LSE - Small Logo
LSE - Small Logo

Blog Admin

May 6th, 2011

Another election where (most) politicians failed to lead or connect

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Blog Admin

May 6th, 2011

Another election where (most) politicians failed to lead or connect

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

The early results today suggest a swing away from the Liberal Democrats in local councils, success for the SNP in Scotland and a win for the No campaign in the AV referendum. Charlie Beckett reflects on the elections and the referendum, and finds that they illustrate an ongoing disconnect between the voting public and the politicians, especially when much of the public is still worried about the effects of cuts and unemployment.

Elections are a wonderful way to tell us what we already know from opinion polls. Campaigns rarely shift the public perception, even during a referendum on a single issue. But these latest British votes seem to say something important, I think, about the continued failure of mainstream politics to communicate with the electorate.

Roughly speaking, the results for the local, devolved national and the AV referendum will, I reckon, be pretty much in line with the numbers from over a month ago. Of course, how they pan out in terms of seats and turn-out is still important. Likewise, the post-match arguments are as important as the campaigns in signalling the political response of the parties to their latest (un)popularity ratings.

Credit: Phil Long (Creative Commons via Flickr)

It’s also worth casting an eye across the increasing diversity of UK politics in the wake of these results. Scottish Labour has rightly acknowledged that it made a strategic mistake in failing to see how devolved power in action changed people’s attitude to the SNP. Scots now trust the SNP to run things and would prefer a party more thoroughly  disconnected from Westminster. Though I suspect the SNP may now over-reach themselves if they think this latest, historic result is a vote for further major constitutional change (yet).

Conversely, the Lib Dems have been slaughtered because they ARE in office. Suddenly, their supporters have decided that they don’t trust them (or perhaps just Nick Clegg) with power.

Add to this mix the pathetic turn-out  (and rejection) for the AV referendum and I think you get a salutary reminder of the continuing existence of the political disconnect between Westminster and the wider public.

The AV vote did not offer a real choice. The NO campaign was hysterical and misleading, but if the Yes campaign had had a decent case then they would have overcome the personal abuse and scare-mongering. In fact the public realised that they were not being offered anything like a significant reform. Certainly, it was not a change that would have had any significant impact on the inertia, corruption and irrelevance that the voters seem to think characterises Westminster party politics. The wonks obsessed about the marginal impact of voting systems and the latest attack poster while the public wondered how they were going to keep their job or pay their bills.

In the short term I think Nick should be very sad, David pretty chipper and Ed slightly concerned. The local election results suggest a return to two-party politics. That process will be helped, of course, by the retention of the First Past The Post voting system.

Steve Richards of The Independent was wrong to suggest that the Yes to AV vote would capture the imagination of a public angry at the current way of doing politics. But he was right to suggest that referendums have unexpected and explosive consequences. In this instance, it might just be the political petrol poured on the smouldering fire of Lib Dem local election defeat that blasts the coalition apart. In the end I think the Lib Dems will cling to the keys of their ministerial limos for as long as they can, but the odds must now be shortening on an early election.

I have written before about how coalition might help create a less frantic, more strategic kind of politics – or at least political communications. Come back in 2014 and that might look a reasonable statement if the economy is recovering and the worst acts of ‘structural readjustment’ have been averted. But right now, coalition is only working for one party, and funnily enough, they are the party  historically most opposed to sharing power.

This article first appeared on Charlie Beckett’s blog on 6 April.

Please read our comments policy before commenting.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

About the author

Blog Admin

Posted In: Alternative Vote (AV) referendum | Media and Communications | Party politics and elections

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported
This work by British Politics and Policy at LSE is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported.