Sunday 22 July 2012

A Swing In Its Step

Gideon Skinner writes:

As parliament enters recess, now is a good time to survey the state of the parties across the north of England. Since we last did this at the beginning of the year, we've seen scandals, the return of recession, backbench rebellions, local elections and an 'omni-shambles' budget (of which more below).

It certainly feels a very different political scene than six months ago – but to what extent is that borne out in the numbers?

By combining all of Ipsos MORI's polls from the first half of 2012, we have a nice base size that allows us to look at regional breakdowns – one of those key demographic factors that do show a real difference in political attitudes. And in fact the basic position hasn't changed much: the north of England is where Labour does best and the Conservatives worst.

Having said that, taking the six months as a whole, Labour has reinforced its hold on the north west and north east (although not in Yorkshire and the Humber), increasing its share there more than in any other region. The north east, in particular, is where we see the highest dissatisfaction with the government, David Cameron, and Nick Clegg, at 72%, 67% and 69% respectively (Ed Miliband gets his best rating in the north west – although even there half are unhappy with his performance). The Liberal Democrats also poll their worst performance in the north east, at only 5%.

So the overall picture is broadly the same, although with Labour taking an even stronger hold. But what happens if we look at the results before and after the major political event of the year so far – the Budget and the local elections which followed them – which neatly means comparing the first and second quarters of 2012? What is interesting here is that it seemed to have much less of an impact in the north of England as it did elsewhere, perhaps because Labour already had such a strong position. So there was no change in Labour's lead over the Conservatives in the north between the two quarters – compared to the Midlands, for example, which saw a 5.5 point swing to Labour.

As for the most important issues, as with everywhere else, it is the economy that dominates minds in the north, at 57% on average over the last 6 months, closely followed by unemployment at 37% (a seven point increase in concern about jobs from the 2011 average – although as with elsewhere in the country, when it comes to local priorities we see the importance of bread and butter issues like the condition of roads and pavements and facilities for young people). Not surprising when the north remains the most pessimistic part of the country when it comes to the economy, again especially in the north east, where since January 55% have said they expect the economy to get worse still. And here Labour has made real progress. Whilst around the country overall it has closed the gap on the Conservatives as the party with the best policies on the economy, in the north of England the turnaround has been striking – from a three point deficit in September last year, to a clear 15 point lead in May.

People in the north are also pretty pessimistic about the future of public services – for example policing, which 39% expect to get worse over the next few years. And yet as with elsewhere in the country, they see no easy answer to the economic problems we are in, being split right down the middle: 45% agree that there is a real need to cut spending on public services in order to pay off the very high national debt we now have, while 42% disagree.

So there are reasons for Labour to have a bit of a swing in its step when it considers its position in the north of England: reinforcing its dominance, taking the lead on economic competence, as well as Ed Miliband's personal ratings taking a fillip there. The Conservatives, meanwhile, show little signs of breaking through, as shown in the local election results earlier this year. None of the parties, though, can say they have an answer to the country's problems that convinces everyone.

If General Elections really were won and lost in the South East, then there would have been a Conservative Government with a large majority in 2005. In the days when that party used to win Elections outright rather than having to be propped up by someone else, then it did so by winning considerable numbers of seats in Scotland, Wales, the North and the Midlands.

The equally ignored battle between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats in the West Country and in Hampshire has also made the difference between a majority government and a hung Parliament at every General Election for many years. The consequences of that fact last time might even cause a bit of attention to be paid to the more westerly half of the South next time. But do not hold your breath.

Those are all much more conservative places than the South East. Hence their lack of support for the post-Thatcher Conservative Party.

By losing first many and then most of its Scottish, Welsh, Northern and Midland seats, and by failing to hold or regain ground in the West Country and in Hampshire, the Conservative Party first nearly and then actually lost power in 1992 and 1997 respectively. It seems that by 2015, they will have condemned the electorally key areas to darkness long into the morning for much of the year, by having imposed Central European Time with the connivance of a Coalition partner which has already collapsed north of the Wash and is ripe for collapse west of the Solent.

