Badenoch apologises for local election ‘bloodbath’ in op-ed
Kemi Badenoch has apologised for the “bloodbath” of the local elections in an op-ed piece on Saturday for the Telegraph.
The Conservative party leader wote:
After last year’s historic defeat, and with protest votes cutting across every ballot box, we knew Thursday would be hard. 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.
In the piece, Badenoch explained that as party members were voting in the final round of the Conservative party leadership contest, an unnamed male MP took her aside in parliament and warned “the May 2025 locals are going to be a total bloodbath”. She acknowledged that the prediction was right: “The results confirm he was correct. But to be honest, it wasn’t a controversial prediction to make.”
She added:
These local election results show the scale of the work needed to rebuild trust in the Conservative party and the importance of redoubling our efforts to show that this party is under new leadership and is doing things differently.
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Updated at 04.39 EDT
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Reform have captured the headlines, but the Green Party made some gains in these local elections too. The Greens gained 44 councillors across the 23 councils in this election.
“Following Thursday’s election we’ve reached a new record high 859 councillors on 181 councils! The Green Party is the only party offering a real alternative to the tired old parties,” the party’s official X account said.
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Assisted dying is about the “human cost” and not pounds and pence, the MP behind the proposed legislation has said after an assessment of the potential costs, PA reports.
An impact assessment into the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill was published on Friday, exactly a fortnight ahead of the next Commons debate on the proposed new law. It set out estimates for how many people might apply and go on to have an assisted death, as well as potential costs of the service and reduced end-of-life care costs.
“It’s a very uneasy sort of conversation to have,” Kim Leadbeater, the Labour MP behind the Bill, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
“Because for me, assisted dying and giving people the choice at the end of their life when they’re facing a terminal illness is about the human cost. It’s not about pounds and pence.”
The assessment estimated that assisted dying could cut end-of-life care costs by as much as an estimated £10 million in the first year and almost £60 million after 10 years. It noted that reducing those costs “is not stated as an objective of the policy” but some have expressed concerns that this could put pressure on people to end their lives.
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Writing in the Times on Saturday, the prime minister insisted there was “tangible proof that things are finally beginning to go in the right direction”, although he said he was not satisfied with where the country was.
Keir Starmer wote:
I am acutely aware that people aren’t yet feeling the benefits. That’s what they told us last night. Until they do, I will wake up every morning determined to go further and faster.
Starmer signalled his priorities as he pledged to deliver “more money in your pocket, lower NHS waiting lists, lower immigration numbers”.
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Nigel Farage has hailed his party’s “unprecedented” results in the local elections.
In a post on X on Saturday, the Reform UK leader wrote:
In postwar Britain, no one has ever beaten both Labour and the Tories in a local election before.
These results are unprecedented.
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In case you want to see the full mayoral and council results from Thursday’s elections, you can find them in the Guardian’s tracker here:
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Yesterday, Nigel Farage warned council staff working on diversity or climate change initiatives to seek “alternative careers”.
Today, a newly elected Reform UK councillor said Durham county council would be “getting the auditors in” right away to slash spending in areas like net zero and green initiatives.
“We’re getting the auditors in to see … actually what those jobs are, and if they’re good value for money, and if they’re not, well, the answer is, ‘Yeah, goodbye’,” Darren Grimes, a Durham councillor and former GB News presenter told the BBC’s Today programme.
Cash spent on such programmes is “vanishingly small” and discretionary spending for councils is mostly spent on social care, libraries and filling in potholes, Tony Travers, a professor of public policy at the LSE, told the programme, according to the PA news agency.
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Updated at 06.22 EDT
Paula Surridge
Reform UK’s victories are just the latest chapter of political fragmentation, writes Prof Paula Surridge, the deputy director at UK in a Changing Europe and professor of political sociology at the University of Bristol.
Nigel Farage’s party has benefited this time as voters flee the main parties, but there are faultlines within its own coalition too, Surridge adds. You can read Surridge’s full analysis here:
ShareHelen Livingstone
Saturday papers in the UK were dominated by the Reform party’s victory at the polls, in which it gained an MP at Labour’s expense and won a string of local councils.
