On the 5 May, elections will be
held across the UK. In England local council and Police Commissioner elections
and elections for the Mayor of London and London Assembly will take place. In
Wales, the national Assembly and Police Commissioner elections will be held.
Scotland will elect its Parliament and Northern Ireland its own national
Assembly.
This will be a big test of public
opinion, the first since last year’s general election and much is at stake for
all the political parties involved. The Tory government has been rocked by a
series of public relations disasters in the last six months or so. Everything from
the budget unravelling, Ministers resigning, the Prime Minister’s tax dodging
antics, and the deep split opening up in the Tory Party over the EU membership
referendum. How will all of this play out in May’s various elections? I expect
some fall in support for the UK governing party, but how much?
For the Labour Party, this is new
leader Jeremy Corbyn’s first nationwide electoral test, and portents are not
all that good. The Scottish National Party (SNP) continues to hold onto huge
support in Scotland, much of it at Labour’s expense. Labour could well finish up third in Scotland, behind the SNP and Tories. The English Council elections
will be difficult for Labour too. Labour is also split, between MPs and members,
over the leadership of Corbyn. The last time these councils were elected was a
good result for Labour, so it is likely they will lose quite a few seats. But
how many seats…perhaps, as many as 200?
In these circumstances, with both
of the larger parties split, it should be good news for the Lib Dems. But after
their participation in the coalition government with the Tories, they remain in
the doldrums. In some areas of England, they may do reasonably OK in the
council elections, but I can’t see them advancing much, and I can’t see any joy
for them in the other elections, in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and and
London.
Then there is UKIP, being so
close to the their raison d’etre issue of the UK’s membership of the EU
referendum, with all the media attention this brings, will probably do well at
the English and Welsh elections at least.
In Scotland, our sister party,
the Scottish Greens, look set to gain a number of seats in the Scottish
Parliament, probably double figure representation, maybe as high as 13 or so
MSPs. In Wales, the Greens could win representation on the Welsh national
Assembly for the first time. Forgive me for not being up to speed on Northern
Irish politics, but we have a seat at present there to defend.
In England, the council elections
often come down to specific local factors and candidates, but I think generally
we will maintain the quiet, steady progress of recent years, and make some
modest net gains.
In London, the Greens hold two
seats on the Assembly currently and we have a good chance of retaining these
seats, with a chance of a gain. What makes me nervous, is that UKIP will gain
at least a seat, possibly two. One of these seats will come from the Lib Dems,
but if they gain a second, from where will it come?
These are the first nationwide
elections after Corbyn became Labour leader, and it will be interesting to see
how the Green Party does, since we are fishing for many of the same voters as
Corbyn’s Labour. My hunch is, we will not be overly affected. Our quiet
consolidation of electoral success will probably continue unabated.
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