You know, with
all the praise heaped on the SNP and on to Salmond, you could be forgiven for
thinking that the SNP don’t do duff election campaigns. You’d be wrong of course, unless you’d
forgotten “More Nat’s, Less Cuts” from the last Westminster elections. Then there’s the one for the Euro Elections –
“Vote SNP to keep UKIP out of Scottish Politics”.
To be fair
though, the SNP really shouldn’t shoulder all of the blame for an uninspiring
campaign – all parties have been focused on polls in September and next
May. Every one of the televised hustings
meetings spent all of the time discussing European issues filtered through the
referendum. This left the field clear
for UKIP to take some votes here, break through the 5% barrier and win a seat
in the European Parliament, just by focusing on free movement, or as UKIP put it "unlimited imigration".
UKIP are the
undisputed winners of the Euro Elections UK wide. Topping the poll on 27.49% of the vote and
picking up 24 seats, the Westminster parties were wearing their wearying look
of “oh no not again” with Farage and co.
Their taking of a seat in the Scottish contest succeeded in getting
under the skin of SNP supporters who turned their fire on people who didn’t
vote, on UKIP voters… in fact on anyone
but their own party. A UKIP MEP
undermines the SNP dual narrative that Scottish politics is different from UK
wide politics because of the different Scottish sensibility and that Scottish
People are universally Pro EU. The first
bit is true & really shouldn’t undermine that narrative that much, the second
bit… well that’s always been patiently rubbish and
Sturgeon’s assertion that euro-scepticism is some sort of Right wing English
disease should really be put to bed.
I also have an
issue with blaming non voters for not voting.
As someone who chose not to vote 5 years ago, and couldn’t vote on
Thursday, I can understand why people wouldn’t want to engage with arguments
that essentially want you to vote to keep out another party without explaining
why you should vote for them. Rather
than blaming these people for not voting, politicians would do better to find
out why people are not voting. Rather
than look like one of the big winners, the SNP emerged as petty and frankly
rather bad winners.
The First
Minister probably has an eye on the fate of his Westminster… er…
colleagues though. Cameron’s
Tories were long thought to be in for a bad night. And so it proved, finishing third behind
Labour. Except they only dropped 4% and
7 seats from 2009, which in respect is not the bloodbath we were thinking. Milliband’s Labour finished second, but it
was a very poor second, with the London results and the Scottish results
pushing then ahead of the Tories by the tiny margin of 1.47% and picking up one
more seat than the Tories. It’s more
down to news management that Labour are perceived to have had a worse night than
the Tories. But both sides did not
suffer the bloodbath handed to the Lib Dem’s.
The Lib Dems vote
halved, their haul of MEP’s were all but wiped out, with Catherine Bearder the
sole survivor for the South East region.
This was the Lib Dem’s worst result since… well 2011’s Holyrood elections when more than
half of their vote left them (both in the constituency and regional list
vote). Four years into the coalition,
the Lib Dems appear to have now woken up to the disaster that has befallen
their party and responded. Unfortunately
that response is in the style of Mr Bean.
The 24 hour news networks couldn’t believe their luck when Lib Dems
appeared on television to critisise their leader and to call for his
resignation.
The Lib Dem’s
have the look of a party about to erupt into civil war, or at least they did until
Matthew Oakshott was outed as the mastermind behind a series of polls that
showed his pal, the former sage of the Lib Dem’s Vince Cable in the best possible
light. They also showed that the Lib
Dems were on course to loose the Sheffield Hallam (of Nick Clegg) and Inverness
(Danny Alexander). Whether Oakshott’s
resignation from the party lances the boil remains to be seen. I do think that sooner or later, there will
be a Labour circa 1980 style fall out between the social democratic wing and
the Orange Bookers.
What the worst
leadership coup in British politics since the attempt to oust Brown in the
aftermath of the last Euro Elections does tell us is that, if we didn’t know it
already, Vince Cable is finished as a top ranking politician. Now forever fated to be laughed at as the man
that got so many things wrong in Government.
The brutal assassination of Consumer Focus and the sale of the Royal Mail to men that Cable himself would have described four years ago as spivs and
speculators count as his… er… high points.
The Lib Dem’s
were not the only institution who’s reputation took a battering. Salmond’s attempted admonishment of Dimbleby
during the results programme played well not just among pro-Indy supporters
convinced the BBC’s coverage has been actively biased against their cause, but
among Labour and Green supporters convinced that the BBC’s coverage has been
too balanced in favour of UKIP at the expense of Labour and freezing out the
Greens. Labour’s council results were
constantly talked down all through Friday, while the Greens complaint is that
as a Left wing party sceptical about the direction of the EU their views have
been ignored. Salmond’s complaint was
that this enhanced coverage of UKIP gave them more coverage that they would
normally have received. All are correct
in their complaints as the Anglocentric media were simply obsessed with Farage
and his crusaders for a much simpler time when men were men and women knew
their place. Watching Ian Hyslop’s
series on people hankering after (and re-writing) the past reminds me of UKIP –
hankering after a version of the 1950’s that simply never existed.
Looking forward,
the Tories still have an awful lot of work to do to retain the voting share
they won in 2010. Labour still has an
awful lot of work to do to convince the voters that they are an alternative
government in waiting. The Lib Dems have
an awful lot of work to do not to implode.
And… oh, yes there’s the small
matter of the plebiscite in September.
The focus of the political classes can now fall on that referendum.