Protesting the Parliament shutdown August 2019 |
Richard Evans
member of Birmingham Selly Oak Labour Party
member of Birmingham Selly Oak Labour Party
The general election starting gun has been fired. Parliament is passing a law for an election on 12th December.
The Tory
right wing had been demanding the hardest of a 'no deal' Brexit and had
brought down Theresa May as Prime Minister, when her deal wasn't hard
enough. Johnson, after the Commons had prevented a no deal, then
rapidly changed tack and negotiated a deal to try to beat the deadline
of a Halloween exit that he had been promising all summer. His deal
effectively kept Northern Ireland in the EU Single Market and customs
union; meaning that there would be custom checks on goods between Great
Britain and NI. His revised deal also removed continuing EU worker and
consumer rights from the legally binding section of the agreement.
Government documents leaked to the Financial Times, show that the Tories
are planning to undercut the EU by loosening worker and consumer
protection.
The bill to approve
Johnson's deal was passed with a majority of 30 (including 19 Labour MPs
) but the government lost the vote on their timetabling motion to rush
the legislation through in 3 days. By doing this, it prevented Johnson
from meeting his October 31st deadline and would have opened up the bill
to being amended to reinsert worker and consumer rights and to maintain
a customs union with the EU. A confirmatory referendum may also have
been added.
The country is split
on Brexit, with polls for over a year showing consistently a small
Remain lead. But this is also largely a split along left/right lines
:with the right favouring a 'no deal' or a hard Brexit and the left,
favouring remain or a very soft Brexit.
In
the 2017 election, the two main parties won 82% of the vote as a result
of the polarisation over Brexit, with Brexiteers going to the Tories
and Remainers to Labour. Now these coalitions have been shattered. The
Brexit vote is split between Nigel Farage's Brexit Party and the Tories;
and the Remain vote is split between Labour and the Liberal Democrats.
The tracking polls have shown that as the Liberal vote increases, the
Labour vote decreases by an equivalent amount; the same mirroring is
taking place between the Tories and Brexit Party.
The
BBC 's tracker on 25th October puts Labour on 24%;Lib Dems 18%;Tories
36%;Brexit Party 11%. The Remain vote is more badly split because of the
blunders by the Labour leadership, which has consistently lagged behind
the mood of its members and voters; and has been too slow to move
towards a clear Remain and Reform position. Fatally allowing the Lib
Dems to re-establish themselves in May's EU elections, when Labour
refused to put forward a second referendum position. Johnson now
believes that he can win a majority by having a snap election. Even on
36%, it would be possible to win a working majority if the rest of the
vote remained split.
Johnson
was refused an election three times because he was unable to secure the
two thirds support in the Commons needed under the Fixed Term Parliament
Act. Now, the December 12th election has been called because Parliament
has voted for a law to circumvent the Fixed Term Parliament Act. It's
the first December general election since 1923 (when a minority Labour
government was returned after a Tory Prime Minister thought he would
win).
In Scotland, both main UK
parties will probably lose seats to the Scottish National Party. The Lib
Dems will expect to make gains in England. These will mainly be Tory
seats but the result of the election will probably hinge on how many
previously Labour votes they take in Labour /Conservative marginals. If
there is widespread tactical voting, it is possible that the Tories
could go down to a heavy defeat. At the moment this could be difficult
as the Labour leadership is likely to adopt a confusing position of
negotiating a Labour Brexit and then putting it to a referendum with
remain as an option but not to say which way it will recommend.
There
is a possibility of a modern day 'coupon election '. In the 1918
election, the Lloyd-George government, which had been a coalition from
MPs of different parties, gave letters (coupons) of endorsement to
those MPs who had supported it. It is possible that the Remain campaigns
will give the pro-EU candidates with the best chance of winning, a
'coupon', whether they are Labour, Liberal, SNP, Plaid Cymru or Green.
The
Labour manifesto will be more radical than that of 2017 with
re-nationalisation of the utilities; a large increase in the minimum
wage; a reduction in working hours; enactment of pro-trade union laws; a
green new deal on climate change producing jobs in de-industrialised
areas. It could even include a commitment to providing universal basic
services.
The volatility of the
electorate is higher than ever and is likely to move during the
election. Campaigning will be difficult with the dark nights of winter -
parts of Scotland are dark by 3.30pm. There is also a prospect of
violence against canvassers or candidates. Brexit is going to be the
number one issue by far. But if Labour wins, it could transform British
politics in the same way that the 1945 Labour government did. If the
Tories win a majority, it will be the most right wing government since
the second world war, looking to complete, what they see as the Thatcher
revolution.
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