This is part 1 of my 2 part series (Yep, its detailed ladies and gents!) Charting the outcome of Britain's 2019 General Election- what happened, its results and the longer term consequences, opportunities and risks. This first part concentrates on the 'Big two' and their mutual 'frenemy' the Brexit Party. Part 2 concentrates on the rise of the Celts and the dashing of Lib-Dem dreams as well as the macro effects this election will have on our politics. Enjoy!
So, after staying up all night on the 12th, into the small wee hours watching the 2019 General Election unfold, I explain below (in layman's terms) the details of what happened, why it happened and what we may expect to see in what is still a highly turbulent Britain. My publicly available Facebook real time commentary is also available.
Refer to the contents page (CTRL + F acesses sections of interest)
Contents:
- The run down
- The Conservatives
- They've gone left!?... economically
- Brexit means...?
- Going soft... on Brexit?
- Boris's Babies
- The Brexit Party
- A true 'Frenemy'
- A PR Snapshot
- The Labour position
- Loved the policies, but oh. Jeremy Corbyn?
- The Un-Civil War
- Cue outro and the tantalizing promise of a Part 2
I'm dividing this analysis into two parts.
PART 1= the big two parties and their common frenemy, the Brexit party, in detail analyzing what happened, the impact and what will happen now.
PART 2
= the smaller parties and the 'rise of the gaels' as well as the collapse of the Lib-Dem dream and the macro effects of this election on British politics.
Without further ado, lets begin!
The run-down:
-Labour's northern 'Red Wall' was breached by the Conservatives in an historic victory
-The Conservatives have shifted economically to the left, but then so has the country (more generally)
-This Conservative shift is because Labours policy offering appears still popular among the electorate, but the countries dislike of Corbyn's leadership as well as Labour's policy on Brexit sealed Labours fate and far outweighed the popularity of their individual policies (Note the fact that compared to 2017 Labour were offering far more comparatively radical policies did contribute to their defeat- while the both Labour and Conservative voters want more state intervention and public services, free broadband was not high on the agenda, the issue for Labour then was also that they offered too much in a short burst).
-The Scottish National Party dominated Scotland
-There are now for the first time ever more nationalist seats in Northern Ireland (10) than there are Unionist (8)
-This was an election to see which leader was least unpopular, not who was better.
-While in Parliament at least this will end the Constitutional quarrel over Brexit, as both remain-leaning opposition groups have been culled, and the Conservative majority is large enough for Boris Johnson to comfortably sideline the previously influential 'hard-brexit' groups like the European Research Group, a new Constitutional battle opens up with the SNP having swept all before them in Scotland, which gives them a mandate they will argue, for a second Independence referendum.
It was not an election of 'triumph' for anybody though and before I get shouted at for being blind to the historic Conservative gains in the North (and they are historic, make no mistake), let me explain. The Conservative vote share in 2017 was 42.4%, there vote share in 2019 is now 43.6%. This is not a huge victorious swing to the Conservatives, its a change of 1.2%. What really happened was that Labour's vote share collapsed, in 2017 it was riding at 40%, in 2019 its now 32.2%. Both parties in 2017 were riding on their 'highest vote share' in recent decades, so Labour essentially got toppled off its top spot, and this is clearly seen as parties like the Liberal Democrats increased their vote share from 7.4 in 2017 to 11.6% this time around.
If we add to this picture the fact
that nearly 50% of voters have a negative opinion of Boris Johnson, and equally that
only 49% of voters feel that Boris Johnson would be a good Prime Minister and that for those who voted Conservative, unlike for other parties there was no expectation of of trusting their motives and policy once in office, and a picture emerges that this is not a positive endorsement, to paraphrase another analysis, but Boris Johnson and the Conservatives have become not popular,
but 'less unpopular'. Labour on the other hand failed to improve their situation, Corbyn for instance had an
approval rating of only 31%, and as we see in the vote share, got eaten into by a growing Lib-dems, SNP and indeed importantly up north saw the Conservatives make inroads into their heartlands.
