World

Stunning UK election result no surprise in Labour bastion

December 14, 2019

BLYTH, UNITED KINGDOM - The biggest shock of Britain's general election was one of the first results, when Blyth Valley in northeast England — a staunch Labour heartland — suddenly turned Conservative.

The result would have been unimaginable during the 1980s industrial decline, which made Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher a hate figure in the working-class area.

But the turnaround was no surprise Friday to shoppers and traders braving the chill in Blyth, a town built on shipbuilding and coal on the North Sea coast near Newcastle.

Frustrated voters felt Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservatives would finally deliver Brexit, more than three years after Britain opted to leave the European Union — something heavily backed in northern working-class towns.

Voters also felt abandoned by Labour main opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn's affluent metropolitan socialism and push for another Brexit referendum.

"I've voted Labour all my life," said market trader Colin Spottswood, 65. "It was Brexit that swung it because I was just fed up.

"Now, at least, hopefully the country can move on," he told AFP.

The Blyth Valley constituency had been Labour ever since its creation in 1950, when northeast England was still an engine room of British industry.

But Conservative Ian Levy's stunning early win set the tone for the sweeping victory that followed, as Johnson won an 80-seat majority in the 650-seat House of Commons.

It typified the way Brexit-backing, working-class towns — traditional Labour bastions — punished the party for taking them for granted.

Levy took 43 percent of the vote, with the Labour candidate on 41 percent and the Brexit Party third on eight percent, having also scooped up frustrated Labour voters.

While Johnson repeatedly pledged to "get Brexit done" by January 31, Corbyn's new referendum was a bid to keep europhile metropolitan voters on board.

Ronnie Campbell, a former coal miner who stepped down as the Labour MP for Blyth Valley after 32 years this month, was a vocal euroskeptic.

"It's a disaster," he told AFP, citing Brexit fence-sitting, Corbyn, and the leader's fervent London fanclub as having cost Labour his old seat.

"We voted to leave. What did Labour do? Went the other way. If you do that, when you knock on doors, people will reject you.

"Jeremy is a nice bloke. But the leadership is part of the London metropolitan set, and that's the trouble," Campbell added.

"It's the happiest day of my life!" said Dave Stephenson, a retired joiner, born and bred in Blyth, and a sprightly 81.

"It's the best thing that's ever happened. Look at the state of Blyth. It was a lovely little town but everything's closing down.

"I changed my vote a while ago. I started voting Brexit Party but for this one I voted Conservative because I want Brexit done.

"Labour have let the people of Blyth down. I couldn't stand Corbyn.

"It's time we had a change and time Brexit was done." -AFP


December 14, 2019
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