A jubilant Nigel Farage said his hard-right populist party had now supplanted the Conservatives and pledged that Reform-run councils and mayoralties would block asylum seeker accommodation and dismantle equalities programmes.
The Guardian’s front page, 3 May 2025. Photograph: The Guardian
The Guardian’s front page led with “Reform wins ‘beginning of end for Tories’, says Farage”, adding that it was a “sobering day” for prime minister Keir Starmer and Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch.
You can see how other papers reported on the local elections here:
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Headteachers’ union takes legal action against Ofsted over inspection changes
Richard Adams
Headteachers are taking legal action against Ofsted, England’s schools watchdog, over fears that its new inspection regime is “even worse than before” and likely to harm the mental health of school leaders.
The National Association of Head Teachers said it had lodged a claim for a judicial review against Ofsted “over the potential impact of their inspection proposals” and for inadequate consultation over its new system of grading schools.
Ofsted’s inspection regime has been mired in controversy since the 2023 death by suicide of the headteacher Ruth Perry, with a coroner finding that Perry’s death was “contributed to by an Ofsted inspection”.
Paul Whiteman, the NAHT’s general secretary, said:
Somehow the focus on school leader mental health and wellbeing has got lost along the way during Ofsted’s consultation process.
We must not forget that the catalyst for these changes was the tragic death of Ruth Perry and widespread acceptance that the inspection regime was placing school leaders under intolerable pressure. However, there appears to have been very little thought given to the impact on the wellbeing of school leaders in the drawing up of these plans and the consultation that followed.
School leaders are deeply concerned that the new report cards could result in an even worse system than before, with potentially disastrous impact on workload, wellbeing and retention.
We have tried engaging with Ofsted and explaining this, but so far these concerns have fallen largely on deaf ears. We have been left with little choice other than to pursue this action.
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The Guardian has also just launched a visual investigation into the Victorian prisons in England and Wales. It has been created by Ana Lucía González Paz and Rajeev Syal, with design and graphics by Garry Blight, Paul Scruton, Lucy Swan and Harvey Symons. You can explore it via the link below:
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Cramped Victorian prisons limiting rehabilitation, chief inspector says
Rajeev Syal
The cramped conditions of Victorian prisons in England and Wales are limiting the rehabilitation opportunities for thousands of offenders, an official watchdog has said.
As the Guardian launches a visual investigation into the state of Victorian prisons in inner cities and towns, the chief inspector of prisons, Charlie Taylor, said 19th century jails could also be “incredibly noisy and distressing” for autistic people.
His words come after a series of warnings from the justice secretary, Shabana Mahmood, that England and Wales’s Prison Service was in crisis, leading to the early release of thousands of prisoners this autumn.
Taylor’s annual report in September showed that many prisons were severely overcrowded and understaffed, with 30 out of 32 closed prisons rated as poor or insufficiently good.
Many are overrun with rats and cockroaches and have been infiltrated by drug gangs.
Taylor, who has previously described Victorian prisons as “barely fit for purpose”, said that many of the older prisons – about 10% of 122 across England and Wales – struggled to rehabilitate offenders.
“These prisons are already overcrowded, and tend to be on fairly small footprints. When you look at prisons like Leicester or Bedford, they’re minute jails. There is very little workspace for education and training,” he said. “If the prison population is also double what it once was, then that’s not at all ideal to be able to do anything that might be vaguely thought to be rehabilitative.”
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A senior Tory MP has insisted Kemi Badenoch will still be the party’s leader in a year’s time after the Conservatives lost more than 600 councillors in local elections.
Shadow chief treasury secretary Richard Fuller also ruled out a future pact with Reform UK on a national level after the party made sweeping gains, reports the PA news agency.
Asked on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme how long Badenoch has to come up with answers and if we are going to see her in post in a year, he said “of course we are”.
On whether the Tories may need to look at a pact with Reform UK to get Keir Starmer out at the next general election, he said:
There won’t be pacts. Nigel Farage has been very clear that he wants to destroy the Conservative party.
