UK Labour Red Wall falls in Burnley as voters clamor for Brexit


Reuters | London | Updated: 13-12-2019 18:18 IST | Created: 13-12-2019 18:03 IST
UK Labour Red Wall falls in Burnley as voters clamor for Brexit
Representative Picture Image Credit: ANI
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Burnley is no longer a brick in Labour's Red Wall.

Electing its first Conservative Member of Parliament for 109 years, the gritty northern England town is emblematic of the pro-Brexit shock in Labour heartlands which handed Boris Johnson a majority government on Friday. David Hughes, 48, was won over by Johnson's "Get Brexit done" mantra and backed the Conservatives after previously voting Labour.

"People wanted to get Brexit sorted and I think Boris will get it done," he said. Burnley, where as recently as the 2015 election, the Conservatives came in fourth place, voted 67% in favour of leaving the European Union in the 2016 referendum.

A centre of the textile trade in the 19th century, Burnley's cotton mills shut down long ago and although it remains home to many manufacturing jobs - fashion retailer Boohoo has a large distribution centre in the town - it is ranked amongst England's most deprived areas. Its industrial past helped make it a Labour stronghold, but across central and northern England, formerly Labour's Red Wall of safe seats, Brexit has shattered old party loyalties.

"Leave" voters baulked at Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn's policy of negotiating a new deal to leave the EU followed by a second referendum and shifted to the Conservatives, helping the party win an unexpectedly large majority in England. In Burnley, the competition was close with Conservative candidate Antony Higginbotham beating Labour incumbent Julie Cooper by about 1,400 votes.

Rita Spencer, 73, a Labour-turned-Conservative voter said she was "over the moon" about Johnson's victory, citing the Conservative position on Brexit plus a dislike for the hard-left Corbyn as the reason for her switch. "Brexit had a lot to do with it but when you think about the rubbish that Jeremy Corbyn has spouted, it was a just a no-no, really," she said, calling him "rather arrogant".

Dave Smith, 68, who also switched to the Conservatives, said Corbyn was awful for Labour. "I think the Corbyn factor made it much easier for Boris than people anticipated," he said, adding that if Johnson's policies brought wealth to the area "we could be Tory in Burnley for the next 100 years."

Johnson has acknowledged that his victory was thanks to people who may have only temporarily lent him their vote and could return to Labour in the future. Labour-voter Ross Davies, 30, said he believed Johnson was right to be cautious. In his view, Brexit's impact on Labour's Red Wall would be shortlived and the Conservatives would not last in Burnley.

"I think after we have left the EU it is probably going to revert back to a safe Labour seat again," he said. "People just wanted Brexit over and done with."

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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