By MARTIN BECKFORD and DAVID WILCOCK
Published: | Updated:
The Tories expect to lose hundreds of seats to Reform this week but remaining councillors will be allowed to work with their rivals.
Predictions circulating in Conservative Campaign HQ suggest that as much as 80 per cent of the 960 council seats the party gained four years ago will be wiped out in Thursday's local elections, it can be revealed.
The Tories believe they will suffer the 'loss of control in all currently Conservative-controlled local authorities', according to documents seen by the Mail.
And the 'majority of anticipated losses' will be to surging Reform UK, which is projected to pick up 500 seats.
A gloomy assessment states the upcoming elections are in a 'markedly different electoral landscape' compared with the 'exceptionally high water-mark' of 2021 when the council seats were last fought, as the party and government enjoyed a Covid vaccine bounce.
'Given the challenging nature of the national political landscape, we should be prepared for our on-the-night performance to be in line with current national polling, if not worse,' the internal Tory memo warns.
Yesterday party leader Kemi Badenoch repeated her insistence that the Tories would not enter into an official pact with Reform on a national level, despite calls among some in the party to defeat Labour by 'uniting the Right'.
But she agreed Tory councillors may end up working with their opponents in town halls where they lose overall control.
She told Sky News: 'I'm not going into any coalition whatsoever with Nigel Farage or Reform at national level. At local level, it's different . . . there might be no overall control.
Yesterday party leader Kemi Badenoch repeated her insistence that the Tories would not enter into an official pact with Reform on a national level
Kemi Badenoch agreed Tory councillors may end up working with their opponents in town halls where they lose overall control
'We are in coalition with Liberal Democrats, with Independents, we've been in coalition with Labour before at local government level. They have to look at who...they're going into coalition with and see how they can deliver for local people.
'What I don't want to hear is talks of stitch-ups or people planning things before the result is out. They have to do what's right for their communities.'
It comes despite Tory Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen telling the BBC: 'If at the next election, there is a number of MPs from the Tory Party and Reform that would create a significant majority, obviously there will be a conversation to create a coalition or a pact.'
Maurice Glasman, the founder of the influential Blue Labour group, said Labour 'will get its head kicked in' by Reform in the local elections.
In an interview with The Observer, he said: 'Labour must be a pro-worker, patriotic party, not talking gibberish about diversity.'
Reform is the favourite to win mayoral votes in two Red Wall Labour heartlands in East Yorkshire and Hull, and Greater Lincolnshire, as well as council seats across the country.
Kemi BadenochLabourReform UK
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