Pacts over
coalitions: why it might pay to be independent rather than an insurgent in
England – Some perspectives on the 2015 General Election
by Simon Lemieux
The big questions and topics from the 2015 general election
are already spawning out in both the printed and virtual media. These include
the big questions such as: How did Cameron manage it? Why were the Lib Dems
routed? Why were the polls so wrong in predicting the respective Labour and
Conservative vote shares? How do we explain the SNP surge? I’ll leave those
very pertinent questions to others, and instead dwell on a couple of ‘side
shows’ in the election which can easily be overlooked, namely electoral pacts
and the role of independent candidates.
So let’s look firstly at electoral pacts. Much was (rightly)
made of the damage and defeat inflicted on Clegg’s cronies by the Lib Dem
participation in the Coalition Government – they apparently took all of the
blame for the unpopular bits and gained none of the glory. Like the Liberals
post 1918, coalition government impacted very badly on the junior partner;
Angela Merkel was right; whither now the Free Democrats in Germany or indeed our
own Lib Dems! But look across the Irish Sea and co-operation between parties in
a different sense, an electoral pact, worked very well. In essence, in the
tribal and frankly rather depressing world of Northern Ireland politics, the
two main Unionist parties (the DUP and UUP) learnt that putting candidates up
against each other in seats where there was not an overwhelming unionist
predominance, could let other parties in (both nationalist and non-sectarian).
This time round they did a pre-election deal in such seats. Result, two net
unionist gains from a total of 18 seats- one for the DUP and one for the UUP,
in the constituencies of Fermanagh and South Tyrone, and East Belfast. The link
below explains it all rather well, and do watch Tom Elliott’s speech for a good
bit of unionist rhetoric.
Moral – don’t split the vote and let the real bogeyman in. So,
would it have been more effective and interesting to have seen in some constituencies
a Green/Labour electoral pact, and a UKIP/Conservative electoral pact? A
progressive alliance versus a reactionary one? I think there could have been
considerable electoral logic in that at least for Labour this time round though
in many constituencies they failed to win or lost, the UKIP candidate came
second…….. Perhaps it would have worked
better for the Tories/UKIP and enabled a centre-right government to have had an
even more comfortable majority. Had the
Tories stood aside in Great Grimsby for example, UKIP might well have taken it.
Of course, I don’t think such pre-election deals are very likely over here on
the mainland, and also they might affect voting behaviour in any case (would ex
Labour UKIP voters, rally behind a Tory, probably not). In England, the
insurgent parties are in (large) part the new receptacle for protest votes,
which makes the scenario different from that in Ulster. Still, it is an
interesting observation that pacts trump coalitions.
The other interesting feature largely unremarked by
commentators is the very gradual emergence of genuine independents. By this I
don’t mean the genuinely wacky, minor parties or those forced out of their own
parties who are making the political equivalent of ‘revenge porn’ – can anyone
think of possible example near to home?
No, I mean well-regarded local candidates often serving councillors
(Independents) or prominent campaigners. True, their numbers are few (no doubt
a £500 deposit deters many) and current chances of success fairly slim (though
remember Dr Richard Taylor, MP for Wyre forest who was elected twice on a
health care issue programme) but some did fare remarkably well in 2015. The
most impressive result I have come across in 2015 was in the safe Conservative
seat of East Devon where the independent candidate, Claire Wright, managed an
impressive 24% share of the poll easily outpolling the Labour, Lib Dem and UKIP
candidates. See her campaign website here: www.claire-wright.org
Nearer to home, the ex-council leader on the Isle of Wight,
Ian Stephens, also ran as an Independent and managed a respectable 4.5% of the
poll. Okay, he didn’t beat any of the main parties but still the development is
noteworthy. Both candidates (and I’m sure many other similar candidates)
emphasise their ability to speak up for and listening to the concerns of
ordinary people without the ties of party; ‘political nimbyism’ as it were
perhaps. Personally, I have rather a soft spot for such candidates due not last
I suspect, to my instinctive dislike and distrust of party machines. With the
rise of social media, YouTube etc, my own hope is that we’ll see a rise in the
number of such ‘anti party political’ candidates; perhaps they can engender the
higher levels of political engagement and participation that we currently
bemoan? It’s always good to back the
Davids against the Goliaths, unless they are completely nuts or a cover for sinister
extremism. Will my hopes be met, well let’s wait and see in 2020 which will of
course witness both a US Presidential election and a UK general election. Just
under five years to go and counting down….
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