The party's drubbing was on course with the worst case predictions and is its worst performance since John Major led them to a loss of more than 2,000 seats when faced by Tony Blair's Labour in 1995. Mrs May avoided what Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt called as 'slap in the face' from voters for both the Tories and Labour by visiting Wales and Scotland, where no elections were taking place.But even that could not prevent her from being confronted by outraged party politicians and activists. The party had lost almost 900 seats on councils across England by mid-afternoon (right), putting it on course to achieve the worst case scenarios of pollsters. As the scale of the catastrophic humiliation became clear late this morning, the Prime Minister (pictured this afternoon in Aberdeen) was heckled by a furious former councillor who demanded to her face that she resign.Stuart Davies, 71, berated the Prime Minister before she admitted that the results from local elections in England had been 'very difficult' for a party which pledged to deliver Brexit on March 29 and failed. Some voters spoilt their ballot papers, writing 'Brexit means Brexit' and 'Get May Out'.
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