At about 20 to 1 this afternoon, the Conservatives passed a landmark that they had not passed since the afternoon of April 10th 1992. They won the seat of Cotswolds which gave them their first overall majority since that date. This confirmed a result that we all knew was likely since the retention of the Nuneaton seat about quarter to 2 this morning. For this election, Nuneaton was this elections equivalent to Basildon in 1992 – results that made flesh Labour’s failure to win.
When the seat of
St Ives declared at half past 3, this gave us the final result of –
Seats
|
Votes
|
Share
|
|
Conservatives
|
331
|
11,334,920
|
36.9%
|
Labour
|
232
|
9,344,328
|
30.4%
|
SNP
|
56
|
1,454,436
|
4.7%
|
Liberal Democrats
|
8
|
2,415,888
|
7.9%
|
UKIP
|
1
|
3,881,129
|
12.6%
|
Others
|
22
|
7.5%
|
|
Conservative
majority - 12
|
Turnout
– 66.1%
|
10pm, 7th May & Exit poll announces Tories are largest party on 316 seats |
The Conservatives
are not the only party celebrating. The
SNP surge was very real and much worse for the Westminster 3 than the polling
suggested. That moniker now describes
the total MP’s for the pro-Union parties.
Why? Well the referendum campaign
played a part, canvassing areas New Labour took for granted putting their
arguments until the penny dropped about Labour’s neglect of Scotland & the
Scottish voter. Of course, Sturgeon, like Salmond before her, is lucky that
Labour have played into their hands with not smart politics. The neutral blogger Stuart Winton suggested
that the SNP would be marginalised in the new parliament and that the best
prospect to save the union would be a new Independence referendum. I’m not sure a second referendum would be as
decisive as the Unionists need it to be, but the SNP are not going to go away –
they’re too smart for that. Remember as
well that the SNP will now be eligible for ‘short money’ and also positions in
the key select committees.
Douglas Alexander, Mhari Black & Fraser Galloway await their fate at Paisley's Lagoon Centre |
Any talk of the
SNP brings about talk about blaming the SNP for Labour’s defeat. It’s true that Scotland is one of the big
reasons Labour lost. Labour did not
handle the referendum very well. From
Milliband’s unthinking acceptance of Cameron’s anti-Independence positioning to
their acceptance of the Coaltion vetoing parts of the Smith Commission – time and
time again they showed a lack of understanding that the terms of the debate hadchanged. True, we don’t want Independence
but polling showed that Devo Max is the settled will of the Scottish people –
Labour’s constant thwarting of this sowed the seeds of them being seen as ‘RedTories’. Scotland also hurt them in the English shires as the Tories pushed the
line that a Labour-SNP deal would be deeply harmful to the country. They did not handle the referendum and they
failed to successfully rebut the prospect of ‘that woman’ (as a voter in Carlisle
put it) running the UK.
The other reason
Labour failed was that they lost the economic argument. That’s an outcome that you could have
predicted within a year of Miliband taking the Labour leadership. As I pinpointed at the time, rather than
formulate a viable alternative to Osborne’s scorched earth policy they instead
fully signed up to it. They also failed
to fully articulate their economic policy fully. They did have good policies, abolishing the
Non Dom tax rule, but they were few and far between. Personally speaking, I was also rather
appalled at the gentrification of Labour – not something that had occurred to
me until I voted last night. Two Labour canvassers
(not the normal canvassers outside Bushes I hasten to add) were unhappy at the
prospect of someone being elected that wasn’t from the town that would bring
the reputation of the town down. Make of
that what you will.
Yet, even before
Milliband resigned, there were the growing storms of a Blairite coup should he
not jump. Even after he went, the journalists
Dan Hodges and John Rentoul were questioning Milliband’s supposed left wing
policies while Blair’s former speechwriter Phillip Collins and the former MP
John Reid were also urging a return to Blairite policies. That worked really really well here in
Scotland, didn’t it? Of the so called
leading contenders, Andy Burnham’s probably the co-favourite with Yvette Cooper
with Dan Jarvis (who?) the outsider. More to follow on that story one suspects
though there certainly is the feeling of a changing of the guard moment for
Labour with Milliband gone and both Balls and Alexander losing their seats –
Brown’s backroom staff from opposition have been removed from the top of Labour
Labour had a
really bad night, in being wiped out in Scotland. At least they didn’t come close to extinction
like the Lib Dems. In 2010 they lost 5
seats but picked up the most votes they have ever taken under the Lib Dem
banner. Last night, the pattern set in
the Holyrood elections of 2011 continued as they lost all but a small cabal of
MP’s and shed more than half of their voters.
If Labour have huge choices on their future direction, what of the Lib
Dems? Do they continue down the Orange
Book path that brought them power followed by the brutal rejections suffered in
the past four years, or do they return to the Social democratic model that saw
them gradually build as a party since the merger of the Liberals and the SDP in
1988?
The SNP richly
deserved their victory. Unkind Labour
wags bemoan the fact that the SNP have stolen their clothes. Well if you discard things in pursuit of
gentrification, then don’t be surprised if vote winning ideas that have been
discarded are picked up. We will see how
much influence the SNP/Plaid/Green bloc garner.
Labour deserved their defeat too.
Their campaign was better than Cameron’s, but the failure to rebut the
Labour/SNP coalition story cost them as much as their inability to lay a finger
on Cameron.
The Conservative’s
election victory is entirely down to the pattern set since Thatcher in the 1980’s
– that unpopular governments no longer lose elections but attractive
governments in waiting win them. For all
the fury at the performance of the SNP – Milliband, Balls, Alexander & co
never ever looked like the next British government.
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