There’s now a wee
bit of a tradition on these pages where I put together a sort of guide about
when results are estimated to come in and results to look for. For this election I’d try and do a similar
thing.
Before I go on,
it will be useful to have a look at what happened five years ago. The bedrock of the SNP’s win was the 53 constituency
seats won, gaining 32 seats from 2007. The SNP took votes from all the parties (the swing to the SNP was 6.2%) but
the biggest swing came from the collapse in support of the Lib Dems, there was
a 4.1% swing away from the Lib Dems to the SNP.
It’s worth mentioning this as polling for this election suggests that
the switch in support to the SNP will come from Labour voters, the switch that
happened from the referendum and caused Labour’s near wipe out in last years
Westminster elections.
The first
Holyrood results are estimated to be announced about 2am. If memory serves, five years ago the first
results started to come in from about half past 1 onwards. The second and third results announced (East
Kilbride and Hamilton, Larkhall & Stonehouse) proved to be the harbinger of
the SNP triumph to come with the unseating of Labour’s shadow finance minister
(Andy Kerr) and former cabinet minister (the late Tom McCabe). Again these seats are estimated to be amongst
the first to declare. If there is to be
an upset, these seats would be vulnerable with swings to Labour of 3.25% and
4.4% required. However that’s not what
the polls are suggesting.
The first Labour
held seat due to declare will be the Rutherglen seat. Five years ago, Labour
hung on, but survived a swing of 7.5% to the SNP. This time Rutherglen will require a swing to
the SNP of 3.3% for the seat to change hands.
The seat is expected to change hands, however if Labour hold this seat,
it could be a harbinger of an upset or that the SNP won’t sweep all before
them.
There are five
three way marginal’s in the last parliament and the first of them is due to
declare about 3. Labour will be hoping
to hold on to Dumfriesshire, with both the SNP and the Tories hoping to take
the seat from them. The Tories have the
better shot with a swing required of 5% for them to take the seat. However if the SNP are having a night like
last year, they will win the seat, even if they need a swing of 6.7% to win the
seat. If the SNP do win this seat, then
it’ll be odds on that they’ll have another majority in the new Scottish
Parliament.
By 3:30am the
results will be rushing in. It will be
from about this time that the Edinburgh and Glasgow seats will be coming
in. This means victory speeches or
concession speeches from the SNP’s Nicola Sturgeon (defending her Glasgow
Southside seat), Labour’s Kezia Dugdale (looking to re-take Edinburgh Eastern,
Kenny MacAskil’s old seat) and Ruth Davidson (standing in Edinburgh Central). As the results from the constituency seats
come in, then phase two of the results will then start to be announced – the list
seats.
Because of the
ubiquitous #BothvotesSNP campaign, then there will be a focus on how many votes
the SNP attract and whether this feeds into a positive result (for them) from
the list votes. It needs to be pointed
out that the SNP have always had a higher percentage of retaining constituency votes
into List votes than Labour have ever had.
This of course is not the only reason to focus on the list votes. It
will be in the list votes that the real battles of this election will unfold. The fight for second between Labour and the Conservatives. And the fight for fourth between the Lib Dems
and the Scottish Greens.
Labour are
expected to suffer heavy losses in the constituency vote, so will be hoping to
pick up seats in the list vote. The
Tories already hold two constituency seats and may add to that. Yet, traditionally, Labour have always
attracted less list votes than they have done constituency votes. I think Labour need to hang on to at least 5
(of the 12 they currently hold) constituencies to have a chance of holding on
to second place.
For the Scottish
Greens, this could be a straight list fight given the continued collapse in Lib
Dem support. Their fight could even be
bolstered by picking up one of their target seats. Their co-Convenor Patrick Harvie is standing
in Glagow Kelvin while the other seat they have high hopes over is I think the
Edinburgh Western seat.
The results of
the list votes are estimated to be announced from 4am onwards, which means a
long night. Both in 2007 and 2011,
results continued to roll in throughout the Friday. The overnight results however will give us an
idea of how this election will go, whether the polls are correct and we will
get a first full term for Nicola Sturgeon, or whether there will be an upset
along the way. For me, I think Labour
will cling on to second. I think the
Scottish Greens will finish ahead of the Lib Dems and I have a feeling that the
night won’t all be plain sailing for the SNP though I think they’ll be the
largest party.
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