This Conservative growth in the North came somewhat at the expense of their position in the South of the country (hence why their vote share stayed pretty much the same as 2017- its geographically shifted). An epitome of this is there loss of the affluent London suburb of Putney to Labour, but more typical is that in the seats in the South's urban areas that they did hold or take, their vote share dropped- for instance
Kensington become a Conservative win despite a drop of -4.3% in their vote share from 2017, simply because the Liberal Democrats split the Labour vote, due to Brexit and Corbyn's unpopularity. So this is not a clear picture of sweeping the nation up, the story instead is one of geographical voting shifts, that are potentially temporary. Something the Conservatives themselves acknowledged both on the night and also in Boris Johnson's own victory speech when he said;
"You may have only lent us your vote, you may not see yourself as a natural Tory...your hand may may have quivered over the ballot paper before you put your cross in the Conservative box, and you may think you will return to Labour next time around"
This is a recognition both of the work now needed to be done to 'bank' (as one former Conservative Cabinet minister said on the night) these new Northern seats over the next five years, lest the Conservatives lose their majority by 'default', once the pressing issue of Brexit (The core reason that so many of the former Labour seats who voted leave switched to the Conservatives) is perceived to have made progress, and Labour's leadership has changed.
For Labour of course there is a chance to regain these seats, which in many cases were won by slight changes to their vote share and compounded by a rather low turn-out. This can be
epitomized by the constituency of the Vale of Clywd, where the Conservatives have 46% of the vote to Labours 42% and turnout was down 2.4% since 2017. Interestingly here as in other areas, the existence of the Brexit party may have allowed the Conservatives to win, by drawing away Labour voters (4%) who could not bring themselves to vote Conservatives. The Liberal Democrat increase in vote share of 2.2% also may play a role. This highlights again the key 'turning point' this election for the Conservative majority, not being Boris Johnson or the Conservatives new-found popularity, but division over Brexit (and antagonism to Labours position), and doubts about Jeremy Corbyn as leader.
The Conservatives:
Even if it is built on a shaky foundation, this does not detract from the scale of the Conservative win - their biggest in 40 years! They took seats that had not been Labour since 1935 (such as Sedgefield, Tony' Blairs former constituency and a seat historically deemed an ultra-safe Labour stronghold). The Conservatives have five years now to convince their new working class Northern voters that they are a better fit for them. Failure to do so will risk losing the means to get a majority in 2024. The Conservatives have already started this process. Johnson in his victory speech directly spoke to these 'new' and possibly temporary Conservative voters when he said;
"I, and we, will never take your support for granted. I will make it my mission to work night and day, to work flat-out to prove you right in voting for me this time, and to earn your support in the future"
They've gone left!?... economically
The 'meat' of this of course is unknown. The Conservative manifesto was purposefully light on detail, but what it does detail speaks to a shift away from the Conservatives economically liberal credentials (
Something that Conservative commentators themselves had previously predicted under Johnson), Johnson has promised a 'Peoples Government' with
new protectionist state-aid laws for British businesses, 'buy British' requirements for Government contracts and the cancellation of corporation tax cuts. This is for the Conservatives a huge move from their traditional economic platform. Johnson indeed in his speech above cited that leaving the EU will allow the British Government to intervene in the economy far more than it is currently allowed to do so under EU rules. The promise is clear, the Conservatives are going interventionist, using a 'big state' to aid ailing aspects of the British economy or give a competitive advantage to British-based companies, this is anathema to traditional Conservative economic values, Thatcher would be rolling in her grave.
On top of this he has also made promises to put an extra levy on foreign home buyers to attempt to arrest high house prices for British citizens and has promised massive spending, £100 billion for infrastructure investment and untold billions for public services. £4.2 billion alone for trains, buses and trams and the Conservatives are promising
a government led national strategy for buses, this for them is a major scale-up in state intervention. Johnson's Conservatives essentially have fought, and are fighting Labour on its own economic turf.
'...change our economy for the better, making it more productive and fairer.'