That, and even further economic collapse through the abolition of national pay agreements in the public sector. To be joined, in the extremely unlikely event of a Conservative victory, by lower levels of state benefits (what, all of them, even including the old age pension?) in the areas where the votes really count. No one in those areas must be in any position to purchase a private sector good or service. Must they?

In 1992, only the most obsessive political anorak had ever even heard of Tony Blair. And that was still the case on Golden Wednesday, when the Conservative defeat, and thus the Labour victory by default, became a done deal. Furthermore, the Conservatives’ failure to regain power first at all and then on its own has consisted precisely in its failure to regain those Scottish, Welsh, Northern and Midland seats.

By contrast, the Labour gains in the South East in 1997 were just a bonus, and the loss of most of them in 2005 made no real difference. Indeed, only in 2005 did Blair finally influence a General Election result at all. Specifically, he lost Labour 100 seats that any other Labour Leader would have saved. Thus he moved from being a mere irrelevance to being a positive liability.

However, the Conservatives, deprived of any significant parliamentary link with the areas that really matter electorally, entirely failed to register this. Instead, they installed as Leader a Blair clone, because he played well in the South East and in polls with the 34 to 38 per cent of determined non-voters dishonestly factored out. How did that turn out for them, then?

It would be pointless for the North of England (with a population considerably larger than that of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland combined) to remain in the United Kingdom if its economically leftish social conservatism serving and served by agriculture, manufacturing and small business, and rooted in Catholicism, Methodism and a High Churchmanship quite different from that in the South, were no longer able to support and to be supported, either by Scotland’s economically leftish social conservatism serving and served by agriculture, manufacturing and small business, and rooted in Catholicism, Presbyterianism and Episcopalianism, or by Wales’s economically leftish social conservatism serving and served by agriculture, manufacturing and small business, and rooted in Catholicism, several varieties of Nonconformity, and the sane High Churchmanship that provides the mood music to the Church in Wales.

The North would be at least as capable of independence as either Scotland or Wales, and would have every reason to pursue that path if they did. But who would then pay for the City to be bailed out next time, and the time after that, and the time after that? And what would the smug South East drink, or wash in?

But the grievance of England, especially Northern and Western England, concerns, not some “West Lothian Question”, but cold, hard cash. We probably have to talk about the English regions, even if we would prefer to talk about the historic counties from before an unprotesting Thatcher was in the Cabinet. Each of the present or, where they have been abolished in the rush to unitary local government, the previous city, borough and district council areas in each of the nine regions must be twinned with a demographically comparable one (though not defined in terms of comparable affluence) in Scotland, in Wales, in Northern Ireland, and in each of the other English regions.

Across each of the key indicators – health, education, housing, transport, and so on – both expenditure and outcomes in each English area, responsibility for such matters being devolved elsewhere, would have to equal or exceed those in each of its twins. Or else the relevant Ministers’ salaries would be docked by the percentage in question. By definition that would always include the Prime Minister. In any policy area devolved to Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, no legislation must apply in any of the English regions unless supported at Third Reading by the majority of MPs from that region. Since such legislative chaos would rightly be unconscionable, any Bill would in practice require such a consensus before being permitted to proceed at a much earlier stage of its parliamentary progress.

No one would lose under any of this: there would be no more politicians than at present, and both expenditure and outcomes would have to be maintained in, most obviously, Scotland and the South East for the twinning system to work. Is it conceivable that Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish voters would not also insist on full incorporation into it, with their own areas thus also guaranteed expenditure and outcomes equal to or exceeding those in each of those areas’ respective twins? Or else the relevant Holyrood, Cardiff Bay or Stormont Ministers’ salaries would be docked by the percentage in question. By definition that would always include the First Minister, and in Northern Ireland also the Deputy First Minister.

Ed Miliband, a Yorkshire MP on the East Coast mainline, over to you. You could do with a Northern foil to Maurice Glasman and Jon Cruddas, both of whom, invaluable though they are, are very much men of the South East, and especially of London. It says a very great deal for London that Blue Labour has begun there. But even so. And someone from each of the West Country, the North of Scotland, and Wales north of the Heads of the Valleys Road, would also be no bad thing at all.

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