By Paul Seddon
Politics reporter
Rishi Sunak has insisted the Conservatives can still win the next general election, despite suffering two damaging by-election defeats.
Labour and the Lib Dems overturned big Tory majorities in Somerton and Frome, and Selby and Ainsty constituencies.
But the Tories held the London seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip, despite predictions they could lose there too.
The result showed the next election was not a “done deal” for Labour, the prime minister said.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said his party’s “incredible” win in Selby and Ainsty was a “cry for change” from voters.
He added the result, where his party overturned a Tory majority of more than 20,000, was a “big step forward” ahead of the next general election, expected to take place next year.
The Tories’ narrow victory in the suburban seat of Uxbridge, which they won by 495 votes, spared Mr Sunak the humiliation of being the first PM for 55 years to lose three by-elections in one night.
The party managed to capitalise on local anger over the planned expansion of the Ultra Low Emissions Zone (Ulez), a tax on polluting vehicles, to outer London boroughs by the capital’s London mayor.
Visiting a cafe in the constituency, Mr Sunak said it showed that people would vote Conservative when confronted with the “reality” of Labour in power.
But the other two results suggest the Tories face a difficult path to possible victory at the next election, with the party trailing Labour in the polls nationally by significant margins.
Asked what the defeats meant for his party, Mr Sunak replied: “The message I take away is that we’ve got to double down, stick to our plan and deliver for people.”
‘Electoral Armageddon’
He vowed to renew his focus on his government’s five flagship priorities of halving inflation, growing the economy, reducing debt and NHS waiting times, and stopping small boat crossings.
Former cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg called on Tory MPs to “row in behind the prime minister,” adding that “divided parties don’t win elections”.
However, a former cabinet minister on the right of the Conservative Party told the BBC the “eye-watering swings” in Selby and Somerton showed the party needs a “complete change of direction”.
“Uxbridge provides no get-out-of-jail-free card for Rishi,” they added.
“It is becoming increasingly clear that a failure by the party leadership to act now and change course risks electoral Armageddon.”
Progress towards the prime minister’s pledges has so far been slow, with inflation in particular falling more slowly than predicted by many economists at the start of the year.
Conservative chairman Greg Hands conceded there was a “lot of work still to be done” to meet the promises, adding they “weren’t designed to be an easy thing to meet”.
Tory peer Lord Frost, a former minister, said his party needed to give people “something to vote for,” arguing the results were mainly down to its voters staying at home.
Writing in the Telegraph, he renewed his calls for the party to promise tax cuts, reduce levels of legal immigration, and delay net zero targets, adding it was currently offering voters policies too similar to Labour’s.
Labour won with a 23.7% swing in the rural North Yorkshire seat of Selby and Ainsty, breaking the record for the largest Tory majority it had overturned at a by-election since 1945.
And a 29% swing to the Liberal Democrats in the Somerset seat of Somerton and Frome showed they could be a stronger challenger to the Tories in the West Country than at the last election in 2019.
He added that its two defeats in Somerset and Yorkshire had both seen tactical voting to eject the Conservatives locally, spelling “bad news” for the governing party.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said his party’s victory was “nothing short of spectacular”, and showed his party were “back in the West Country”.
He added that there were 15 south-western seats with smaller Tory majorities, making his party “best placed” to defeat the Conservatives in the region.