The local elections yesterday were widely seen as a sign of things to come in the June 8 snap poll, announced suddenly by May last month.
The Tories gained over the Opposition Labour party in many of the council seats and confirmed pre-poll forecasts of a Labour battering, largely blamed on the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.
Butthe biggest losers have been the far-right UK Independence Party (UKIP), which is set to be completely annihilated after losing every local seat it had under its control.
A total of 4,851 council seats were up for grabs in 88 councils -- all of those in Scotland and Wales -- and 34 in England, five weeks before the general election.
Around 60 of the 88 councils in England, Wales and Scotland have already declared their final results and in the latest count, the Conservatives had a net gain of 346 councillors, Labour were down to 187 and the Liberal Democrats were reeling at 27.
The Conservative candidate for the new "metro mayor" post for the West of England, Tim Bowles, beat Labour's Lesley Mansell by 51.6 per cent to 48.4 per cent vote, registering another major win for the Tories.
The Tories have gained massive ground from the UKIP and the Labour party but the party has chosen to strike a note of caution to prevent its prospective MPs becoming too complacent in the general election campaign.
"We can't assume that what happens in local elections will automatically be replicated in general elections," said Tory minister Brandon Lewis.
The Labour party sought to play down its drubbing with the shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, claiming the party had"all to play for" in the general election.
"These elections are a challenging set of contests held in unique circumstances. They're individual contests being fought in very differing situations, from local council-level, issue-driven campaigns up to large mayoral fights with some well-known politicians," a Labour party spokesperson said.
"It looks as if we have made so far some encouraging gains...But it's very early days yet. Most of these councils, the vast majority, are still to count. We'll have to wait and see what the final results are -- and overall, of course, the turnout is much lower than you get in a general election," said UK defence secretary Michael Fallon, playing down the Conservative gains earlier today.
While the complete tally is pending, the broad trends were clear, with the UKIP confirmed as having suffered the maximum casualties in the contest.
"This is a temporary glitch for us,"claimed Nick Smith, the UKIP's chairman in Lincolnshire region.
But political pundits have already predicted the beginning of the end for the far-right phenomenon after Nigel Farage had stepped down as leader to make way for Paul Nuttall, who has so far failed to make any mark with the electorate andlost heavily when he recently attempted to contest a by-election in Stoke.
Nuttall claimed the party, which did well in 2013 council elections and won 3.8 million votes in the 2015 general election, was a "victim of its own success".
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