ShareJessica Elgot
In a week of difficult local elections, there was a special guest in No 10 to give a pep talk to staff: Arsène Wenger, the former manager of Arsenal, beloved of the prime minister. Keir Starmer has sought his advice before, on the importance of building a team. And they have faced some common challenges, rebuilding their clubs and parties from low ebbs to extraordinary success.
Now Starmer may face a similar challenge – and criticism – to Wenger in his later years: whether he can adapt his tactical rigidity when results start to suffer.
So far, a successful strategy has been to win back Conservative switchers and working-class voters whom the party was felt to have abandoned. That has morphed into deep concern about the threat of Reform UK. In Runcorn and Helsby, lost by an agonising six votes having been one of Labour’s safest seats, Reform showed how it could turn out its machine.
But cabinet ministers have told the Guardian they are concerned that Labour’s own pendulum has swung too far and is alienating their own voters. In that same seat, Labour retained just 55% of its vote, suggesting many of its own voters did not turn out. The Greens, however, clung on to their vote from last July.
Nigel Farage may loom large as the biggest threat in some of Labour’s most vulnerable seats in the north and the Midlands. But MPs and ministers fear the threat in those seats of Labour staying at home and losing votes to the Greens, Liberal Democrats and independents could just as easily be the factor that would deliver seats to Reform, as more Conservative voters switch to Farage.
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Badenoch apologises for local election ‘bloodbath’ in op-ed
Kemi Badenoch has apologised for the “bloodbath” of the local elections in an op-ed piece on Saturday for the Telegraph.
The Conservative party leader wote:
After last year’s historic defeat, and with protest votes cutting across every ballot box, we knew Thursday would be hard. 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.
In the piece, Badenoch explained that as party members were voting in the final round of the Conservative party leadership contest, an unnamed male MP took her aside in parliament and warned “the May 2025 locals are going to be a total bloodbath”. She acknowledged that the prediction was right: “The results confirm he was correct. But to be honest, it wasn’t a controversial prediction to make.”
She added:
These local election results show the scale of the work needed to rebuild trust in the Conservative party and the importance of redoubling our efforts to show that this party is under new leadership and is doing things differently.
Share
Updated at 04.39 EDT
Labour MP Rachael Maskell has urged her party to scrap winter fuel and welfare policies that she said are pushing voters away, reports the PA news agency.
The York Central MP told BBC Breakfast that Labour has “special responsibilities” to serve the needs of people.
She said:
We’re not any other political party, we were created to serve the needs of people across working areas of our country so that people had a real voice of the kind of change that they wanted to see.
I think it’s now time, if Labour are going to go further faster, to pick up that voice, to put our fingers on the pulse and to understand that that responsibility that the 1945 government set out putting that safety net in place at the welfare state is on our watch and is our responsibility.
So, scrapping these proposals to push disabled people into hardship is an absolutely crucial part of that change, showing that we’re going to be listening to the country and protecting the people at their time of need.
Of course we want to get more people into work. Of course the changes to the health system is really crucial … but also we’ve got to help people and care for people as we go on that journey.
She added:
People went cold last winter and that’s not what a Labour government should be doing.
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.
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Updated at 04.18 EDT
Starmer says he wants ‘national renewal’ and that ‘change on that scale will take time’
Keir Starmer has said he wants “national renewal” and that “change on that scale will take time”, in a Saturday op-ed for the Times.
The prime minister wrote:
In short I want national renewal. But that can only be built if people across the country have security in their lives and that will only happen if we have a secure economy, a secure health service and secure borders. Change on that scale will take time. But it is my focus, now and every day ahead.
He added:
The lesson of these elections isn’t that the country needs more politicians’ promises or ideological zealotry. It isn’t that there is some easy solution, as promised by our opponents. It’s that now is the time to crank up the pace on giving people the country they are crying out for.
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A Labour MP has suggested that voters shunned her party in local elections because it has failed to live up to the values the public expects from a Labour government.