So, with all this in mind Boris Johnson's Conservatives
truly have accelerated their shift from an economically and socially liberal party into an economically interventionist and culturally conservative one
as the Economist has complained. While traditional Conservative voters may not like this, Labour's offering
was to be even more state interventionist and promise even higher levels of spending. Thus they had no choice really but to stick with the Conservatives, and shut up. They will see tax-cuts in the future and a few token policies, but the attention of the Conservatives will be to prove to the British working class 'Up North' that they are the party for them. It's a familiar pitch of course, for those who remember Theresa May's commitments (in rhetoric at least, before Brexit consumed everything) to help the JAM's (Just About Managing) and working classes through 'One Nation' Conservative policies of intervention. This time the Conservatives have found the right tone and policy mix to make themselves tolerable to many Northern Labour voters, while also offering clarity on Brexit which has allowed the North to make the switch it did not fully do in 2017.
What this does mean is that the 'Britannia Unchained' hopefuls, like Dominic Raab and the Conservative Free Enterprise Group, who were hoping for a return and revamping of Thatcherism that turned Britian into a low-tax, low-regulation, low working rights and welfare state have lost their influence and the ability to carry out this plan, for now at least. Johnson's big-state drive of protectionism, state intervention, state borrowing and state-led investment places them again on the periphery of the Conservative party.
Brexit means...?
In the longer term, it means that Brexit is still a hugely polarizing topic for British people, this election has essentially done nothing to resolve these divides, indeed as I point out in my Brexit Unpacked Seminar (book via my PR), it is unlikely the division will be healed anytime soon - it may take more than a decade. During this time, British politics, as we've indeed seen at the latest election, will continue to be highly volatile, with the issue being divisive enough for their to potentially be vote share in it for parties in the near-future, particularly as Brexit is a long process that will take years to achieve and then decades for Britain to actually realign itself economically and on the world stage. Debates over trade deals, the nature of Britain, its future economic model are all still to be fought, and the hard-remain and hard-brexit groups are still there, both with their particular visions for Britain's future. Remember the Euroskeptics did not disappear after the 1975 referendum came back that Britain supported joining the then EEC, instead they waited in the wings biding their political time until the circumstances were right to affect change to the entire direction of British politics. There is no indication that Europhiles will be different.
Going soft... on Brexit?
This divide though can be papered over, both as we've seen currently by FPTP overriding the polarization, but also by a government that pursues a Brexit line, and wins a successive number of times until the divisions while not diminishing, are replaced by other concerns. The Conservatives are well on their way to doing this arguably with this win, a win in 2024 may see the matter negated somewhat. It is also helped by the fact that it is fairly likely Boris Johnson will, with his very large majority, simply now
ignore the harder-brexiteers in his party, such as the ERG, who already were somewhat dubious of his Withdrawal Agreement,
but backed it lest they lose Brexit altogether. Boris Johnson on the other hand is not a 'natural' hard-brexiter. Its well known that in the run-up to the 2016 referendum he wrote two articles,
one in support of the EU and the other in support of Brexit. He is a pragmatist who will do what is necessary to keep his position and get his policies over the line.
Likewise in larger terms the sustainability of the Brexit project is reliant on its results being in the short-term not economically disastrous and in the longer term offering greater prosperity and opportunity for Britain. This also explains the Conservatives shift to the left economically, with the Government making a big deal out of the fact leaving the EU means they can now promise to bail out businesses effected by Brexit or economic downturns and give favorable trading conditions to British based companies (Again a position directly at odds with the ERG and right-wing of the Conservative party).
The country remains divided by Brexit and will continue to be so, in political terms the pathway is clear, and its likely with the Conservative majority being so large will mean Johnson is able to sideline the more 'hard-line' elements of remain and Brexit in Parliament, both in his party and out, and do a Brexit deal that is more pragmatic to his political circumstances, softer in nature and less disruptive.
Boris's Babies
No, not a new scandal, but the term being used to dub the new 109 Tory MP's coming to parliament. An interesting point to note, and one that adds evidence both to the point that the Conservatives are going economically left, but also that Brexit will be 'softer' (and certainly that the ERG and right-wing Tory economic groups are consigned again to the fringes of the party) is the fact that many of the new Conservatives are very different in age, outlook and class to the parties more traditional members.
