Normally at this
point in the election campaign there is an inkling that things are either won
or lost. That things are close to being
decided. Like five years ago however,
things are not quite decided and that final decisive movement is still to come.
Of course, at
this point five years ago Brown’s meltdown in Rochdale that essentially cost
him the election was still to happen.
Even so Cameron’s poll ratings were not as far ahead as they wound up
being come polling day. This time there’s
just no movement whatsoever.
Both Labour and
the Conservatives are showing as deadlocked on 33% each on the UKPR polling average. While there is no lead for
Labour, the swing hinted at of 3.5% from the Conservatives to Labour would
suggest Labour gaining 42 seats from the Conservatives. This swing would also point to 6 gains for
Labour at the expense of the Lib Dems.
Normally this would point to Labour being very firmly in largest party
territory and falling just short of an overall majority. That scenario does rather ignore the
bloodbath about to engulf “Scottish” Labour.
I had written about
the task facing the ‘45ers’ last autumn just before polling showed a huge shift
in voting intention from Labour to the SNP.
Currently the SNP are averaging polling leads roughly in the mid 20’s. Extrapulated into swing, this is showing a
swing from Labour to the SNP of about 22%.
Enough to leave Labour with only 5 seats. Gone would be Cathy Jamieson, Margaret
Curran, Anas Sarwar, Douglas Alexander and Jim Murphy. It’s the potential for the loss of Alexander,
and the adoption by the SNP of Mhari Black – who would be the youngest MP to
enter Parliament since the 1920’s - as their candidate, that seems to have
captured the imagination of the London and international media as we have seen the
likes of Michael Crick (Channel 4) Alegra Stratton (Newsnight) Ewan McAskill
(the Guardian) and Helen Lewis (of The New Statesman) ventured towards the home
town of this blog. Paisley has never been such an epicenter of political campaigning since... well the by-election in November 1997 when the SNP's Iain Blackford lost to one Douglas Alexander.
The potential
fall of Alexander and election of Black seems to be the fortunes of both
parties as microcosm. Alexander the arch
New Labour backroom player who’s own Blairite views have fallen from favour not
just in the country but in his own party versus Black who made a name as a ‘Yes’
supporter & campaigner. If the new
political landscape in Scotland threatens Labour in their attempt to win a week
on Thursday, well who’s fault is that then that “Scottish” Labour failed to
adapt to the new realities.
It’s not just ‘Scottish’
Labour who has failed to adapt. The Conservatives
and the Lib Dems seem intent in making the SNP look like the barbarians at the
gate, intent on spending money that would leave us worse off than we are now. If anything, and as I pointed out when
discussing Salmond’s legacy as First Minister, the SNP have been a conservative
steady hand on the Scottish Government tiller.
Not the radical reforming force that we maybe need – and was hinted at
in 2007 with the willingness to look at Local Government financing before LIT
was dropped. But that’s an argument for
2016.
In the meantime
the rise of the SNP has seen them essentially treated as lepers by the
Westminster Three. More than their
adoption of Keynesian economics, the thing Westminster has been agitating
against is the potential for a second Independence Referendum. I think that the SNP’s response to questions
on a second referendum should be to ask the Westminster Three if they condemn
the tactics of the Conservative Party and their cheerleaders in the English
media in making Scottish people feel like foreigners in our own country.
As we enter the
final full week of campaigning, we are still to see the defining moment. Cameron is still hanging on in there despite
his campaign being seen as at best lacklustre with a couple of disastrous
moments in particular – his interview with Paxman and his Q&A on Radio 1. Miliband is having a better campaign than Cameron,
but is still not performing as well as the SNP.
If Milliband does fail to make it to Number 10 purely because of Labour
supporters switching to the SNP, I wonder if there will be consequences for ‘Scottish’
Labour who have failed to adapt to the post referendum landscape. While that particular fallout is still to be
played out, there’s just one actor waiting to be cast. Who is this election’s Gillian Duffy?
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