The ruling party Labour suffered a disastrous defeat in local elections, while the Reform Party gained strong momentum.
British Prime Minister Stammer suffered a significant early setback in the elections held on Friday, highlighting strong dissatisfaction among voters with his government and casting a shadow over his political future once again. In areas where results have been announced, support for Stammer's Labour Party has dropped significantly, including in traditional strongholds in the former industrial areas of central and northern England and in parts of London. The main beneficiary of this election is the anti-immigrant populist party "British Reform Party" led by Brexit advocate Farage, which has won over 200 parliamentary seats in England and is expected to become the main opposition force to the pro-independence Scottish National Party and Welsh Party in Scotland and Wales. The elections for 136 local councils in England, along with local council elections in Scotland and Wales, are the most important test of public opinion before the next general election in 2029. Labour MPs have stated that if the party performs poorly in Scotland, loses its governing position in Wales, and fails to maintain a majority of its approximately 2500 vulnerable seats in England, then Stammer will face new pressure to resign or set a departure timetable. Preliminary results show that the traditional two-party system in Britain is continuing to erode, shifting towards multi-party democracy, with analysts calling it one of the biggest changes in British politics in the past century.
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