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One of the best electoral experts in the country said on Sunday that Britain may face its largest political behavior in 100 years.
Sir John Curtis, speaking before a round of local English elections on Thursday, said that five parties are seriously competing for the votes, threatening the custodian of the workers who have controlled politics a century ago.
He said that the right -wing Popular Party in Farraj – which leads the Labor Party and the conservatives in some national opinion polls – was beyond its predecessor in UKIP, while the democrats and liberal vegetables were showing strong levels of support
Cortis, an analyst in the veteran elections, told the Financial Times that the old left left gap no longer explains the British policy and that cultural issues are now a major factor. “Politics is no longer unilateral,” he said.
“The circumstances exist in the greatest challenge of the political agreements of British policy since the twenties of the twentieth century,” he added, with both the Labor Party and the Basic voter Party and the voting in the low -twenties.
Conservatives, who are defending nearly two -thirds of more than 1,600 seats to seize Thursday Local electionsIt is prepared to stick, with the reform that challenges the main right -wing party in many regions and Lib Dems targets great gains in the south.
The elections will be held for 23 councils and six mayors in England, with about a third of the voters in England qualified to vote. Reform, which hopes to win some municipal competitions, also seeks to overcome the Labor Party in Ronkorn and Hildby of the two sub -parliamentarians On the same day.
Conservative Party leader Kimi Badnouche has admitted that the elections in the provinces of Shiri and the local mayor will be “very difficult”, and its problems have been exacerbated by leadership. Conservatives Preferably on future deals with Farage.
On Sunday, Lord Bin Hoshen, the mayor of the TEES Valley, told BBC on Sunday that his party could agree with Farraj after the upcoming general elections in the case of a suspended parliament, in order to maintain the Labor Party outside his post.
He said: “If there are a number of deputies in the Conservative and Reform Party in the following elections, it is clear that there will be a conversation to create a nice alliance or agreement.” The following general elections must be held by the summer of 2029.
“I am talking about the practical aspects of removing work from the government,” he added. But Badnouch excluded national agreements with Faraj that could “Unification of the right”Noting that the reform leader has pledged to “destroy” conservatives.
“There will be no agreements with reform. How can you have an agreement with a party that wants to nationalize large areas of the UK industry and the NHS privatization and it seems that it prefers Vladimir Putin over Ukraine?”
However, Badnouch admitted on Sunday that Conservative Party consultants could take deals with reform at the local level after the May 1 elections to achieve politics.
“I will not go to any alliance with Nigel Faraj,” she told Sky News. “At the local level, it is different.”
“At the present time, we are in alliance with liberal Democrats, with independents. We were in alliance with the Labor Party before at the local government level,” said Badenosh, who could be leading his leadership to new pressure if the performance of the conservatives is very bad on Thursday.
She added: “Many people who work in reform are now members of the Conservative Council. Therefore, they may have worked with some of these people before.”
“The Conservative Party is one of the most successful parties in the Western world, but it is currently negotiating whether it could win again or not.
“It seems that it is going through a public crisis in confidence in the middle of the local election campaign. One of the most surprising things is that it plays in public places.”
McFadden admitted that the Labor Party also faced a major challenge to defend the seats on May 1, with public support decreased since its victory last year. He said that the party had inherited a “difficult situation”, but he insisted that it began to make progress in dropping NHS.
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