Boris Johnsonâs Tories suffered a humiliating by-election defeat as the Liberal Democrats scored a stunning win in Chesham and Amersham.
Lib Dem Sarah Green became the countryâs newest MP after winning a seat which had been a rock solid Tory bastion since its creation 47 years ago.
Party leader Sir Ed Davey said the result sent a âshockwave through British politicsâ by showing that the âBlue Wallâ of Tory southern seats could be taken.
The prime minister had personally campaigned in the seat and a raft of cabinet ministers had visited it to try and boost the vote, but all to no avail.
The Tories claimed it was difficult for governing parties to win by-elections, but defeated candidate Peter Fleet acknowledged the Conservatives had to rebuild âtrust and understandingâ with voters.
Johnson described claims that the Tories were neglecting the south in favour of so-called âred wallâ former Labour seats in the north as âpeculiarâ and âbizarreâ.
The contest was triggered by the death of former Cabinet minister Dame Cheryl Gillan, who took the seat with a majority of 16,233 in the 2019 general election â some 55% of the vote.
In a stunning result with a swing of 25%, Green took 56.7% of the vote to secure a majority of 8,028 over the second-placed Tories.
âThis Conservative Party has taken people across the country for granted for far too long,â Green said.
The Green Party came third with 1,480 votes, with Labour trailing in fourth with just 622 votes, losing the partyâs deposit in the process.
In her acceptance speech new MP Green said: âTonight the voice of Chesham and Amersham is unmistakable. Together we have said, âEnough is enough, we will be heard and this Government will listenâ.
âThis campaign has shown that no matter where you live, or how supposedly safe a constituency may appear to be, if you want a Liberal Democrat member of Parliament, you can have a Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament.â
She added: âWe will continue the work of holding this government to account for letting Covid rip through the care homes.
âWe will speak up for the three million people excluded from financial support throughout the pandemic and we will challenge Boris Johnson to be far more ambitious in tackling climate change, supporting our frontline workers and backing our small businesses.â
The scale of the defeat will ring alarm bells in Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ).
One Tory source had told HuffPost UK that the party was âsh*tting bricksâ over possible loss of the seat. On the day of the by-election on Thursday, former PM Theresa May was knocking on doors in a desperate attempt to turn voters out, sources said.
Major issues in the campaign included the HS2 rail line, which cuts through the constituency, and the governmentâs proposed planning reforms which have sparked fears about building in the countryside around the seat in the Chilterns.
Davey said that a key issue was the Tories were âtaking people for grantedâ across the South.
But pollsters and experts also believe the Lib Dem victory shows the Tories are losing their well-off traditional voters as they focus on cementing gains in the largely Brexit-supporting âred wallâ former Labour working class areas.
Lib Dem MP Munira Wilson told HuffPost UKâs Commons People podcast: âThe Tories are now so focused on the red wall and their culture wars that I think really appeal and resonate in those [red wall] seats, that many of those people who, yes, largely voted Remain in the referendum... are looking for an alternative.â
âThings like the cut in foreign aid, which I see as part of that culture war,â Wilson said.
âMinisters will tell us, well actually itâs really popular and people want us spending that money in the left behind areas.
âIn these sorts of areas [like Chesham and Amersham] I donât think itâs an âeither/orâ, itâs an âandâ- we have a moral obligation to be spending the 0.7% on foreign aid and looking after the worldâs poorest, but equally investing in our recovery up and down the country.â
Wilson added that other cultural issues, like Tory MPs backing those who boo England football team for âtaking the kneeâ, could play a part.
âI think the recent debacle over footballers taking the knee, for most people itâs like, you know, Englandâs in the Euros, weâre hosting loads of the matches, we should be getting behind our team and not suddenly criticising them for taking the knee.
âLots of people in these seats recognise that there is still an issue with racism in many parts of our society and we should be doing everything we can to combat that.â
Fleet said: âClearly this was a very disappointing result, not the result that I was expecting nor my team.â
He added: âItâs an absolutely extraordinary result which must take into account the fact that the Liberal Democrat party didnât just throw the kitchen sink at this constituency, I think it was the microwave, the table, the oven, the dishwasher, the dog, the cat and anything else that was lying around as well.â
Johnson attempted to play down the significance of the result, suggesting local issues came to the fore during the by-election.
âThere were particular circumstances there and we are getting on with delivering our agenda for the whole country, thatâs what one nation Conservatism is all about,â the PM said.
âWe believe in uniting and levelling up within regions and across the country.â
Tory chairwoman Amanda Milling said the âwork starts now to show how itâs Conservatives that can deliver on the peopleâs priorities and regain their supportâ.
A source at Conservative Campaign Headquarters said âby-elections are always difficult for the governing party, particularly 11 years into governmentâ.
But this did not stop the Tories winning Hartlepool from Labour in May, and the source acknowledged âthere is no getting away from the fact this is a very disappointing resultâ.
The full result was:
Carolyne Culver (Green) 1,480
Brendan Donnelly (Rejoin EU) 101
Peter Fleet (Conservative) 13,489
Sarah Green (Liberal Democrats) 21,517
Carla Gregory (Breakthrough) 197
Adrian Oliver (Freedom Alliance) 134
Natasha Pantelic (Labour) 622
Alex Wilson (Reform UK) 414