There are social workers, teachers, doctors,
those with Tattoo's
(as the Sun drolly remarked) and above all some fairly young people. The new Conservative MP Sara Britcliffe who took the former Labour heartland seat of Hyndburn is only 24 years old, the youngest MP in parliament currently. These candidates were of course chosen by their local associations (with input from Conservative HQ) to both appeal to their northern voters, but also to directly 'detoxify' the image the Conservative party has built for itself since 2016, that of being pro-austerity, anti-teacher, anti-NHS and against the public sector. These new faces both support Boris Johnson's new 'big state' energy for the Conservative party, but will also be there to enforce it, it is in their interests that Johnson's platform comes to fruition, lest they lose their seats in 2024.
The fact many candidates are far younger, is also an attempt for the Conservatives to tackle a perennial problem since 2015- that being the party is consistently struggling to attract younger voters, despite Labour loss
it dominated among the under-45s,
it lacks activists on the ground, particularly when compared to Labour and
has a dwindling party membership, indeed the Liberal Democrats and SNP, two far smaller parties, almost have the same number of members. It is thus hoped that this 'new face' of the Conservative party may provide the bridge to start cutting through to both northern voters, and younger people.
With a Conservative party that is more left-leaning economically, that is state-interventionist, likely to be 'softer' on Brexit and is concentrating on 'winning' the captured Northern votes, we are in for an interesting five years and potentially a historic shift for the Conservatives (providing they do as they've said, it might be all merely rhetoric at the end of the day - if it is, we'll be talking about a major Conservative collapse come 2024). Note it isn't necessarily a new and 'radical' Conservative platform, it is a rejection of continuing Thatcherism, the death of British neoliberalism and a return to the 'One Nation' conservatism of the pre-Thatcher era, a term that is currently all the rage among Conservative MP's.
The Brexit Party
With this shift in the Conservative position then, is there room for Nigel Farage's potential 'Reform' party going forward? Certainly there are disgruntled traditional Conservative voters who are pro-small state feeling somewhat politically homeless in this new more populist British political context with all the major parties going along with the majorities desire for greater levels of state intervention in the economy to improve inequality and increase opportunity as well as to provide broader, better public services. Likewise
Farage is already worried that Johnson is going towards a far softer Brexit
(or Brexit in name only- BRINO)
now that he can sideline the ERG. However, only a small section of the brexit voting public (
around 10-18%) actually agree with Farage and want a 'harder' Brexit, though this is still a significant minority who could cause upset in the future.
A true 'Frenemy'
It is unlikely though that any future Farage party will do any better than his current Brexit party did in terms of winning seats. However, the Brexit party this election did have a rather significant impact on the vote share in the key battleground seats - they essentially split the vote, allowing Labour to hold onto seats
such as Sunderland Central. Here Labour were down -13.4% in vote share, getting only 18,336 votes, meanwhile the Conservatives received 15,372 up 2% and the Brexit party received 5,047, 11.6% of the vote. It is highly likely that the Brexit Party prevented the Conservatives taking the seat, this is a story that repeats elsewhere too
such as the Labour hold of Alyn and Deeside
where Labour received 18,271, the Conservatives got 18,058 and the Brexit party gained 2,678 vote- more than enough to have seen Labour lose its now tiny majority of 213. The Brexit party here thus acted as a conduit for Labour leave voters who had an option other than the Tories to express their preference, allowing Labour to fend off the Conservatives.
Another example of this is Hartlepool, where the Conservatives lost -5.3% of their vote taking only 11,869 votes, while Labour received 15,464 votes down -14.8%, with Brexit being such a clear priority for this area
which voted leave in 70% leave, the fact that the Brexit party scored a huge 25.8% of the vote, taking 10,603 votes makes it clear that without their presence, the Conservatives could have taken the seat or certainly made it a new marginal.
On the flip-side in traditional Labour seats
such as Delyn, the Brexit party split the Labour vote enough for the Conservatives to win by 'default'. Here Labour received 41.4% of the vote share (15,891 votes), if this is added to the Brexit parties 5.1% (1,971 votes) then even with some voting Tory instead, its likely Labour would have retained the seat as the Conservatives only scored 43.7% of the vote (16,756). This story plays out in other Conservative wins
such as Bury North
where the Conservatives won by a tiny 105 votes, the Brexit party here took 1,240 votes- more than enough to have seen Labour keep the seat if Farage's party had not stood here.
