The 5 key moments that prove tomorrow’s local elections are NOT boring – and could be start of a political earthquake

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HE is promising a political earthquake when polls shut at 10pm tonight – but will Nigel Farage’s big talk meet reality in the local elections?

It is the first time any voters have been to the ballot box since Sir Keir Starmer took office last July, and Labour are braced for a bloody nose.

AFPWill Nigel Farage’s big talk meet reality in the local elections?[/caption]

How Parliament would look if the latest opinion polling is translated into seats at a General Election

Not least in Runcorn, in a tight by- election battle triggered after one of Starmer’s MPs literally thumped someone.

Despite needing to overturn a 14,696 majority, the bookies have Mr Farage’s party as the favourites.

Eyebrows have been raised that Sir Keir has not visited the constituency during the campaign, typically a sign that his advisers are privately readying for a bad result.

Defeat in Runcorn would confirm the PM’s worst nightmare — that Reform are just as dangerous to Labour as they are to the Tories.

That is before more than 1,600 council seats are in play across 23 local authorities in England.

The latest polling shows Reform, Labour and the Tories all virtually neck and neck at around 24 per cent.

But according to More In Common, Reform are on 26 in the areas that have elections today, with the Tories on 25 and Labour on 18.

Almost 40 per cent of those who voted Labour last July, and are planning to vote in these smaller elections, say they will vote for another party.

Were that repeated in 2029, the Government would be toast and the British electoral map upended. With a historically unpopular government less than a year in power, Reform have grand plans to realign British politics in a straight fight between them and the reds, leaving the Tories for dust.

This is the first big test to see whether that grand plan is on course, or just a pipe dream.

If Farage falls short in Runcorn or fails to seize control of some key battleground areas, there will be plenty of heckles that he is all talk.

But there could be plenty of shouting and blame games on all sides.

Honeymoon over

Today’s local elections are set to be particularly gruelling for the Tories and struggling Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who could lose up to 500 councillors across England.

The Tories go into the elections defending the most seats and are therefore equally expected to lose the most.

Pollster Lord Hayward reckons Ms Badenoch will land on around 375-435 councillors, down 475-525 from 2021.

The main beneficiary of the Tory slump is expected to be Mr Farage, who is forecast to snaffle between 400 to 450 council seats, largely in the Midlands and North.

Kent council is also one to watch, with Reform hoping to pick up a decent chunk of disaffected Tories as they did in the General Election.

Meanwhile, the PM is in for a disappointing night as an expected underwhelming result would confirm his honeymoon from last year’s thumping general election win is truly over.

ReutersSir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party are braced for a bloody nose during the local elections[/caption]

GettyConservative leader Kemi Badenoch could lose up to 500 councillors across England[/caption]

But if things are not too bad for Labour, if they bag some 280 seats, then there is essentially no change — although they would have hoped to win some of the seats expected to fall to Reform.

Party strategists have been managing expectations by insisting the council seats up for grabs are not their naturally fertile terrain.

In a sign of our new fractured political landscape, Labour, the Tories, Reform, the Greens and Lib Dems are all in with a shot

But keep an eye on Doncaster, which Labour is defending. The party currently commands a sizeable majority on the authority, and losing that would be big.

Also note the handful of high-profile skirmishes as several mayoralties are contested. The most closely watched election is in Lincolnshire, where Reform is hoping to strike another blow on the Tories.

Former Conservative minister turned Reform defector Dame Andrea Jenkyns is the bookies’ favourite in a traditionally true blue shire.

Victory would be seized upon by Mr Farage as a shifting of the sands in Brexit-voting heartlands.

Also interesting pollsters is the five-horse race that is shaping up in the West of England mayoral election.

In a sign of our new fractured political landscape, Labour, the Tories, Reform, the Greens and Lib Dems are all in with a shot.

With Sir Keir Starmer’s grip on Parliament broad but shallow, expect plenty of runes to read.

Over to you, voters . . . 

GettyLib Dem leader Ed Davey[/caption]

FIVE KEY MOMENTS TO WATCH

Runcorn by-election

Result time: 3am

What: Triggered when Labour MP Mike Amesbury quit after a suspended jail sentence for punching a constituent.

Verdict: Reform win would be their first in a Labour seat and show Farage can beat Sir Keir in Red Wall heartlands.

Richter scale: 9

Lincolnshire mayor

Result time: 3.30am

What: Two-horse race between the Tories and Reform deep in a Brexit-voting true blue shire.

Verdict: Win for Reform’s Dame Andrea Jenkyns – a former Conservative minister – would be a sign of the shifting sands towards the party from disaffected Tories.

Richter scale: 7

Hull & East Yorks mayor

Result time: 2.30pm

What: Former Olympic gold medal-winning boxer Luke Campbell is hoping to bag this for Reform.

Verdict: Winning in this part of the country – where Tories, Labour and Lib Dems all enjoy some level of support – would be a big coup.

Richter scale: 6

Doncaster council

Result time: 3pm

What: This Red Wall seat is the only majority council that Labour are defending in the elections.

Verdict: Labour is facing a major offensive from Reform, who are smelling a local election upset in this working-class stronghold.

Richter scale: 8

Kent council

Result time: 7pm

What: The Tories have a hefty majority, but are facing a pincer movement from Reform and Labour, who made strides in the county at the last General Election.

Verdict: Haemorrhaging votes on both her flanks would cap off a grim day for Kemi Badenoch.

Richter scale: 6

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