In local elections, part of England vote, Farage's reforms Britain seeks huge gains

London - Voters in many parts of England conducted a poll on Thursday in local elections tested in the left-wing Labor government of the Keir Starmer Center, 10 months after being elected in a landslide.

Both the Labor Party and the main opposition Conservative Party have lost losses in the mid-term polls. The British right-wing reform led by Nigel Farage is more than any other party and hopes to make significant gains in the election, winning about 1,600 seats in 23 local councils, six mayors and one parliamentary seat.

Reforms received about 14% of the vote in last year's national election and only four out of 650 seats in the House of Commons. However, the poll now recommends that its support equals or exceeds that of labor and conservatives and hopes to make conservatives the country’s main political party expires by 2029 before the next national election.

“Tomorrow is the day for permanent deaths in bipartisan politics in England,” Farage told supporters at a rally Wednesday night.

Polls are open until 10 p.m. (2100gmt, 5 p.m. ET), and most results will be held on Friday.

The reform aims to win hundreds of municipal seats, mainly from conservatives, and if the party is so bad, their leader, Kemi Badenoch, could face an uprising.

Badenoch admitted that the outcome could be “very difficult” for the Conservatives. The party was doing very well when the districts last played in 2021, with the Conservative government of then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson becoming popular due to the 19th vaccine program.

Farage's party also wants to win two or three mayoral matches and hopes to hold a special parliamentary election at the locations of Runcorn and Helsby in northwest England. It was a safe labor zone, but former Councilman Mike Amesbury resigned after being convicted of membership in drunken anger.

Tim Bale, a political professor at Queen's University in London, said the Conservative Party and reform are fighting for the souls of the British political right. "Farage's "populist radical rights insurgency" also poses a threat to labor to work-class voters aimed at curbing immigration, creating jobs and reducing government waste.

Centre-Liberal Democrats also want to build on their success to win more wealthy social liberal voters away from conservatives.

Bell said winning municipal power could be a double-edged sword of reform, putting pressure on transport, potholes, housing and all other unsatisfactory demands for everyday politics.

"The Populist Party tends to provide fairly simple solutions to quite complex problems," he said. "When you object, everything you do is fine. But once you start living in the deed, it's a completely different claim."