Keir Starmer horror show as Labour torn apart in Wales amid huge backlash | Politics | News
Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth said he was hearing โlots of positive noises across Walesโ.
He said: โBut, itโs very, very early, and Iโve watched enough elections as a correspondent, as well as a politician, to know that we hold back until we have the big picture.
โWe know what we were trying to do in this election, letโs track how the afternoon goes.โ
He added it had been โclear for some timeโ that Wales is ready for change.
โOur job has been to try to encourage people to make the correct change,โ he said.
โAnd weโll be watching very, very carefully over the next few hours.โ
Labour is on course to receive its worst set of local election results in the partyโs history, having already lost control of nine councils on Friday morning.
The Prime Minister said he was hurting from โtoughโ results which saw Labour lose hundreds of councillors in England.
Reform piled on councillors across the country as Mr Farage claimed there had been a โtruly historic shift in British politicsโ.
Labour also suffered from voters switching to the Green Party as Zack Polanski declared the era of two-party politics โis not just dying, it is dead and it is buriedโ.
Sir Keir, whose position was already under pressure over Labourโs plummeting poll ratings, said: โThe results are tough, they are very tough, and thereโs no sugar-coating it.
โWe have lost brilliant Labour representatives across the country, these are people who put so much into their communities, so much into our party.
โAnd that hurts, and it should hurt, and I take responsibility.โ
He acknowledged his Government had made โunnecessary mistakesโ in office but added: โIโm not going to walk away and plunge the country into chaos.โ
Energy Secretary and former Labour leader Ed Miliband had urged the Prime Minister to set out a timetable for his departure, the Times reported.
But Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy urged his party not to play โpass the parcelโ with the leadership in response to the election results.
Defence Secretary John Healey said Sir Keir should be given more time, saying โhe can still turn it roundโ.
But Hartlepool MP Jonathan Brash, who watched his wife lose her council seat overnight as Reform UK surged in the authority, said: โItโs clear to me that the Prime Minister should take this opportunity to set out a timetable for his own departure, and then allow for the widest possible leadership election that includes all the talents of our party.โ
Reformโs successes included wins in Havering, its first London borough, and taking both Essex County Council โ Tory leader Kemi Badenochโs local authority -and Suffolk from the Conservatives.
Mr Farage said: โItโs a big, big day, not just for our party, but for a complete reshaping of British politics in every way.โ
Sir Keir faces further heavy losses as vote counting continues throughout Friday in both English local elections and contests for the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Senedd.
