With the news
that the Tories are still averaging in the high 40’s and Labour’s percentages
are creeping up, the conclusion that you could make about ITV’s third outing of
“I Want To Be Prime Minister” is that with the exception of the Scottish First
Minister, none of the participants were in with a chance of making a dent in
the already nascent election campaign, never mind in with a shout of the big
prize.
Nicola from
Ayrshire aka the SNP’s leader and First Minister of Scotland is already a dab
hand at these affairs. I do wonder though whether the ease which she sailed
through this was down to her skill at these affairs or whether no one actually had
the knowledge or the nouse to tackle her on her record as Scottish First Minister. As a result she sailed through the section on
Education without one single mention either of the literacy figures or the pigs
ear that is the replacement to Standard Grades & Highers. Nobody brought up her policy of a 50% tax rate
for the UK but not setting the higher rate at that level here in Scotland. Her reasoning for that sounding suspiciously
like George Osborne’s reasoning for cutting the top rate from 50% to 45%. I don’t even think the UKIP guy laid a glove
on her regarding her record on bringing the country together in the aftermath
of the EU Referendum.
Then again,
Scottish affairs have never really featured very high on the UK news cycles. Which is why a high profile figure like
Sturgeon can get away with being the darling of the progressive classes while
pursuing a New Labour agenda in Scotland?
And why when Caroline Lucas talked about Free Care for the Elderly, Dim
Faron didn’t claim the policy as his parties policy (pushed through by Jim
Wallace when he was Deputy First Minster in the Labour/Lib Dem coalition). But
certainly being a part of the non-Labour aligned progressive alliance (as
opposed to the soon to be a thing Progressive Alliance party) paid off for Sturgeon as no one
really laid a glove on her.
Unfortunately the
story is more about who ducked out rather than the participants who did take
part. For all that Lucas was perfectly
sane and sensible, that Sturgeon sailed through and that Nuttall was cast as
the pantomime villain, the two main protagonists in this election were
missing. We all know the reasons, that
May is believed to be a stiff and somewhat poor debater and that Corbyn... well actually I’m not sure why he declined to
appear. I’m surely not alone in thinking
that however bad a leader he is, he can’t surely be that bad against Wood,
Lucas, Farron & Nuttall. That and
actually this could have been an opportunity to put your ideas across. Polling suggests that there has been an
increase in Labour’s vote, this could have been an opportunity to consolidate
that increase.
While Julie
Etchingham chided May & Corbyn for refusing their invite for this debate, I
think that they should have empty chaired them, empty lecterns and all. It would have been a visible symbol of
parties that wanted to disrespect the UK voter.
Instead, I think Corbyn and more so May have rather gotten away with
it. Had both been there, we would have
(for better or worse) seen the true mettle of the prospective prime
ministers. A by-product would be that we
would have seen Sturgeon up against people who in the past (given the way she
bulldozed through Michael Moore & Allistair Carmichael during the
independence referendum) would have been a winnable test. A much more difficult task than what was
presented tonight.
Given ITV’s
previous debates resembled game shows (and how nice of them to re-cycle the set
from two years ago) then this edition is difficult to pin down. The winner will not be the one striding up
Downing Street in three weeks claiming victory.
Indeed, you could argue with the Lib Dems not cutting through, the SNP
looking at defending seats rather than rolling through them, UKIP falling into
history and Plaid and the Greens looking to hold on to what they have, the
parties represented could end up as losers to varying degrees come June 9th. That
rather suits Theresa May’s Tories just fine.
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