Dear All
The battle
for the UK is really for the Labour Party, the battle of Scotland, although,
you might not think so, given the TV coverage seems to be focused on what
happens down south. One thing for certain is that either Boris Johnson or
Jeremy Corbyn will be rolling in 10 Downing Street on the 13th December. In
order for Jeremy Corbyn to do that neat trick, he must take back Scottish seats
lost to the SNP. Is that possible, well technically given that 30 out of 35
seats currently held by the SNP are marginal, the answer is yes. However, the
problem is not a technical issue, but one of events, personalities and policies.
If you take
the time to look at polling, the Conservatives from a UK perspective dominate,
a recent poll of 17% lead has put a spring in their step; even the Scottish
Conservatives seem to be rather upbeat in this election. Big poll leads have an
unfortunate tendency to whittle away, so it will be interesting to see if that
can be achieved by a Labour revival, especially in Scotland. Scotland may
appear a sideshow due to the SNP being so dominate but they are also skating on
thin ice. The SNP have for some time seen their voter share drop at elections,
but not enough to let other parties win seats.
Given there
are so many marginal seats dotted around the place, being the incumbent may on
the surface be great but it is like a tree branch which you can hear cracking
under you, some hear the cracking more than others. As well as polling, if you
look at the bookies you would think that the SNP has this election in the bag, in
Glasgow, not a single Labour MP is expected to be elected, but polling and the
bookies aren’t everything. There are the issues of loyalty and emotion which
could play in this election as well. Glasgow North East elected a Labour MP in
2017, against the polling and against the bookies, overturning the biggest SNP
majority in the city.
Labour
candidate Paul Sweeney is standing again, this time round, he has a good track
record to point to as well as thousands of satisfied residents who helped with
problems. His campaign will attract attention given that this time, the SNP
will be putting in a bigger effort to unseat him. 2015 saw Scottish Labour
effectively wiped out, the SNP won 56 MPs, the result of an emotional vote,
2017 saw the number drop to 35 MPs. So, the SNP aren’t as strong as many will
think, 30 of the 35 seats the SNP currently holds are marginal, with Labour the
principal challenger in as many as 22 of them.
One thing in
this election is that we will see surprises thrown up, when and where is
unclear but somewhere someone who everyone thought was fireproof will end up
getting burned. And if I had my way of putting someone to the torch, it would
be Ian Blackford, the pompous fool who took Charles Kennedy’s seat. This is one
character which people say that the Labour and Conservatives should stand aside
for the Lib Dems. Tactical voting is being promoted in this election however,
the political parties of the Union haven’t gotten on board with this other than
asking voters from other parties to lend them their vote. The Conservatives have
for a few weeks been pushing this line, how people will respond, we will see at
the ballot box.
Given we
have so many marginal seats in Scotland, Eight of the thirteen seats won by the
Conservatives and six of the seven seats that Labour took back, the outcome in
these marginal seats matter for both the Conservatives and Labour Parties.
There is a long way to go in this election, and although the Conservatives
appear 10 points min ahead, the task for Labour it seems is to deny Boris
Johnson a majority, that appears to me to be their goal. You can see already
that certain people are under strain, and with the tension expect to mount, you
will at least be entertained if not enlightened in this election.
This is
still the Brexit Election, this is the obstacle that the Labour Party must get
around!
Interestingly,
if the Labour Party in Scotland had a magical night on the 12 December and recaptured
all of the 22 marginal seats where it is second to the SNP, the political
landscape of the UK would be in touching distance of being changed. Labour
would need just over a three-point swing from the Conservatives in the rest of
the UK to win an overall majority. If, they didn’t achieve any of that, then
Labour would see the task as much harder, having to claw back 6 % in the rest
of the UK. This is why Scotland is so important for the Labour Party fortunes,
in a lesser extent important to the Conservatives. The 13 seats won by the Scottish
Conservatives meant that Theresa May was able to do a deal with the DUP after
she went to the polls, although I thought an early election was a case of bad
timing for her, and it was.
Finally, the
most recent Scottish polling, conducted in mid-October by YouGov, put the SNP
on 42%, the Conservatives were on 22%, the Liberal Democrats, 13 and Labour, on
12%. Looking at the Labour polling of 12% is scarcely believable, but a
reflection on what is and has to come in Scottish Labour …… a purge, a change
of direction, a new campaigning model and a more dynamic work record of CLPs
and activists. The Labour Party needs to be campaigning full time, all the
time, much in the same way that the Conservatives will need to do if they still
want to attempt Holyrood 2021. Campaigning is like puppies, not just for xmas,
but all year round.
Yours
sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign
for Human Rights at Glasgow University
3 comments:
I suspect, George, that the Conservatives will win this election unless something changes dramatically. I'm not sure about their ability to beat the SNP just so far, but you never know.
Personally, with Corbyn's wild mistakes and misinterpretations, and his take on Brexit, I doubt he's going to win. If he'd said "we're going to go forward with Brexit, support the vote, make it work for everyone, and move forward for this country" he'd have surged in the polls. I can't see that happening somehow, he's been bullied by momentum and remain labour, and unless he and his party very quickly hot foot it around Scotland to win back the voters, he's not going anywhere.
Of course, I'm aware that could be wrong, but that's just how it looks to me, really.
it will be 2028 before Lie@bour wins power "IF EVER". They'll have to wait until half the countries population has no memory of a Lie@bour government.
Dear Anon
Its anyone's game to win or lose.
George
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