In 1997, as he celebrated Labour's landslide, Tony Blair famously declared: "A new dawn has broken, has it not?"
In 2023, as they head in direction of a set of dismal native election outcomes, the Tories will concern that is the darkest hour earlier than one other new Labour daybreak subsequent 12 months.
From Plymouth to Stoke-on-Trent, from the South West and South East of England to the Midlands and the North, the overnight results have been disastrous for the Conservatives.
Defeat for the Tories in Plymouth was certainly one of many night time's most predictable outcomes, after the national public outcry towards the council's act of vandalism - based on critics - in chopping down timber within the metropolis centre.
But certainly one of Labour's most spectacular ends in Medway, in Kent, the place the Conservatives had been ousted after 20 years in energy.
Counting came about all night time on the Medway Park sports activities centre in Gillingham, opened by Dr Roger Bannister in 1973.
And the depend was a marathon, not a dash.
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The outgoing Tory chief of the council, 72-year-old Alan Jarrett, candidly admitted in a Sky News interview the federal government's unpopularity was a giant think about his social gathering's defeat.
As Labour candidates had been elected with thumping majorities, group chief Vince Maple appeared poised to develop into council chief.
Some 24 hours earlier, at an elite drinks social gathering on the Reform Club in Pall Mall, Rishi Sunak had mentioned the Conservatives would lose seats due to the "box-set drama" that engulfed the social gathering in the course of the premierships of Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.
Labour definitely pulled out all of the stops in Medway, with Sir Keir Starmer visiting twice, the second time on the ultimate day of campaigning. The Tory chairman, Greg Hands, even visited on polling day.
Back within the Nineteen Nineties, a Labour surge in native elections in Medway acted as a springboard for Mr Blair, profitable all three parliamentary constituencies within the borough in his 1997 landslide.
But the arithmetic is completely different now, and Medway has three Conservative MPs with large majorities: Tracey Crouch in Chatham and Aylesford (18,540), Rehman Chishti in Gillingham and Rainham (15,119) and Kelly Tolhurst in Rochester and Strood (17,072).
Read extra:Local election results in fullGuide to the key results so far - and what is still to comeHow to cut through the political spin as the parties pick apart the results
Elsewhere within the nation, nevertheless, Conservative MPs with smaller majorities will probably be in a chilly sweat this morning.
So a lot for a Rishi Sunak bounce within the Tories' fortunes, thus far, though Friday afternoon's outcomes - principally within the shires and districts - must be higher for the Conservatives than these declared in a single day, principally within the city areas.
Many of the Conservatives' worst outcomes had been in "red wall" and strongly pro-Brexit areas, like Stoke-on-Trent, for instance. What will fear the social gathering's excessive command is that Nigel Farage's vote in 2019 seems to have gone again to Labour, not the Tories.
That will probably be an enormous reduction to Sir Keir, who has wobbled in current weeks underneath a Tory onslaught of labelling him "Sir Softie" on crime and "Sir Flipflop" on points like tuition charges.
We should not neglect the large good points made by the Liberal Democrats, both, many in so-called "blue wall" areas in prosperous southern England. They look poised to grab extra seats from the Conservatives on the basic election.
So because the solar rose across the city halls of England this morning, Labour and the Lib Dems might be assured of a brand new daybreak on the horizon. But for the Tories, it actually was certainly one of their darkest hours.
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