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Sir Ed Davey hails ‘exceptional’ election result for Liberal Democrats | Politics News

Sir Ed Davey has hailed the Liberal Democrats’ “exceptional” results in the general election.

When polls closed on Thursday night, the exit poll by Ipsos UK for Sky News, the BBC and ITV News suggested the Lib Dems would win 61 seats – up from 11 – more than five times the number they secured at the last election in 2019.

Since then, the Lib Dems have secured a number of gains from the Tories – including in Wells & Mendip Hills, Dorking & Horley, Wimbledon, Yeovil, Hampshire North East and Norfolk North.

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The Lib Dems also unseated multiple prominent Tory cabinet ministers.

Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, lost to Max Wilkinson in Cheltenham.

The party also took Chichester – with Jess Brown-Fuller beating Education Secretary Gillian Keegan with a majority of 12,172 votes.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey at the London Art Bar in central London, where party supporters are watching the results of the 2024 General Election. Picture date: Friday July 5, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Election. Photo credit should read: James Manning/PA Wire
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Ed Davey celebrating election results. Pic: PA

While Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer lost her seat in Ely & East Cambridgeshire and Michelle Donelan lost to Liberal Democrat Brian Mathew taking her place in Melksham and Devizes with a 2,406 majority.

The Lib Dems had set out to target the so-called ‘Blue Wall’ of Conservative seats in the southwest and southeast of England, and its strategy appears to have paid off.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey at King's Centre in Chessington, south west London, after he was declared the winner of Kingston and Surbiton constituency in the 2024 General Election. Picture date: Friday July 5, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Election. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
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Pic: PA

Lib Dem leader Sir Ed was re-elected in his Kingston & Surbiton seat with 25,870 votes, ahead of his Conservative rival Helen Edward on 8,635.

Speaking at The King’s Centre in Chessington, in southwest London, Sir Ed said the party had put voters’ concerns “at the heart of our campaign”, adding that he had “rather enjoyed” the six-week run-up to the election.

Throughout the campaign, he has conducted a series of stunts such as paddle boarding, bungee jumping and conducting an interview on a fairground teacup ride.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey at the London Art Bar in central London, where party supporters are watching the results of the 2024 General Election. Picture date: Friday July 5, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Election. Photo credit should read: James Manning/PA Wire
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Sir Ed at the London Art Bar in central London. Pic: PA

“I think it’s possible to have a serious debate as well as having a bit of fun. I don’t take myself as a politician seriously. I want to take the concerns of the British people seriously,” Sir Ed said after his re-election.

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“I hope that the style we’ve gone about it has encouraged people to join the Liberal Democrats.

“It’s certainly encouraged them to vote for us. This is an exceptional result, a historic result for the Liberal Democrats.”

Eyewitness: The Lib Dems begin celebrating a successful night

By Matthew Thompson, Sky correspondent

The sun is just about coming up outside the Lib Dem election watch party in central London. And it dawns on what looks like a bright day for the party.

Party leader Sir Ed Davey arrived to rapturous applause, a boisterous chorus of Sweet Caroline, and he even indulged in some… shall we say enthusiastic dancing, even if it wasn’t quite worthy of Strictly.

And the party has good reason to be happy. As it stands, projections of around 60 seats are close to their upper expectations. As one senior source said to me: “If you’d offered me 60 seats three months ago, I’d have bitten your arm off.”

One thing that stands out though is that their share of the vote, with over half the votes counted, hasn’t budget at all from their calamitous 2019 performance. On national share, at least, they trail some distance behind Reform, in fourth place.

Nobody in this room is currently very bothered about that. They’re too busy celebrating a successful night, as well they might.

But to progress at the next election, or even to hold on to what they’ve gained, you wonder if they might need to spend some time thinking about how to broaden the party’s appeal.

He added that Lib Dem policies on issues like health and the cost of living crisis have “been heard louder and clearer because of the way we presented ourselves in this positive light”.

Sir Ed has represented Kingston & Surbiton since 1997, apart from in 2015 when he lost to Conservative James Berry in a backlash against the coalition government.

10,000 people a year could die as a result of heatwaves, MPs warn | UK News

Up to 10,000 people a year in the UK could die as a result of heatwaves if nothing is done, MPs have warned.

According to a report from the Environmental Audit Committee, the increased frequency of extreme heat events could also cost the economy £60bn a year.

The committee’s Conservative chair, Philip Dunne MP, urged the government to act, because “there is a lot of work that needs to be done”.

The UK Health Security Agency issued its first ever ‘level 4’ heat alert in July 2022 when 40C was recorded for the first time.

While globally, 2023 was confirmed as the hottest year on record by a significant margin.

Speaking to Sky News, Mr Dunne said: “It’s here, it’s a present danger, and it’s coming at us quite quickly.

“We need a plan now.

“The longer we delay it, the more at risk we’re going to be.”

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Wildfires spotted in the Highlands

According to the Office of National Statistics, there were an estimated 4,500 heat-related deaths in 2022.

But MPs say the annual rate could rise to 10,000 by 2050 if there is no intervention.

Extreme heat increases blood pressure and heart rate, raising the risk of illness or death caused by dehydration and heatstroke.

Over-65s and those with existing conditions are most at risk, while there are impacts on mental health too.

