Just before 9am yesterday morning the last of the list seats were allocated in the North East
Scotland Region. This confirmed the
final outcome that had always been the highly likely outcome of this election -
that of a first full term for the SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon which will only be
fully confirmed once the new Parliament convenes.
Nicola Sturgeon on the steps of Bute House, Friday afternoon. |
That final result
did not look as good as it looked as if it would be when the SNP took the seat
of Rutherglen at about 1:30am this morning.
The swing that removed Labours James Kelly was 9% from Labour to the SNP
– that uniform swing across Scotland would be enough to wipe out Labour in the constituency
vote. However, as constituency results
started to come from the east and rural areas, a different picture
emerged. If Glasgow and the west of
Scotland was a picture of the SNP laying waste to Scottish Labour’s heartlands,
then the east & Edinburgh was a picture of the SNP advance being checked
and, in some instances, being pushed back by resurgent Liberal Democrats and
Conservatives.
This pushback,
among other factors, led to the SNP falling two seats short of another majority
government with the final result of:
Votes – FPTP - % - Seats
|
Votes – List - Seats
|
Total seats
|
||||
SNP
|
1,059,897
|
46.5%
(+ 1.1%)
|
59
(+6)
|
953,587
|
4
(-12)
|
63
|
Conservatives
|
501,844
|
22.0%
(+ 8.1%)
|
7 (+4)
|
524,222
|
24
(+12)
|
31
|
Labour
|
514,261
|
22.6%
(- 7.8%)
|
3
(-12)
|
435,919
|
21
(-1)
|
24
|
Scot Greens
|
13,172
|
0.6%
|
0
|
150,426
|
6 (+4)
|
6
|
Lib Dems
|
178,238
|
7.8%
(- 0.1%)
|
4 (+2)
|
119,284
|
1 (-2)
|
5
|
The collapse in
Labour’s vote was most apparent when the first tranche of results were coming
in, when the SNP were taking seats from Labour in the West and around Glasgow. I mentioned Rutherglen earlier, but that was
only the first. Previously rock solid
Labour seats like Provan, Maryhill & Springburn, Greenock & Inverclyde
and Coatbridge & Cryston fell to the SNP on swings of 15.6%, 15%, 13.9% and
12.6% respectively. Those swings were
not confined to SNP gains either.
Glasgow Anniesland was the most vulnerable SNP seat going into this
election with a majority of 7. Bill Kidd’s
majority, after a swing of 12% is now 6,153.
Similarly, George Adam’s majority has been transformed from 248 to 5,199
via a swing of a mere 8.1%.
The shift from
Labour to the pro-Independence SNP is a huge problem for Labour and has serious
implications for Corbyn’s attempt to unseat Cameron in four years time. If Labour’s problems only stem from being
pro-Union, you can understand calls for Labour to soften their line regarding
the constitution. However what the
second half of the constituency votes showed is that there is still a large
pro-Union constituency in Scotland – a voting bloc now empowered to use their
votes tactically to thwart Indyref 2.
Those people who have switched rightwards from Labour will be, as I’d
mused earlier, soft right voters attracted to Labour through Social Democratic
values rather than out and out Socialism. Professional people who may, in a
previous age, have been so called ‘Tory Wets’.
Think fellow bloggers Ian Smart and Kevin Hague.
More than
Rutherglen, perhaps Eastwood was the real harbinger result of this
election. A three way marginal, where
the SNP didn’t quite do enough to overtake both Labour and the Conservatives to
win. The Tories Jackson Carlaw only
needing a swing of 5.7% to unseat Labours Ken McIntosh. It was after that result that the shock
results started to come in. Those results
hinted at pro-Union tactical voting. The
SNP lost North East Fife to the Lib Dem’s Willie Rennie and then Edinburgh
Western. Both seats were not exactly
vulnerable – requiring swings over 4% for the Lib Dems to take the seat yet the
Lib Dems produced swings of 9.5% and 7.8% to take these seats. The biggest shocks came with the Tories constituency
wins.
Davidson’s win in
Edinburgh Central came from out of the blue, given the Tories were third in
this constituency in 2011. A swing of
9.7% to the Tories saw them home with a majority of 610. A bigger swing came in the Tory win in
Aberdeenshire West, when they took the seat on a 12% swing.
There was some
relief for Scottish Labour when they took Edinburgh Southern from the SNP, coupled
with holding on to East Lothian and Jackie Baillie’s… ah… ‘popular’ win in Dumbarton. Bearing in mind that Labour has traditionally
gained far fewer votes on the list vote than the constituency vote, this left
Labour with too much ground to make up on the Tories going into the list seats. So, as a result of both the Tories aggressive
re-positioning as defenders of the union and Labour’s continuing impersonation of
Stretch Armstrong culminating in their two stools approach to the
constitutional question, the Tories had their best share of vote in Scotland
since the 1992 General Election and Labour finished third for the first time in
an election in Scotland since 1910.
The SNP though
serenely moved towards a third consecutive term. Except that, in spite of their highest constituency
vote in a Holyrood election and the highest list vote ever in a Holyrood vote, due
to the vagaries of the list vote the SNP fell short of a second overall
majority. The gains in the constituency
vote had a negative effect on their list vote, only 4 seats were picked up on
the list system. So much for the
#bothvotesSNP effect and the architects claims that only both votes would guarantee
a majority SNP government that craves an Independent Scotland.
Sturgeon has
already said that the SNP will govern as a minority, as they did during their
first term. While the SNP would ideally
have wanted a majority, the new parliament gives them options. Funnily enough, I suspect that there won’t be
that much love lost between the two pro-Independence parties in Holyrood given
the SNP’s aggressive #bothvotesSNP campaign and their attempt to run the
Scottish Green’s off the road (as they did with RISE). One by-product of this election will be that
I think that Indyref 2 will not happen in this parliament. Not that this is a bad thing, when the SNP
have still to come to terms with their own failure or to hold any sort of post
mortem into how they failed. Patrick
Harvie’s sober but realistic view on Indyref 2 is certainly not what the hard
line pro-Indy supporters want to hear, but they are views that should be
listened to if people are to be convinced about Independence.
While Nicola
Sturgeon is comfortably back in Bute House and no doubt planning for the next
weeks and months of SNP government, the other big winners are the
Conservatives. Ruth Davidson’s tactic of
running as the out and proud pro-Union party clearly paid dividends and made
things much more difficult for Scottish Labour by targeting their indecisiveness
over the constitutional issue. Scottish
Labour’s meltdown has also made things clear down south that there is now a
Scotland shaped roadblock to their route back to government. Sturgeon might have won, but in the longer term
the spoils will go to David Cameron’s successor.
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