This time a
couple of weeks ago, the Westminster village was full of rumour and speculation
concerning debates supposedly happening about whether the Prime Minister should
go to the country before the date stipulated on the Fixed terms Act. William Hague then penned a piece calling for
an early election, whilst BBC Scotland’s num… ah, sorry, ‘flagship current
affairs phone in’ show “Call Kaye” debated the issue. After the week May had last week, it was somewhat
surprising to see the issue crop up in yesterday’s Sunday Politics show. By now, you’ll have guessed that there’s
something of a roadblock to this plan.
The closest precedent to the predicament May is in - Harold MacMillan after his General Election win, October 1959 |
The Fixed Terms
Act didn’t just give the UK the concept of fixed terms for Westminster
elections (even if there’s some debate over whether it should have been 5 year
terms) but also changed the terms of any future vote of no confidence. This means that a simple +1 majority no
longer counts as a vote of no confidence and therefore makes it more difficult
for May to engineer a vote. For May this
would be a pity as I’d suspect that if she wanted a big stonking Commons
majority then the optimum time for getting that will be the next 6 or so
months. If she’s living off the mandate won by Cameron when the bells ring in
2018, then the chances of a big majority start to erode.
Having said that,
I’m not sure an election this year figures largely in May’s plans anyway. By the looks of things, May’s timetable will
be full until the divorce from the EU is completed. The sending of the letter triggering Article
50 will in effect mean no early election and for that matter no second
Independence referendum until divorce with the EU has been finalised. I would think that if May does want an early
election, then the earliest she will go for will be spring 2019 with an
election campaign centred on the supposed “Great Repeal Bill” and the rumoured scrapping
of ECHR – a much better ‘material change’ than the European Referendum result
is proving to be surely. Other than that
temptation, I’d think she’d stick with the date stipulated in the Fixed Terms
Act, namely May 7 2020.
We might be in
uncharted territory, however May’s predicament is not entirely without
precedent. In the aftermath of the Suez
Crisis, Anthony Eden resigned 19 months into his only term as PM. His successor, Harold MacMillan (above), did not seek
a fresh mandate straight away waiting until the autumn of 1959, 2 and a half
years into his premiership, before going to the country. MacMillan won on the famous “You’ve Never Had
It So Good” slogan, winning the Conservative’s first post war landslide
election win with a majority of 100.
It is Brexit
then, which is driving May’s timetable, rather than the Fixed Terms Act. However both of those situations have
deprived us of the parlour game once beloved of political hacks – name the
election date. Harold Wilson was a
master of picking election dates, with the exception of picking the date of his
third election as Labour leader. Rather than
wait until the autumn, Wilson chose to go to the country in June 1970 and lost
to Heath. When Heath decided to go to
the country, it was on a ‘Who governs’ slogan…
and stumbled into a hung parliament in February 1974. That election called in the winter of 1974
was the last truly ‘snap’ election as every election since the following
October election has been called at 4 year intervals at least. There is a school of thought that had Cameron
not set up the Fixed Terms Act (as part of the coalition deal with the Lib
Dems), he possibly could have called another, snap, election at some point in
2011 or 2012.
For all the talk
about a snap election, it is surprising how little the Fixed term Act has
entered people’s calculations. This has
removed the temptation of a ‘snap’ election for May, though the divorce
proceedings with the EU are probably the main reason we can rule out snap
elections in May, June or September this year.
Thanks to May’s timetable – which does not involve a Scottish
Independence referendum either – then the earliest that Theresa May will be
going to the country will be late spring 2019. I fully expect May to go to the
country on the Fixed Term stipulated date, and not receive the huge majority
that the polls think she’d get if she’d got an election this year.
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