Analysis: Crewe and Nantwich could be blue for some timepublished at 13:52 Greenwich Mean Time 13 December 2019
Phil McCann
Cheshire Political Reporter, BBC News
Crewe and Nantwich was always going to be tough for Labour to hold on to given that they only had a majority of 48 votes and 60% of the constituency was predicted to have voted to Leave in the EU referendum.
The task was made all the more difficult without a totem issue to galvanise voters around - as they had in 2017 when local school funding cuts had been announced just months before the election.
But only the most pessimistic of Labour activists would have predicted the Conservatives would beat them by more than 8,000 votes.
The seat has tended to be marginal given the different nature of its two main settlements, with Crewe mostly voting Labour and Nantwich mostly voting Conservative.
Now it looks like the Tories have been able to firmly establish themselves in both, so it could take some massive changes on Labour’s part and possibly a lot of waiting before they’re a force to be reckoned with there again.