Farage's Brexit Party is a true frenemy for the Conservatives and Labour, both preventing them from taking more seats, but also allowing them into others by default through splitting the vote. This perception is added to in that Farge choosing to stand down his party in the Conservatives existing 317 seats more than likely prevented the Conservatives suffering losses in the South.
For instance, in Winchester, who voted
41% to 59% remain in 2016
the Conservatives saw a drop in their vote of -3.7% fended off the Liberal Democrats by a mere 985 votes, if the Brexit Party had stood here the Conservatives would have lost the seat.
A similar story plays out in Hastings and Rye
where the Brexit party could have facilitated a Labour win if they had stood.
However, this is not to say that Farage was integral to the Conservative win,
in traditional Labour seats like Bolsover
even if we combine the entirety of the Labour vote with the Brexit party, they still fall-short of beating the Conservatives. The Conservatives were more than capable of breaking into Labour's heartlands without the Brexit party, its just likely it would not have been on the same scale with Johnson getting a far smaller majority.
A PR Snapshot
Farage claims he
'hurt' the Labour party. This is true. But he also put a stopper to some Conservative gains as well. An interesting point that has been raised by Brexit party voters, Greens and Liberal Democrats is that the electoral landscape would look very different if Britain adopted a proportional representation (PR) electoral system. It is more democratic than Britain's current first past the post (FPTP) as it makes every vote count, and gets rid of 'safe seats'. However by being more representative of the electorate, it also tends to result in coalition government, which critics will point out tends to be far less stable than a 'winner takes all' approach and forces compromise.
Indeed this point is made clear by the Electoral Reform groups calculations of what our parliament would look like under PR currently- the Conservatives far from winning a large majority would actually be short of the 326 needed to gain only 288 seats. The Brexit party instead would be on 10 seats, instead of their current 0, while the Liberal Democrats would receive 70, Labour 216, Green 12 and the SNP 28. A coalition would thus be the order of the day. Watch out for my true pros and cons article in 2020 on PR vs FPTP, a subject with a lot of complexity behind it.
The Labour position
Labour can pat itself on the back for shifting the UK's political debate away from 'Should the state ever intervene in the economy?' towards 'How much should the state intervene?', that is small consolation to the horrific loss they have suffered against a Conservative party who has fully embraced this shift in the electorates direction. Labour
lost seats like Sedgefield
which has been Labour since 1935. They lost Northern mining towns that blamed the Conservatives for their decline under Thatcher. Their heartland strongholds were blown wide open. Even where they've retained seats, their majorities have come right down to the wire,
such as in Ashton-under-Lyne
where Shadow Education Minister Angela Rayner saw a drop of -12.3% of her vote share while the Conservatives grew by 5.3%.
This is not though a startling 'shock' process. An inkling of this was detected in the 2017 General Election,
where the Conservatives vote-share grew in the North, despite not winning seats there. For instance in northern areas
like Bishop Auckland
which Labour has held since 2005 has seen consistent Conservative growth, in 2015 the Tories vote share grew by 6.2% to 32.5%, then then rocketed up 14.4% in 2017 to 46.9% and now in 2019 has become a Conservative 'win' on 53.7% of the vote. It could thus be argued that this is part of a longer-term trend in British politics, the much discussed 're-alignment' as economic distinctions of left and right become less important (or as we've seen in 2019 they essentially merge to be a similar outlook) and instead a nationalist vs globalist divide takes hold. I would argue though this is a topic that needs its own investigation, and we'll also need to wait for the 2024 election result to be able to discuss it with any certainty. Currently the Conservatives, as they freely admit have a long way to go to ensure they 'bank' these new northern voters.
Loved the policies, but oh. Jeremy Corbyn?
The electorates economic shift to a left-wing outlook has held.
