We all knew that this would be a historic night for the SNP and
would end up with a first full term for Nicola Sturgeon. We also thought that
this would be a terrible night for Scottish Labour. What we did not know is
that tonight would be redemption night for both of the coalition partners in the
last government.
For the SNP, so much has changed but so much has stayed the same.
Rather than become the beneficiaries of Scottish Labour’s collapse, their share
of vote has only gone up – to date – by 1.1%. They have picked up 10 seats from
Labour but to date have lost four seats. It did look like the early result at
Rutherglen, where the SNP unseated the Labour shadow cabinet minister James
Kelly – would be this election’s equivalent to Nuneaton or Basildon. That we
would have a second majority government on the spin. That currently is not
certain to happen.
Instead, the story has turned out to be redemption night for both
of the coalition partners. The Lib Dems held both the Orkney & Shetland
seats before claiming the Fife North East and Edinburgh West seats from the
SNP. The Tories wins were more spectacular, and puts them on course to snatch
second place from Labour. The first signs that the Conservatives might be on
for second was Jackson Carlaw’s defeat of Ken McIntosh in the three way marginal
at Eastwood. Then came Ruth Davidson’s win in Edinburgh Central. The
constituency wins underpinning the story of the 8.5% swing from Labour to the
Conservatives.
The reasons for SNP’s projected win are fairly well discussed,
given their safety first manifesto. A hopelessly split party on the verge of
civil war with very real decisions about where it should go next and no real
plan on how to bridge the divergent priorities of middle Scotland and middle
England have contributed to Labour’s collapse here. It is also very clear that
there is a constituency here in Scotland that 30 years ago would have been
Conservative (but firmly on the Tory Wet wing) but as time went on would have
been what we now recognise as Blairite. Those people, probably in the
Professional class, commuter belt Scotland, are pro-Union and are not sure where
they sit in post Referendum Scotland. An ideal starting point then for a
Conservative revival.
So far, a good night for the Conservatives, a good night for the
Lib Dems and a catastrophic night for Scottish Labour. The SNP might still talk
about what might have been. But with the list votes still to be counted, it is
certain that Nicola Sturgeon will be heading back to Bute House.
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