Yesterday’s
local election results in England, Scotland and Wales, were good for the
Tories, with all of the results in they have gained 562
councillors and won control of an extra 11 councils. They also won four of the
six ‘metro’ mayor contests too. If this pattern of results is repeated in the
general election next month, then we are looking at something like a hundred
seat overall majority for the Tories in Parliament.
For Labour,
although it might have been worse, with them performing well in the cities of
south Wales, and winning big in the ‘metro’ mayoral elections in Manchester and
Liverpool, it was overall a very poor result though. They lost ground to the Tories in
Lancashire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, and control of seven councils overall and
losing 382 councillors in all. You can’t spin that in any other way than bad, but I will
attempt to later in this post.
The Lib Dems,
who had high hopes of making big gains, and were all set to use these local
elections as a springboard for next month’s general election. They did not make
the hoped for gains in the south west of England though, and more of this later as
well. Overall the Lib Dems lost 41 councillors net.
UKIP had a
meltdown in this election, losing all of the council seats they were defending
and gaining only one in Lancashire, a net loss of 145 councillors. It is hard to
see where UKIP goes from here, but they must surely think about disbanding all
together. I predicted
their demise in October last year, because there isn’t really any point to
them anymore, now they have achieved what they set out to do, get and win a
referendum taking the UK out of the European Union (EU). The Tories appear to
have taken their voters with their hard Brexit stance and tough talk about the
negotiations with EU.
The Green
Party, made modest gains in these local elections, with a net gain of 6
councillors, but the Greens are the only party, other than the
Tories, to make any net gains in England. The Greens gained two councillors in
Somerset and one in Dorset, Devon and Gloucestershire in the south west of
England, which gives a clue as why the Lib Dems didn’t do as well as they were
hoping for in this region. This bodes well for the Greens in their number two general
election target seat of Bristol West, in the south west. The Scottish Greens
gained 5 councillors in Scotland also.
The share of
the vote for the bigger parties, which is something of a projection when
comparing local election results with general election forecasts, is:
Conservative
38%
Labour 27%
Lib Dem 18%
From this
point of view it doesn’t look so bad as the general election opinion polls have
been indicating, with the Tories holding an average percentage lead over Labour
in the high teens and the Lib Dems polling around 12%. The turn-out was low at
around 30%, which is less than half of the probable general election turn-out,
so we should be cautious about drawing too many conclusions from these results.
The other
thing is, some people do vote differently in local elections than in general
elections, where local issues come more into play, and voters know that they
are not electing a government. This could possibly go either way in the general
election, where people may be more willing to vote tactically against the
Tories, than in council elections, but it may be that the less committed voters
will turn-out in bigger numbers and re-elect the Tories to government.
One thing is
for sure, Labour will need to perform much better against the Tories in the
general election or we are set for Tory hegemony, for perhaps two or three
general elections into the future. There are less than five weeks now until the
general election, which doesn’t leave much time, but Labour needs to at least
get into the low 30s percentage wise, and the Tories to fall further below the 38%
shown in the projection above.
If the Lib Dems can maintain something like 18% of the vote, or improve on this, in the general election, and crucially it is concentrated in constituencies where they are challenging the Tories, all may not be lost. There was no local elections in London yesterday, where, normally, the Tories don't do well. The SNP need to hold off the Tories in Scotland too. The Tories overall majority could be kept reasonably low, or even lost completely if all of this happens.
If the Lib Dems can maintain something like 18% of the vote, or improve on this, in the general election, and crucially it is concentrated in constituencies where they are challenging the Tories, all may not be lost. There was no local elections in London yesterday, where, normally, the Tories don't do well. The SNP need to hold off the Tories in Scotland too. The Tories overall majority could be kept reasonably low, or even lost completely if all of this happens.
I have to
admit, it is getting very difficult to be optimistic about next month’s general
election, but it not over until it is over. I may be clutching at straws, but I
still have some hope left, just.
In the Gospel Oak By-Election in Camden, Labour won by a landslide after the exiting Labour cllr stated she could no longer afford to live in the area.
ReplyDeleteBut what are we to make of the 36.24% turnout?
Alan Wheatley