You know, one of
the best things written about the so called “45” (crap name and technically
incorrect, though the “44 point 7” is less catchy so…) was by the Scottish
Green activist Sarah Beattie Smith. So
much so, I’ll not bother.
There still a lot
of energy around the referendum two weeks on from it’s conclusion as various
groups that sprung up around “Yes Scotland” starts to look for roles in the
post referendum landscape. The “yes”
twibbons have gradually been replaced with “I voted yes” or “45” twibbons,
while the “Women for Independence” group held a conference in Perth at the
weekend that put the gathering Liberal Democrats in Glasgow in the shade – not that
you could tell by the media coverage.
Soon though another set of choices will present themselves in front of
the Scottish electorate as our politicians gird their loins for, and lets be
honest here, what many Westminster politicians believe to be the main event. You can have your pretendy referendum, but
nothing will beat the battle of a Westminster election.
Many within the
yes supporting constituency though believe that this is finally the opportunity
to sever the Scottish electorate’s love affair with Labour. Since the mid 1960’s and the name change from
The Unionist Party to the Scottish Conservative & Unionist Party, Labour
have made inroads & have held on to their status as the national party of
Scotland. Buoyed by the surge in
memberships of pro Independence parties and some polls showing that 37% of
Labour voters voted for Independence, this has lead pro-independence supporters
to predict the beginning of the downfall of Scottish Labour. There’s just one small problem with this
rational.
The SNP’s
election campaign 4 years ago wasn’t quite a disaster, but wasn’t exactly a
roaring success either. Salmond’s slogan
of “More Nat’s, Less Cut’s” sank without trace while the abiding memory of that
campaign was Salmond & Sturgeon’s whinging at being excluded from the
“Leaders Debates”. Their share of the
vote (20% of the Scottish electorate) translated into them keeping the 6 seats
won in 2005, with the failure to retain their by-election win in Glasgow East
the first loss for the SNP since Scotland’s MP’s were cut from 71 to 59.
The impact of
this on next years Westminster elections is that it will be more difficult for
the SNP to make inroads in Labour’s block of MP’s. Of Scottish Labour’s MP’s, a swing of 10%
will only bring the grand total of three Labour seats. Most vulnerable will be Gordon Bank’s Ochil
& South Perthshire seat, a swing of 5.2% will see this seat change
hands. To put that into context,
nationwide there has only been three elections where there has been a swing of
over 5% between parties (Thatcher’s win in 1979 was based on a swing of 5.29%,
Blair in 1997 achieved a swing of over 10% while Cameron’s win was based on a
swing of 5.17% from Labour). Mind you,
the SNP’s win at Holyrood three and a half years ago was built on a swing from
the Lib Dem’s of 4.1% and a total swing to the SNP of 6.25%.
So, as a
yardstick, what would that swing get the SNP were it to be replicated. Well, they’d certainly unseat Mr Bank’s
and… well that’s it really. Among the Lib Dem seats, Malcolm Bruce’s
(soon to be) old seat of Gordon and the Argyll & Bute constituency are the
most vulnerable, but the SNP would be projected to fall short (by 0.25% in the
case of Gordon) of taking these seats.
What the SNP need would be a sea change, something like the energy
harnessed by the unsuccessful “Yes” campaign.
Something like that hinted at with the latest Panelbase poll.
SNP
– 5 Target Labour Seats
|
|||||
Labour Vote
|
Labour Share
(%)
|
SNP Vote
|
SNP Share (%)
|
SNP Swing
required (%)
|
|
Ochil & South Perthshire
|
19131
|
37.9
|
13944
|
27.6
|
5.2
|
Falkirk
|
23207
|
45.7
|
15364
|
30.3
|
7.7
|
Dundee West
|
17994
|
48.5
|
10716
|
28.9
|
9.8
|
Ayrshire North & Arran
|
21860
|
47.4
|
11965
|
25.9
|
10.8
|
Aberdeen North
|
16746
|
44.4
|
8385
|
22.2
|
11.1
|
Vote
& share as at Westminster Election – 6 May 2010
Panelbase’s poll
puts the SNP at 34% in terms of Westminster voting intentions with a swing of
12%. That would see the SNP make real
inroads into Labour’s seats, taking 6 Labour seats. Not only would Bank’s Ochil seat fall, but
also the controversial seat of Falkirk – Eric Joyce’s seat and Dundee
West. With that swing though, the SNP
would fall 0.2% short of taking Michael Connarty’s Linlithgow & Falkirk
East seat.
Not that this
sort of swing would only damage Scottish Labour – though the loss of 6 seats
would not help Milliband’s push for Number 10.
On this sort of swing, the SNP would take half of the Lib Dem’s Scottish
representation. Of the six Lib Dem
seats, obviously I’ve mentioned Malcolm Bruce’s Gordon seat as a faller, but
third on the list would be the seat of Inverness,
Nairn, Badenoch & Strathspey. That
of the Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander. A swing of 11.0% would see his removal as MP. On top of the 6 existing MP’s – on this swing
SNP representation would go up to a record 18 seats.
A swing like that
would also bring into play future SNP targets – many of them in Labour central
belt. There are currently 20 Labour
seats that would require a swing between 12-18% for them to change hands. If the SNP managed the swing hinted at by
Panelbase, these seats would become Labour marginal’s & would shake up
Scottish politics.
SNP – 5 Target
Lib Dem seats
|
|||||
Lib Dem Vote
|
Lib Dem Share
(%)
|
SNP Vote
|
SNP Share (%)
|
Swing
|
|
Argyll & Bute
|
14292
|
31.6
|
8563
|
18.9
|
6.4
|
Gordon
|
17575
|
36
|
10827
|
22.2
|
6.9
|
Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch &
Strathspey
|
19172
|
40.7
|
8803
|
18.7
|
11.0
|
Caithness, Sutherland & Easter Ross
|
11907
|
41.4
|
5516
|
19.2
|
11.1
|
Aberdeenshire West & Kinkardine
|
17362
|
38.4
|
7086
|
15.7
|
11.4
|
Vote
& share as at Westminster Election – 6 May 2010
Of course all of
this is subjective. For one thing, as I’ve
said previously, the SNP have never really gotten to grips with how to play
Westminster Elections in the devolution era.
Hence while they’ve formed a successful government at Holyrood, they
only polled 20% in the Westminster election half way through their first
term. Secondly, they’ve never really
come close to replicating their result from the General Election 40 years ago
this Sunday – when the SNP upped their representation to 11 MP’s from the 7
elected in the February election.
The third reason
is, of course that those area’s that voted for Independence are safe Labour
areas. While Glasgow got a lot of the
headlines for voting for Independence lets not forget that 2 of the 10 safest
Labour seats in Glasgow are Labour seats (Iain Davidson’s Glasgow South West seat
Willie Bain’s and Glasgow North East).
Indeed the “easiest” seat for the SNP would be Tom Harris’ Glasgow South
seat – “winnable” on a swing of 15.8%.
If the energy amassed
is not to be for nought for the SNP, the hard work and the planning starts here
for next May for the ousting of those “Red Tories”. The SNP’s performance in 2010 has given them
a mountain to climb if they wish to target serious amounts of Labour
seats. Whether the predicted meltdown in
the Lib Dem vote will help the SNP remains to be seen, though that in itself
won’t be enough to make the advances desired by elements within “the 45”. What is certain is that this referendum will impact on next years Westminster
election, we just don’t know how.
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