Well five years
ago, I though that I would try and do a sort of guide which would show when the
key seats were due to be announced and why they were key seats. If memory
serves, it wasn’t an exact guide and results came later too. I could have had a quick nap at about 1am
too, maybe I would have stayed up for Caroline Lucas winning her seat as
well.
So, undaunted here’s
this years (approximate) timetable of events.
Normally the
first event will be the exit poll (due when the polls close at 10pm). Like
last time, which successfully predicted the result, the BBC, ITV & SKY News
will have a shared exit poll. As I
pointed out 5 years ago, the exit poll hasn’t always been as accurate. Famously the 1992 exit poll predicted a hung
parliament with Labour as the largest party, rather than the outcome of a
Conservative majority of 21. Less
famously, the BBC exit poll in the October 1974 election predicted a landslide
for Harold Wilson, rather than the majority of 3 he ended up with.
The most striking
thing about watching repeats of the coverage of past elections is the speed
that the counts take place. It used to
be the case that after the first results there would be a trickle before most
of the results being announced between 1-3am.
And a lot of results being announced on the Friday as well. So much for Iain Dale & Tom Harris
campaign, from five years ago, to ‘save’ Election Night.
Now what happens
is that there will be a couple of results around 11-midnight with the trickle
starting from 1am onwards with results scheduled to be rolling in at breakfast
time tomorrow. With the added
complication of Council elections in England, what does the schedule look like
this time around?
The first seats
to declare will be in the North east, with the uber safe Labour seat of
Houghton & Sunderland South scheduled to declare first at about 11pm. Lat time around, it declared at about 10 to
11 so we will see if it breaks that record.
Also declaring before midnight five years ago was both Washington &
Sunderland West and Sunderland Central.
All are safe Labour seats so what we will be watching for will be swing
to or from Labour. Increased majorities
suggest a good night ahead for Labour, while a decrease may well signify a
second Cameron term.
The first result
from outside of the North east is due about 1am and there are a couple of seats
that could be this election’s Basildon or Birmingham Edgebaston – harbingers of
the oncoming result. Both Dagenham &
Rainham and Tooting might provide an early indicators of whether Cameron can
bridge the gap to win a majority for his party, the Conservatives need a swing
of 2.5% to oust Sadiq Khan from his Tooting seat. On the other hand Dagenham & Rainham
would require a swing of 3%, wins in either or both seats may indicate a
Cameron majority. Meanwhile Nuneaton is
a marginal Conservative seat Labour need to take to win, a swing of 2.3% is
required to take this seat. Labour’s
performance here will be a proper early sighter of Miliband’s chances of
victory.
Milliband’s own prospects
will become a lot clearer when the flow of results gains momentum at about
2am. Northampton North needs to be taken
by Labour if it is to win, winnable at a swing of 2.4% to Labour. Meanwhile two Welsh seats due to declare at
this point might provide evidence of whether Miliband could be heading for a
working majority. Both Carmarthen East
& Dinefwr (held by Plaid Cymru – 4.7%) and Carmarthen West & Pembroke
South (Tory held – 4.25%) are around the swing of 4.7% Labour needed (before
any losses here in Scotland are factored in) to win a majority. Wins in both of these seats will point to a
shock majority for Labour, while Battersea might be just out of reach for
Labour, requiring a swing of 6.15% for Labour to win it. A win for Labour here would normally point to
a comfortable Labour majority of about 40-odd.
Normally…
Speaking of
Scotland, of course, this election is not the simple straight Labour versus
Conservative fight. Nah h-Eileanan an Lar
is scheduled to declare at about 1:30am, but the scale of the predicted rise of
the Sturgeonistas will become apparent from 2am onwards. East Kilbride, Strathaven & Lesmahagow (Labour’s
26th safest seat in Scotland – SNP swing required 14.3%), Lanark & Hamilton
East (23rd – 14.5%), Glenrothes (10th – 20.3%), Rutherglen & Hamilton East
(5th – 22.4%) and Kirkcaldy & Cowdenbeith (2nd – 25.1%) – all scheduled to
declare about the 2am mark and a fairly good spread that will indicate the
depth of the so called SNP surge. Also
declaring around this mark will be Fife North East, the fourth safest Lib Dem
seat in Scotland. A swing of 15.1% is
required from the SNP, if they take this seat it’s likely that the SNP surge is
not confined to Labour seats.
Scheduled to
declare from 2:30am are another couple of key seats for Labour. The
seat of City of Chester will be vital for Labour if they are to win, with a 2.75%
swing required, while Cleethorpes needs a swing of 4.8% to Labour. Meanwhile up here, both of the Dundee seats
are due to declare. It will be a huge
upset if the SNP’s deputy leader Stewart Hosie is unseated in Dundee East. If the polling is to be believed, it would be
a shock if the SNP failed to take Dundee West too, fifth on the SNP’s target
list. Also due to declare is the seat of Kilmarnock & Louden which is the
first ‘Scottish’ Labour cabinet minister to be in the firing line, Cathy
Jamieson.
The results will
now be flooding in and the narrative of this election will be taking
shape. Of interest will be the seats
local to this blog, and incidentally the highest profile targets for the SNP. The shadow Foreign Secretary, Douglas
Alexander, will find out if he has fought off the challenge of the SNP’s 20
year old candidate Mhari Black. Also due
to declare around the 3am mark is the neighbouring seat, where Jim Sheridan
will be aiming to hold off Mark Newlands.
Meanwhile up the road in Barrhead, Jim Murphy will find out if he had
held on to his East Renfrewshire seat or whether the SNP challenger Kirsten
Oswald will unseat him. Away from the so
called ‘Jockalypse’ the results will continue to indicate who will be the next
prime minister. For example a win for
Labour in Peterborough, with a swing required of 5.4% would normally indicate a
small Labour majority. On the other
hand, if the Tories take Middlesbrough South & Cleveland East, the swing of
1.8% required is the same swing needed for the Tories to get an outright
majority. Also declaring around this
time will be Bristol West which is a target seat for the Greens.
We will be in the
thick of the results by the time 4am rolls around. The safe seat of Whitney is due to declare
around this time and this will bring us the victory speech of David Cameron,
whether it is a declaration of victory nationally or a concession of defeat is
another matter. The same thing applies
when the Labour seat of Doncaster North declares and Ed Milliband makes his own
victory speech. Half past Four is the
scheduled time for Gordon to declare and for, presumably, the return to
Westminster of one Alex Salmond.
Political death… pah!
By the time both
Cameron & Milliband are elected, we should know which way the wind is
blowing in the new parliament. For the
political anorak though, there is still some drama to come. Sheffield Hallam is due to declare around
5am, where we will find out if Nick Clegg can retain his seat in the face of a
strong Labour challenge. Also due to
find out his fate will be Cleggs lieutenant in the treasury, Danny Alexander
with his Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch & Strathspey constituency due to
declare then too. For the really hardy
souls, both Caroline Lucas & Nigel Farage should find out their political
fates around 6am. Just in time for
breakfast.
Of course, that
timetable is bound to change, however this is just a guide, just a bit of fun
as someone with a swingometer once said.
By all likelihood, unless the polls have failed to pick up some late
swing, 6am only marks the start of the horse-trading as the parties come to
terms with the new political landscape.
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