The committee heard evidence that suicide risk in the UK is twice as high when the temperature is 32C rather than 22C.

The report recommends the Met Office should name heatwaves in the same way as storms to help raise awareness of the threats.

Climate change experts agree that public perceptions must be urgently changed.

“It’s clear that Britain still thinks of itself as a cold country that celebrates periods of heat by talking about going to the beach and eating ice cream, when in actual fact it’s an extreme weather event that leads to thousands of deaths,” Bob Ward, Policy Director at the London School of Economics’ Grantham Research Institute said.

Other recommendations include creating more parks and ‘green infrastructure’.

This is considered particularly important in urban areas, like London, which can be 8C warmer than surrounding areas.

The committee is also calling for a national strategy to retrofit homes and offices with passive cooling measures, like external shutters, to help save lives and boost productivity.

“The problems we have with heat are primarily because we have homes and offices that are not well designed for dealing with it,” Mr Ward told Sky News.

“Most people who die [in heatwaves], die in overheated homes. Most of the people who are less productive in heat are in offices that are overheating.

“There needs to be an urgent retrofit program to make our homes and offices much better at dealing with heat.”

Read more:
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UK weather: Warmest ever January temperature record rises to nearly 20C

A government spokesperson said: “We have set out a robust five-year plan to respond to the impacts of a changing climate and strengthen our national resilience – with action to improve infrastructure, promote a greener economy and safeguard food production.

“We are the first major economy to halve our emissions and have already taken steps to manage the risks of climate change – with new warning systems to alert the public to heatwaves and our Environmental Land Management schemes supporting farmers to make their land more resilient to the changing climate.”

“Nearly half of homes in England now have an Energy Performance Certificate rating of C. This is up from just 14% in 2010 and we are investing billions to ensure homes and buildings are even more energy efficient.”

This result wasn’t just bad for the Tories, it was terrible. While they won’t admit it, they know it was | Politics News

A couple of hours before the result of the West Lancashire by-election was declared shortly before 2am, senior Tories at the count were prepared for the worst.

Privately, they were predicting a 60% share of the vote for Labour and 25% for the Conservatives.

They weren’t far wrong. The Tory vote has indeed slumped from over 36% at the 2019 general election to about 25%. But Labour’s share was higher than the Tories feared, above 62%.

That was a bigger share for Labour and smaller for the Conservatives in this constituency than in Tony Blair’s landslide general election victory in 1997.

After the result, Bill Esterson – Labour MP for the neighbouring seat of Sefton Central – took great delight in pointing that out.

For the Tories, Blackpool South MP Scott Benton told Sky News in a combative interview that the result here wasn’t good enough for Labour to send Sir Keir Starmer to Downing Street at the next general election.

In her victory speech, the winning Labour candidate Ashley Dalton – resplendent in a bright red trouser suit – said it was time for a general election. But there isn’t going to be one for at least 18 months.

Rishi Sunak’s Conservatives may be languishing on around 25% in national opinion polls – coincidentally about the same as their vote share in this by-election – but the government consistently wins votes in the Commons by comfortable majorities of about 60.

That doesn’t mean Mr Sunak isn’t in a perilous position, however. A trouncing at the local elections on May 4 similar to this by-election result will send many Tory MPs into a blind panic and plunge the PM’s future into real danger.

Pic: Twitter
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The by-election was sparked by Rosie Cooper’s resignation. Pic: Twitter

Amid the latest run of dismal by-election results and the prospect of a drubbing in May, Mr Sunak’s tenure in No 10 is made all the more vulnerable by the resurgent threats posed by his two predecessors, Boris Johnson and Liz Truss, with Mr Johnson undermining him in military aid to Ukraine and Ms Truss leading a renewed charge for tax cuts in Jeremy Hunt’s Budget on 15 March.

As for West Lancashire, it has a new MP who on the evidence of this morning – in her victory speech and subsequent interview with Sky News – will be a powerful and extremely vocal advocate for the constituency.

She highlighted the problems in the NHS, the cost of living crisis and transport issues as her top priorities when she arrives at Westminster after parliament’s half-term recess in 10 days’ time.

On transport, for example, the new town of Skelmersdale in the constituency has no railway station – and locals here complain that it’s a long and frustrating bus journey to Liverpool.

There had long been plans to rebuild a train station, but the government rejected these plans last year – a move West Lancashire’s previous MP, Rosie Cooper, described as a “cruel joke”.

Health, cost of living and transport – issues that are currently dominating politics nationally and were also the predominant issues in this by-election campaign.

Read more analysis:
A worrying trend is emerging for Tories in by-elections

That suggests they are the main reason the Tories are haemorrhaging votes. Add to that the Tory sleaze and bullying allegations, “partygate” and the perception that the Conservatives are out of touch after 13 years in power – all of which we heard from Labour in West Lancashire – no wonder Sir Keir’s cheerleaders are cock-a-hoop about the result in this by-election.

And, despite the brave face put on this crushing defeat publicly by the Tories, the slump in votes here will privately fill many Conservative MPs with gloom and alarm.

No doubt those Tory predictions two hours before the result were intended to manage expectations in their party’s favour. But it didn’t work and this result wasn’t just bad for the Conservatives. It was terrible. And while they won’t admit it, they know it was.