In the parliamentary election we know that the Conservative candidate
for East Devon, Hugo Swire was re-elected. In this election Hugo Swire was
challenged by Claire Wright (Independent) and Steve Race (Labour), Stuart Mole
(Liberal Democrat) and Andrew Chapman (UKIP).
At the same time we know that nationally the Conservative Party was
elected to govern on its own, with its previous coalition partners, the Liberal
Democrats taking a real hammering, to the point of verging on being wiped out.
We know that the Labour Party was all but wiped out in Scotland where the
Scottish Nationalists were all conquering. UKIP, managed to produce a reasonable
showing as an overall percentage of votes cast in the election, but failed to
make the breakthrough in turns of parliamentary seats that it had both
predicted and expected.
Zorro was intrigued to understand
what lay behind the East Devon parliamentary voting figures. This was
particularly as in his acceptance speech Hugo Swire said “I am deeply honoured to have had an increase in (my) vote; my majority
is at its largest since I was first elected back in 2001”.
Zorro has pulled together the election results for East Devon
for the past four elections since Hugo Swire was first elected, covering 2001, 2005, 2010 and 2015.
This has then been compared election upon election and for the 2015 election
the local voting per candidate has been compared with how their parties (where
this is applicable) fared this time.
East
Devon General Elections 2001/2015 – votes per political party
|
2001
|
2005
|
2010
|
2015
|
Conservative
|
22,681
|
23,075
|
25,662
|
25,401
|
Liberal Democrat
|
14,486
|
15,139
|
16,548
|
3,715
|
Labour
|
7,974
|
7,598
|
5,721
|
5,591
|
UKIP
|
2,696
|
3,035
|
4,346
|
6,870
|
Green
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
815
|
n/a
|
Independent
|
n/a
|
400
|
n/a
|
13,140
|
Total voting
|
69,542
|
49,247
|
53,517
|
54,717
|
East
Devon General Elections 2001/2015 – percentage of total votes per political party
|
2001
|
2005
|
2010
|
2015
|
Conservative
|
47.4%
|
46.9%
|
48.3%
|
46.4%
|
Liberal Democrat
|
30.3%
|
30.7%
|
31.2%
|
6.8%
|
Labour
|
16.7%
|
15.4%
|
10.8%
|
10.2%
|
UKIP
|
5.6%
|
6.2%
|
8.2%
|
12.6%
|
Green
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
1.5%
|
n/a
|
Independent
|
n/a
|
0.8%
|
n/a
|
24.0%
|
What this information tells us is that Hugo Swire got it wrong in his
acceptance speech on the morning of 8 May. In this election he polled less
votes than in the last one, therefore he is less popular coming out of the
election than going into it. Indeed, Hugo Swire’s percentage of the votes cast
is in 2015 at the lowest percentage (46.4%) than in any previous election.
Hugo Swire’s lack of popularity is interesting when one recognises that
this election we saw the Conservative Party nationally increase its share of
the vote by 0.8%. So Hugo Swire did worse locally than his party did nationally.
That tells a story in itself.
Hugo Swire’s loss of popularity has to be compared with the fact that
the Independent candidate (Claire Wright) polled remarkably well at 24% of the votes,
and that the Labour Party, in a constituency that is well away from its
traditional heartlands, also did well to more or less maintain its previous
share of the vote. The big losers in East Devon, as with elsewhere, were the
Liberal Democrats whose voting share plummeted to just under 7% of the vote; a
long way from its heyday when it received just under a third of the votes.
East
Devon General Elections 2010/2015 – change in vote share
|
2010
East
Devon
|
2010/2015
%
Change
East
Devon
|
2015
National
|
2010/2015
%
Change
National
|
Conservative
|
46.4%
|
- 1.9%
|
36.9%
|
+ 0.8%
|
Liberal Democrat
|
6.8%
|
- 24.4%
|
7.9%
|
- 15.2%
|
Labour
|
10.2%
|
- 0.6%
|
30.4%
|
+ 1.5%
|
UKIP
|
12.6%
|
+ 4.4%
|
12.6%
|
+ 9.5%
|
Green
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Independent
|
24.0%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Turnout
|
73.7%
|
-
|
66.1%
|
-
|
In comparing the voting in East Devon against the national turnout for
the political parties this shows that Hugo Swire dropped his vote by almost 2% at
a time when his party nationally increased its share of the vote by just under 1%.This
shows that there is some unpopularity with the Conservatives in East Devon at a
time when the Conservative Party nationally is riding high.
Equally, the Labour Party in East Devon produced a percentage increase
in its vote, therefore outperforming its position nationally. This was probably
due to the local dissatisfaction with the Conservative Party, but more
importantly, the local and national flight away from the Liberal Democrats.
At the same time UKIP’s vote in East Devon was unable to increase at
the same rate as its national party did. This suggests to Zorro that its local candidate’s under performance reflected his
lacklustre and poor campaign. East Devon should have been a prime constituency
for UKIP to do well in, particularly when the local Conservative Party was performing
so badly in the way it was running the District Council.
But, the candidate who really has most to cheer about as a result of
this election is the Independent candidate, Claire Wright. Against a national
backdrop of an overall improved outcome for the Conservative Party, she came
from nowhere and stormed in to take a quarter of the vote. This is particularly
impressive when one considers that she had no political party apparatus or
funding behind her, and the past four elections have not had a consistent
independent challenge. Over the three previous elections a total of 400 votes
had been garnered for an Independent candidate.
Zorro remains of the view
that a collaborative coalition that works hard over the next five years could
mount a credible challenge to the Conservative Party which does not command the
support of 50% or more of the voters, let alone electors in East Devon. Indeed,
if you tally up the votes for the progressive candidates – Independent, Labour and
Liberal Democrats – Hugo Swire barely scrapes through with a majority. There is
a real lesson to be learnt here!
It’s still time for challenge!
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