Labour on its policy platform is at its core popular among voters of all parties
(Note though 'core', this is important for a later point), hence why the Conservatives have moved into this space too. Polling after 2019's result found that
only 12% of British voters didn't vote Labour because of Labour's policies. Again this feeds into the fact that Britain generally has moved to the 'left' economically, and why Johnson's Conservatives have also followed suit. The issue then is not the core idea behind Labour's policies indeed
canvassers have found that outside London, voters liked Labour's policies, but they did not like Jeremy Corbyn's leadership. The shine of 2017 having worn off among the electorate. This proved to be the killer point, as while both Corbyn and Johnson are unpopular,
Corbyn is more so. Indeed according to Yougovs polling there, Corbyn and Johnson are both as equally on only 19% of the electorate trusting them to keep their prices, though Johnson actually comes off worse with 54% to Corbyn's 45% believing they would break their promises actively- despite this 36% of voters believe that Johnson would be a 'good leader' (A very low number) compared to Corbyn's 16%. Corbyn might be trusted more, but people did not feel he was leadership material in a race where it was essentially voters choosing the lesser of two evils.
To add further clarity specifically on what it was that was putting people off Corbyn,
we can turn to the Guardian, who interviewed former Labour voters in the former Labour stronghold of Sedgefield. Here it was found here that many either hadn’t voted or had switched to supporting the Conservatives out of sheer frustration. While Brexit naturally played a role, far bigger credence by these former Labour voters was given to a personal dislike of Jeremy Corbyn. This dislike was based upon a feeling that he ‘didn’t understand them’. One life-long Labour voter who regretfully had abstained this election said t was because Corbyn was ‘weak’. Here we thus begin to see the crux of the matter.
The north-east is equally left-wing historically, but also patriotic. Indeed, it was noted that the many families had a history of serving in the armed forces or knew someone who did personally. Corbyn’s well known pacifism, and the perception of him being ‘unpatriotic’, by not supporting the armed forces, by engaging in dialogue with those who are perceived to wish harm upon Britain, and no doubt supported by several smear stories of Corbyn being a communist spy or terrorist sympathizer, all worked to Labour’s detriment. Corbyn as a leader is seen in the heartlands and no doubt by many voters across the country as being either unpatriotic or ‘soft’ on security.
For Labour though, they tend to be perceived by voters as
being significantly weaker in this area, thus when they are successful it is with leaders who double down on domestic and foreign security, as with Attlee whose wartime record and credentials as a veteran were clear, or Blair- who set out publicly to have a strong foreign policy and coined the phrase ‘tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime’. Labour essentially have to work twice as hard to convince voters that national security is safe in their hands due to stereotyping essentially. Corbyn though with his pacifistic leanings (highly admirable, but not vote winning), his opposition to Britain’s nuclear deterrent and his more academic approach to security (for instance in response to the recent London Bridge terror attack, the Conservatives immediately promised no more early release for those convicted of terrorism, while Corbyn argued for this to be done only on a ‘case by case’ basis- a very considered response, but not a vote winning one for a party that has to try twice as hard to compete with the Conservatives as being trusted with domestic and foreign national security).
Add to this mix the consistent criticism of Corbyn’s handling of antisemitism in the party, his failure to really crack down quickly on this, and be seen to be doing so, feeding into the narrative that he is a ‘weak’ leader, and its very apparent why Labour lost their core vote. Policy = fine, Corbyn’s leadership = distrusted. Now what I’ve said here is not that Corbyn actually is a bad person, anyone whose seen his personal record knows that he is moral, and upstanding and a genuine person, but he was not the leadership that the Labour party needed to beat a revitalized Conservative party that is taking the fight to them on their home-ground.
While indeed the media portrayal around Corbyn was incredibly negative with a heavy bias,
as the University of Longbourgh has proven. Their findings highlight that the media was specifically negative to Corbyn, far more than it ever was with the Conservatives, Labour scoring a -70% for coverage (i.e. the vast majority was negative), while the Conservatives received +30% positive, a huge difference.
But this negativity was to be expected given the past three years had pretty much followed the same course
as the University of Longbourgh had shown in 2017. The reality of this environment meant that firstly Labour would need one hell of a media strategy to combat this- in this latest election it turns out they clearly failed in this area, and secondly in this environment a leader like Corbyn, with his pacifism and particular past seeking dialouge with groups hostile to Britain has a clear handicap. Thus, Corbyn as leader was the main problem for Labour. Again going back to the Guardians findings in Sedgefield, a seat where they still hang the banners in their locals that the miners marched under against Thatcher, and yet which voted Conservative for the first time since 1935; out of every five doors knocked on, two were concerned with Brexit while three with Corbyn.
