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Labour fights for post-Brexit future in UK by-elections

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London: Britain’s ailing Labour party was battling on Thursday to avoid defeat in two parliamentary by-elections, fighting off UKIP in one Brexit bastion and fearing a historic loss to the governing Conservatives in the other.


The votes in Stoke-on-Trent and Copeland are a test of whether Labour can hold its once core support among working-class voters in the north of England following Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.


Most Labour voters supported Brexit while most of their MPs wanted to stay in the EU, a gap that the party is still struggling to bridge as Prime Minister Theresa May prepares to start the withdrawal process within weeks.


Under leftist leader Jeremy Corbyn, the party is deeply divided and languishing in the polls, with the latest one showing they are 18 points behind May’s Conservatives.


Stoke in the West Midlands recorded the strongest vote for Brexit of any of Britain’s major cities in last June’s referendum, and the anti-EU, anti-immigration UK Independence Party (UKIP) is hoping for a breakthrough there.


New UKIP leader Paul Nuttall is himself standing there, hoping to build on the widespread sense of public alienation from mainstream politics — and to prove the party has a future after securing its goal to leave the EU.


But his campaign has been damaged by controversy over his experience of the 1989 Hillsborough football disaster, after admitting that claims on his website that he had close friends among the 96 victims were wrong.


Meanwhile in the rural Cumbrian seat of Copeland, Labour is facing the prospect of losing to the Conservatives — which would be the first time a governing party took a by-election from a rival party since 1982.


“They are both on a knife edge,” said a senior Labour source.


“We believe that we will win in both Copeland and Stoke, but there’s no doubt that they are both tightly fought campaigns in different ways. That’s the reality of the situation.”


Of Britain’s 30 major cities, Stoke had the highest vote to leave the EU, at 69.4 per cent — even though its Labour MP, Tristram Hunt, opposed Brexit.


Hunt stepped down last month to become the director of the V&A museum in London, citing in his resignation letter his “frustration” at Labour’s direction under Corbyn.


UKIP jumped at the chance to take the seat, in which it came second in the 2015 election with 23 per cent of the vote to Labour’s 39 per cent.


However, apathy runs deep in Stoke which saw a dismal turnout of 49.9 per cent in 2015, with Thursday’s numbers likely to be affected by a storm sweeping across northern England. “If Labour lose here, where can they hold on to their seats in the north-” said Mick Temple, a politics professor at Stoke’s Staffordshire University. — AFP


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