecedented” and “the end of two-party politics”.
The party has taken control of 10 local councils, won two mayoral races and added a fifth MP to its ranks in the Runcorn and Helsby by-election now counting has been completed.
Many of these wins came at the expense of the Labour and Conservative parties, which have both sought to explain the results.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer conceded that people were not yet feeling the benefits of a Labour government, while Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch pledged to make her party a “credible” alternative once again.
‘Not Labour enough’: MPs’ despair at voters’ verdict on government
Local elections at-a-glance: What’s happened?
Local elections 2025 in maps and charts
Farage claimed on Saturday: “In post-war Britain, no one has ever beaten both Labour and the Tories in a local election before.”
Writing in The Times, Sir Keir said the lesson learned from the elections was not that the country needed “ideological zealotry”.
“It’s that now is the time to crank up the pace on giving people the country they are crying out for,” he said.
But some within Labour have called on the prime minister to change direction, saying the decision to cut winter fuel payments to all but the poorest pensioners had put off voters.
Labour MP Rachael Maskell urged the government to ditch the cuts, telling BBC Breakfast: “We have got that mandate, I believe, as a party to look at how we can better redistribute wealth, as opposed to taking out of the pockets of the poorest.”
1:10
Watch: Sir Keir responds to election results on Friday
With the results all in, Badenoch apologised to the defeated Conservative councillors, saying: “I am going to make sure that we get ourselves back to the place where we are seen as the credible alternative to Labour.”
Writing in The Telegraph, she said: “I’m deeply sorry to see so many capable, hard-working Conservative councillors lose their seats. They didn’t deserve it – and they weren’t the reason we lost.”
Badenoch blamed the party’s 14 years in government and a “punishing” general election which had both “sapped morale and resources”.
She also reiterated her view that defending many local seats the party had gained in 2021, during a “vaccine bounce”, was a “tough ask”.
The results were worse than Conservatives had feared, with the party not only losing to Reform but also the Liberal Democrats.
It lost 674 council seats and control of all 16 authorities it was defending – but wrested the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough mayoralty from Labour.
Chart showing projected national share. These are estimates for how the election results would have translated if a nationwide election had been held on Thursday. Reform UK projected share 30% Change +28, Labour projected share 20% Change -14, Liberal Democrat projected share 17% Change 0, Conservative projected share 15% Change -10, Green projected share 11% Change -2, Others projected share 7% Change -2
Roger Gough, the former Conservative leader of Kent County Council, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the party had a huge job to do.
“We are still under the shadow of what happened when we were in government,” he said. “That’s a shadow that was over us when we went to the national polls last year and it hasn’t lifted.”
He added: “There’s a genuine pressure between coming up with serious answers, which will in some cases take time, and establishing a credible position in the shorter term.
“Clearly that’s not happened so far, that’s why so many of us paid the price electorally over the last couple of days.”
Shadow chief treasury secretary Richard Fuller insisted that Badenoch would be the party’s leader in a year’s time.
He told Today the party “has to think deeply about policies that are going to work, make sure we’ve got the people to put them in place, then regain trust”.
Fuller said the Tories would not make a pact with Reform, adding Farage “has been very clear that he wants to destroy the Conservative Party”.