The second issue, was of course Brexit. Labour lost its leave voters who were integral to its northern heartlands
which had overwhelmingly voted to leave during the 2016 referendum, while the Conservatives managed to
hold onto their own leave voters
(partly informed by the distaste for Corbyn). This double whammy of Corbyn and Brexit acted in tandem to see Labour's northern strongholds collapse, while gains against the Conservatives were limited around the country. The exception to this of course being Remain-voting urban centers like London,
where Labour gained Putney from the Conservatives, an affluent suburb where Labour's offer of a second referendum, combined with its popular policy platform appealed. It might also be of interest to those looking into the realignment of British politics to note that Labour's vote share in Putney has consistently been increasing since 2015, from 30% in 2015, to 40% in 2017 and now 45% in 2019 mirrored by a drop in Conservative support.
A final though smaller aspect of why Labour lost is in the sheer amount of policy offerings that came out of nowhere. Take the promise of widespread and free broadband across the UK. The original pledge was a surprise, it had not been on the public radar prior to that in the same way debates about rent caps, train, energy and water nationalization have been. With little time to be properly digested, 62% of voters really liked the idea of free internet access to all homes and businesses,
only 1/3rd were in favour of the partial nationalization of Open Reach this entailed, this was a half-way there policy. There is a valid economic discussion to be had about how access to 'free' broadband directly to homes and businesses
can benefit an economy undergoing the fourth industrial revolution. Voters responded on gut at the surprise offering and were only partly convinced, with much to be desired.
Labour's 'core' policy offerings as evidenced previously are popular with the public. 2019 saw a swathe of dramatic increases in the amount Labour was offering. This clearly had some detrimental impact, as while the Conservatives also threw out policies of state-intervention and spending pledges,
that the IFS blasted, Labour who had done this to a far greater degree, gained larger negative interest
when the IFS blasted them, resulting in more media exposure as the Conservatives slipped under the radar, with their huge spending pledges, by being comparatively less than Labours surprise extras. This was helped by the Conservatives traditional reputation of fiscal responsibility and the implementation of a decade of austerity which meant that Conservative spending might possibly (My own opinion here) be received less sceptically by the electorate, while Labour who are expected to make radical (for the UK at least) offerings are more in danger of appearing to 'bribe' the electorate if they go 'too far' as arguably they may have done this time, compared with their more modest 2017 (which was still for the UK at least radical) platform for change. The danger then when the Conservatives adopt a similar approach as they have in 2019 is that they will come across looking potentially far more 'Government worthy'- which polling confirms as the
Conservatives despite a very vague manifesto and the IFS criticism were still far more trusted with the economy than Labour.
The Un-Civil War
In the wake of Labour's defeat, Corbyn has said that he will not lead the party into the next election, but he also stated he will continue to lead the party during a 'period of reflection' and stated,
"I will discuss with our party to ensure there is a process now of reflection on this result and on the policies that the party will take going forward...And I will lead the party during that period to ensure that discussion takes place and we move on into the future.”
Corbyn staying on for the interim while Labour discusses new policies, analyzes its defeat and talks about a new leader can also be seen to be a play from the parties Social Democratic wing to ensure they maintain control of Labours 'broad church' party, which in it contains various factions from the 'far-left' to the center (This faction is also dubbed the Blairites). By staying on Corbyn and his supporters hope to make sure that Labour do not radically deviate or alter from their current socialist/social-democratic policy platform (which again to a certain degree as we've seen is fairly popular among the British electorate). More than this though, it is to ensure that the next leader has a greater chance of being elected from this wing of the party, and not say from the Blairites or those who support Milliband's version of social democracy. A key force behind this of course is Momentum, and there have already been skirmishes between the Parliamentary Labour party factions and them,
epitomized by Labour veteran and former Home Secretary Alan Johnson (who served under Blair) and Ed balls attacking both Corbyn's leadership, but also Momentum's role as a 'party within a party'
that had sought to capture the Labour party and drag it consistently further left.
