Boris Johnson voted early in the dramatic Super Thursday battle today amid signs he is on course to take a wrecking ball to the Red Wall again.
The PM cast his ballot along with fiancee Carrie Symonds in London as the crucial set of elections got underway.
The Tories have been boosted by the latest poll showing they have a huge 10-percentage point lead – driven by the success of the vaccine rollout.
Keir Starmer is braced for a disastrous ‘hat-trick’ of defeats in the Hartlepool by-election, as well as the two key mayoral races in the West Midlands and Tees Valley.
Allies believe a hard-Left challenge is inevitable if the results in his first major electoral test are as bad as feared – but they are also confident he can survive.
Votes will be cast in every part of Great Britain, with the Scottish and Welsh Parliaments, London Assembly, and Hartlepool by-election up for grabs.
More than 5,000 council seats in England will also be contested, along with 13 mayoralties and 39 police and crime commissioner positions.
YouGov’s final poll before the big day found the Tories were on 43 per cent nationally, ahead of Labour on 33 per cent.
The research, conducted over the past two days, found 40 per cent had a favourable view of Mr Johnson, compared to just 31 per cent for Sir Keir Starmer.
Boris Johnson cast his vote in the dramatic Super Thursday battle today amid signs he is on course to take a wrecking ball to the Red Wall again
The PM cast his ballot along with fiancee Carrie Symonds in London as the crucial set of elections got underway
The Tories have been boosted by the latest poll showing they have a huge 10-percentage point lead – driven by the success of the vaccine rollout
Importantly more than nine in ten voters thought the government handled the coronavirus vaccination programme well, with just over half of those credited the success to Boris Johnson.
Only a fifth believed Sir Keir Starmer would have performed better, while one third said it would have been ‘much the same’ under Labour and 29 per cent said it would have been worse.
Other polls have suggested that the race has been narrowing amid the ‘wallpapergate’ and lobbying rows.
But a bombshell Survation poll for ITV’s Good Morning Britain this week found that the Conservatives are 17 points clear in the pivotal Hartlepool contest – a seat that Labour has held ever since it was created.
A Tory win in Hartlepool would be only the second time in 38 years that the Government has snatched a seat from the Opposition in a by-election.
Lord Mandelson yesterday said he will ‘go into a meltdown’ if the constituency, where he was MP from 1992 to 2004, turns blue for the first time in its 47-year history.
Sir Keir last night pledged to ‘carry the can’ if Labour fares badly at the ballot box, but insisted his focus is on ‘winning the next General Election’.
‘When things go right, the leader takes the plaudits; when they don’t go right, the leader carries the can and takes responsibility,’ he said.
‘That’s what I will do with these elections, as I will do in everything that the Labour Party does.’
Mr Johnson sought to downplay expectations as he insisted it will be a ‘very tough set of elections’ for the Tories.
The Prime Minister joined West Midlands mayor Andy Street for a cycle ride on a canal path in Stourbridge. Mr Street, the former boss of John Lewis, is expected to be re-elected, along with Ben Houchen, who is Tory mayor in Tees Valley.
In an eve-of-poll message last night, Mr Johnson argued the pair had done more in a few years than Labour did in the decades it had a stranglehold on the regions.
He said: ‘It’s Conservative mayors who are bringing new investment and local jobs to their areas. A new freeport and green jobs are on their way to Teesside and new trams, Metro lines and station upgrades to the West Midlands.
‘More has been delivered by Conservatives in four years than complacent Labour politicians have delivered in decades.’
Earlier, Mr Johnson tried to calm talk of the Tories winning the Hartlepool seat, saying it would be a ‘very tough fight’.
As Sir Keir’s hard-Left critics sharpened their knives, his allies insisted he be given more time to turn around Labour’s fortunes.
As Sir Keir’s hard-Left critics sharpened their knives, his allies insisted he be given more time to turn around Labour’s fortunes
Shadow work and pensions secretary Jonathan Reynolds said parts of the UK were a lot ‘warmer’ towards Labour than they were in the General Election.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4, he said: ‘We hope the public will see how we have changed since 2019 – we have a new leader, we have a new direction, but to be frank it’s not been the easiest of years to make those wider messages. That’s just how it is, there’s no use complaining about that.’
Mr Reynolds added: ‘It’s a lot warmer for Labour than it was in 2019. People might not be totally convinced yet but they want to have that conversation.’