LABOUR suffered losses today (May 6) in regional and local elections, especially in Scotland, but waited to see if it would, as expected, capture the big prize of London mayor.
It was not clear whether the scale of the losses would increase pressure on leftist party leader Jeremy Corbyn from some centrists fearing a swing back to old-style socialist policies.
While the party fared poorly in some of dozens of contests in Scotland, Wales, parts of England and Northern Ireland, it looked set to win London's mayoral election, where Tooting MP Sadiq Khan was expected to become the first Muslim to take the post.
The Conservatives failed to make any big gains in England and Wales, but made good headway in Scotland where partial results show it may leap-frog Labour as the second party of the Scottish National Party.
Britons voted yesterday (May 5) to elect new devolved authorities in Scotland and Wales, more than 2,700 local officials across England and a new mayor of London.
"If you compare from when Jeremy took over to now, we are on a clear path of improvement," shadow chancellor John McDonnell told BBC radio after it said results suggested the party had increased its share of the vote in "key wards" since last year when it was beaten by the Conservatives.
Corbyn has struggled to hold Labour together after he was elected as leader in September on a wave of enthusiasm, particularly among younger voters, for change and an end to “establishment politics”.
But his left-leaning stance has jarred with several MPs, some of whom have been looking into ways to topple Corbyn despite his strong backing from a major funder to Labour, the trade unions.
Some Labour MPs said the results, which saw the party set to fall into third place in Scotland in the devolved Scottish parliament, should force Corbyn to try to widen his appeal.
"I think that the reality is that people aren't listening to us any more (…) and we have to earn that right again," said Anas Sarwar, newly elected Scottish Labour MP.
"We have a problem with connecting with certain parts of the electorate and I think that's a fundamental problem."
With nearly two-thirds of the results declared, there was little change in England, with Labour losing nine per cent of its share of the vote in Scotland and losing some ground in Wales.
In London, Khan, 45, the son of a Pakistani bus driver, was up against Conservative Zac Goldsmith, 41, the elite-educated son of a billionaire financier.
The winner will replace Boris Johnson, the Conservative who has run the city of 8.6 million people for eight years.
Khan has a big lead in the opinion polls, despite accusations by Goldsmith that he has shared platforms with radical Muslim speakers and given "oxygen" to extremists – charges he has denied.
The results are expected this evening.