York Central MP Rachael Maskell said Labour needs to be driven by “a framework of values, which is about protecting people, helping people to move forward in their lives and ensuring you’ve got those public services ready and working so that people can have that support when they need it”.
“That is what Labour governments do,” she told BBC Breakfast. She added:
I believe that when Labour does not meet that sweet spot, that expectation that people have of a Labour government, then they start to look in less favourable places for where that help comes from.
Yesterday, many people were searching for that response, to find that protection, to get that support. But, sadly, if Labour were not offering that, they would look in other places.
That’s why Labour have got to learn from the results yesterday and ensure that we do meet the needs of people in this country in very, very trying times.
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‘No simple answers’ for Reform UK, says senior Tory
Reform UK will find out there are “no simple answers” to local public finances and have to make “difficult choices” after the party surged in local elections, a senior Tory MP has said.
Richard Fuller, shadow chief treasury secretary, said it was now up to Nigel Farage’s party to see if they can deliver in the areas where they have won council seats and mayoral polls.
According to the PA news agency, Fuller told GB News:
We have to acknowledge Reform did very well yesterday.
They won the Runcorn byelection off Labour. They’ve won some mayoralties and now they will get the chance to show what they can actually do when they give them power.
So, no longer pointing at problems, but actually there to try and find solutions, albeit on a local level, to help the people in Lincolnshire or Hull, where they have taken over the mayoralties.
And other areas where they have taken control of the council.
They’ll find out, Reform will find out, I think, that there are no simple answers locally to public finances at local government level, they’ll have to make some difficult choices and the local public will … hold them to account for the decisions they make.
Farage has previously suggested every county council “needs a Doge” – a reference to Elon Musk’s cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) in the US.
Leader of Reform UK Nigel Farage cheers while addressing supporters and the media at Staffordshire county showground after Reform won control of Staffordshire county council. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images
Speaking on the BBC’s Today programme on Saturday, ex-GB news host Darren Grimes, who won a seat on Durham county council for Reform UK, said: “On day one of being in control, we’re get the auditors in.” More on this story in a moment, but first, here is a summary of the latest updates:
Nigel Farage hailed Friday’s local election results as “the end of two-party politics” and “the death of the Conservative party” as Reform UK picked up 10 councils and more than 600 seats in Thursday’s poll.
Kemi Badenoch apologised to defeated Conservative councillors after the Tories lost more than 600 councillors and all 15 of the councils it controlled going into the election, among the worst results in the party’s history. Conservative figures have sought to deny that the results are “existential” for the party.
Several Labour figures have called on the prime minister to change course after Reform UK won the Runcorn and Helsby byelection by six votes and took control of the previously Labour-run Doncaster Council. Backbench MP Emma Lewell, who has represented South Shields since 2013, said it was “tone deaf to keep repeating we will move further and faster on our plan for change. What is needed is a change of plan.”
Keir Starmer warned against parties offering “some simple, ideological fix”. In a Saturday op-ed for the Times, Starmer wrote that he wanted “national renewal”. He added: “But that can only be built if people across the country have security in their lives and that will only happen if we have a secure economy, a secure health service and secure borders. Change on that scale will take time.”
In further signs of fracturing political loyalties, a BBC projection of how the voting would have looked in a UK-wide election put Reform first on 30%, Labour on 20%, the Liberal Democrats on 17%, the Conservatives fourth with 15% and the Greens on 11%.
After losing his legal challenge over personal security, the Duke of Sussex, has appealed to the prime minister, Keir Starmer, and the home secretary, Yvette Cooper. Asked whether Starmer should “step in”, he replied: “Yes, I would ask the prime minister to step in.” He then said: “I would ask Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, to look at this very, very carefully and I would ask her to review Ravec [Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures] and its members.”
The cramped conditions of Victorian prisons in England and Wales are limiting the rehabilitation opportunities for thousands of offenders, an official watchdog has said. As the Guardian launches a visual investigation into the state of Victorian prisons in inner cities and towns, the chief inspector of prisons, Charlie Taylor, said 19th century jails could also be “incredibly noisy and distressing” for autistic people.
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Updated at 04.11 EDT