Alistair Campbell had a fiery exchange with Momentum's leader Jon Lansman
as the results came in, as he blamed them and Corbyn directly for this defeat.
Critics of Corbyn offer the argument much as they did on the night that essentially Corbyn himself was vastly unpopular. Nick Cohen argues using polling statistics that;
'A vast poll of 12,000 voters, released tonight, showed Jeremy Corbyn was by far the single biggest reason voters gave for deserting Labour. Of those who voted Labour in 2017 but were less than 50 per cent less likely to vote Labour now, Deltapoll found the overwhelming reason people gave was they ‘don’t like Jeremy Corbyn’ with 46 per cent agreeing with that blunt statement.'
There clearly is a Corbyn problem. However, currently Labour Blairites, or former Labour Blairites like Alastair Campbell are using such an argument to ignore the Brexit factor.
Campbell argues that Corbyn's unpopularity was more to blame, and his refusal to take a firm stance on Brexit. While again there could be some truth to this, adopting a pro-remain position as Campbell advocates would still have seen Labour's leave voting heartlands go towards the Conservatives. The fact is that on Brexit Labour had a very difficult position, straddling as it did both remain cities in the south and leave towns in the north. In this context though, the appeal of Corbyn himself indeed did no favours though.
The debate about why Labour lost is only just beginning, and the coming civil war in Labour over the issue is starting to heat up. I am currently writing a deep dive article on the Labour party, its factions and how it functions, so watch out for that one! Broadly there are three factions in play:
- Social Democratic Corbyn supporters- Momentum, McDonnell, Abbot and co- these are people who are blaming just Brexit for Labour's loss, that they were in an impossible position, they hope to engineer it so that the next labour leader will be a social democrat of their ilk.
- New Labour- The remnants of the Blairites and the social democrats of Ed Milliband I would place in this category. These are openly arguing that Labour has only been successful in the recent passed when it was running on a center-left platform as Tony Blair did (Essentially neoliberal policies and a socially, but not economically to the left), they also tend to be Remain-leaning and thus place more emphasis on the failure of Corbyn's leadership and policy offering than they do on Brexit as seen by former MP's like Anna Turley who argued both for a second referendum on Brexit and has said of Labour's defeat that:
'For me, when you’re getting four doors in a row of lifelong Labour voters saying ‘I’m sorry Anna, I’m a lifelong Labour voter, I like what you’ve done, but I just can’t vote for that man to be Prime Minister’, I’m afraid that’s a fundamental barrier that we just couldn’t get across'
The three broad factions (with many differences internally simplified for the sake of the article and my own sanity) all of which compete with one another and who represent three different traditional Labour electorates, Corbyn's group represents the young, New Labour are the centrist and center left voters who feel that Corbyn is a disaster and has gone 'too far', and the Traditional Social Democrats advocate a traditional working class vote, older and Brexit supporting. There is thus no easy way for these groups to compromise as they share very different values, indeed
currently it seems like all three positions are simply digging in as these comments highlight, but if Labour is to ever make a resurgence they will need to somehow instead of destroying or removing the other factions, work out a way where they can be in coalition together- the 'broad church' that is needed by any British political party to actually win and gain a majority. With Corbyn gone, and Brexit at least perceived to be done (its not properly yet of course, that will take years) there might be the chance to retake their lost heartlands in 2024... this is providing the oncoming internal struggle isn't too bloody and polarizing and that the Conservatives are not wildly successful in convincing Northern voters through their new left-wing economic position of 'big state' Conservatism that they are now the 'real' party of the working classes.
Cue outro and the tantalizing promise of a Part 2
Here endeth then Part 1 on the tale of the 2019 General Election and its consequences. I hope you've enjoyed reading and that you'll join me for Part 2 which will come out sometime next week (Early Christmas present for you!). Part 2 will go into detail about the 'rise of the Celts' and the expected issues this may cause the United Kingdom as well as pay a visit to the funeral that was the Liberal Democrats election dreams as well as the macro effects it may have on our politics.
I'll hope you'll join me then, until then- stay warm, drink tea and make merry.