Shock election results highlight the MAGA momentum.
Voters went to the polls in the UK local council elections on May 1 and delivered a stinging rebuke to the ruling Labour Party. Nigel Farage, leader of the Reform Party and known worldwide as “Mr. Brexit,” led his nascent party to a resounding victory, claiming more than 600 local seats and flipping the only parliamentary district on the ballot. While local elections are rarely seismic events, all the portents suggest Farage is on his way to the top spot. The similarity to the MAGA movement in the US is now impossible to avoid, and there are lessons to be learned on both sides of the Atlantic.
The Local Insurgence
Local elections are not often considered big news in British politics, but this time is different. Mr. Farage’s Reform put forward candidates for the more than 1,600 contests from a starting position of zero seats. What soon became apparent as the results dribbled in over Friday afternoon was that the country is firmly behind Farage’s vision. Here are some of the highlights:
There was one parliamentary election in what was the Labour Party’s 16th safest seat in the country. The Reform candidate managed to overturn a 15,000-vote majority and won by just six ballots. This was a massive rejection of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s ruling party and finally destroyed the narrative that Farage would only take votes from the Conservative Party.
Control of 23 council authorities – roughly equivalent to US state houses – was up for grabs. Ultimately, Reform swept up an impressive ten and forced a further ten into a state of “no overall control” (meaning no party could command a majority).
However, it was in the individual seats that Reform’s progress was most apparent. This round of elections did not cover the entire country but rather a selection; other elections will come in the next few years. Notably, areas that were generally favorable to Reform will not go to the polls for some time, so this was a Tory and Labour day for wins – or so the parties thought.
Of the 1,600-plus seats, Reform gained a massive trove with more than 620. The Conservatives lost an enormous 600 and change, and the ruling Labour Party lost an equally staggering almost 200, which, considering it is the party in power, should send shockwaves through Parliament.
As for the number of contests won, Reform took around 40% against the Tory’s 20% and Labour’s 5%. If such a vote share were replicated in a general election, Nigel Farage would undoubtedly be prime minister with a majority of roughly 200 parliamentary seats.
Britain’s MAGA Moment?
How does this all relate to US politics? It would not be pushing the envelope too far to suggest the Labour Party is comparable to the Democratic Party and that the Conservatives are akin to the Republicans before Donald Trump. In this analogy, Reform is the MAGA faction that rose to prominence with Trump’s 2016 election victory. In America, MAGA became the dominant force within the GOP; however, Reform – running on a similarly populist platform – aims to supplant the Tories entirely.
These results indicate Nigel Farage is doing just that.
And here’s the most fascinating data point: Reform has taken both Labour and Tory votes from the right. Rather than pitching itself as a centrist party (although, in reality, it does have a centrist platform), Mr. Farage has been unapologetically championing what would, in America, be considered right-wing policies. And it seems that even left-leaning Labour voters are buying into his vision.
The only fly in the ointment of Farage’s ascension to 10 Downing Street is that Prime Minister Keir Starmer controls when the next general election will be (as long as it is before the summer of 2029). Four years is an incredibly long time in politics. Still, the Farage star is certainly on the rise, and as he said of the Conservative Party when the votes were counted, “You’re witnessing the end of a party that’s been around since 1832.”
Political earthquakes are rare, yet it seems Nigel Farage is often the epicenter of such phenomena.
Liberty Nation does not endorse candidates, campaigns, or legislation, and this presentation is no endorsement.