The national picture is now clear (as mud). The overall result of this
general election that Theresa May didn’t need to have called shows that, whilst
the Conservatives share of the national vote increased, their, albeit previous
thin majority, has now dissipated. Overall, it was a bad night for the leader
of the Conservatives and for her party. She, like her predecessor David Cameron
gambled and lost.
In contrast Labour had a good night with, against all of the odds,
Jeremy Corbyn leading his party to an increase in the number of its MPs.
Equally, Tim Farron led the Liberal Democrats to a better place than they were
in. And as for UKIP; its support has withered on the vine almost as quickly as
it grew. And at the time of writing it once again has to search for a new
leader. Surely the odds on it being Nigel Farage must be so very slim!
Here in East Devon the election dust has settled. We now know that
incumbent MP Hugo Swire has been re-elected and obviously receives
congratulations for that. But, despite his slightly increased share of the vote
has he been damaged in the process?
He was strongly challenged by Independent Claire Wright who also
increased her share of the vote since the 2015 general election when she first
took the fight to Hugo Swire. Interestingly for a constituency such as East
Devon, the Labour vote also increased, and no surprise at all was the fact that
the UKIP vote crashed and burnt.
As we know the result in East Devon was –
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
+/-%
|
Hugo
Swire
|
Conservative
|
29,306
|
48.5
|
+2.1
|
Claire
Wright
|
Independent
|
21,270
|
35.2
|
+11.2
|
Jan
Ross
|
Labour
|
6,857
|
11.4
|
+1.1
|
Alison
Eden
|
Liberal
Democrats
|
1,468
|
2.4
|
-4.4
|
Brigitte
Graham
|
UKIP
|
1,203
|
2.0
|
-10.6
|
Peter
Faithfull
|
Independent
|
150
|
0.2
|
+0.2
|
Michael
Val Davies
|
Independent
|
128
|
0.2
|
+0.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
All of this was on a turnout of 73.3%, which was slightly down on the
last general election in 2015. Where was the other quarter of the East Devon
electorate? It really is a scandal that in a mature democracy where men fought
and died in wars to secure our freedom to vote and engage in robust political
discord, and where women fought, and even died to gain the franchise, so many
electors really just couldn’t be bothered to pop down to their local polling
station.
Hugo has been re-elected with a majority 8,036, which has significantly
dropped from the last election by a third. That is in part why Zorro asks
whether Hugo has been damaged, particularly at an election where he could
reasonably have expected to have increased his majority as the UKIP vote was
always going to be squeezed to his advantage.
Hugo really didn’t enjoy this campaign as he has today made clear in a
BBC television interview http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-england-devon-40112127?ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter&ns_campaign=bbc_live&ns_linkname=593a3912e4b0a9016d3e6e39%26Hugo%20Swire%20criticises%20his%20East%20Devon%20competitors%26&ns_fee=0#post_593a3912e4b0a9016d3e6e39
Perhaps Hugo has had it a bit too politically easy in the past? The
challenge to him and the one party domination of East Devon has certainly
stepped up a gear or two over recent years. But that surely was to be expected?
Hugo is a representative of a party that for the past seven years has put the
country through austerity measures which have particularly hit those in society
who were already struggling.
Until not so long ago he had his moment in the political sunshine as a
government minister. He has been the elected representative at Westminster of
the East Devon electorate. So against this entire backdrop Zorro argues that it
was inevitable that some robust challenge would eventually come his way. And in
this election it did more vocally than ever before, more damaging than before.
Perhaps Hugo has lived a sheltered political life. Zorro would contend
that in many constituencies around Britain incumbent MPs of all political persuasion
regularly receive robust and regular challenge from electors and commentators.
It’s called being held to account! That’s the price you pay when you are an
elected politician!
Hugo claims to have been abused and verbally attacked during the
campaign by supporters of Claire Wright. He reports some of his posters were
either removed or defaced. Zorro has to take his claims at face value. Zorro
will defend robust challenge, but abuse isn’t helpful or appropriate.
But Hugo wasn’t the only candidate who faced the same attacks. Claire Wright
and some of her supporters had their posters stolen too! Zorro has seen some of
the vile social media comments posted against Claire Wright supporters. All of
that too isn’t helpful or appropriate.
In this election Claire Wright and her team of some 700 enthusiastic
volunteers managed to mobilise over 21,000 electors to vote for her. That is a truly
remarkable achievement, particularly if one recalls that in the seven weeks
since the election was called Claire Wright has had to decide whether to stand
as a candidate, put together a campaign team, recruit volunteer workers raise
around £13,000 to fund her campaign, produce, print and distribute a manifesto,
produce, print and distribute leaflets, pound the streets and shopping areas of
East Devon to engage with voters, attend hustings meetings to explain her views
to voters and work out how to juggle all of this with both a personal and a work
life.
With all of this Claire was able to significantly increase the number
of votes (up to 21,270) over those she received in the 2015 election, as well
as increasing her share of the vote by over 11%.
Come on Hugo give her credit, albeit grudging credit, for taking a
significant fight to you. Be the big man. Be magnanimous in victory. Surely,
even you can do that!
Compare how Claire Wright responded to the (disappointing) result when
interviewed by the BBC, to that of Hugo – http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-england-devon-40112127?ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter&ns_campaign=bbc_live&ns_linkname=593a3e12e4b0831b670303e7%26Claire%20Wright%20defends%20her%20campaign%26&ns_fee=0#post_593a3e12e4b0831b670303e7
As at the time of the 2015 election, Zorro argued early in this
election that the Labour, Liberal Democrats and Green parties should all stand
aside in East Devon in order that the anti-Conservative vote shouldn’t be split.
History shows that they chose to carry on their vanity politics by standing and,
yes, the anti-Conservative vote was predictably duly split with Claire Wright emerging
as the most popular of the progressive candidates.
Zorro would have hoped that in this election progressive parties could
have been somewhat tactical or pragmatic in how they approached each constituency.
Why, in one like East Devon where it would take a bigger miracle than either a
messiah like Jeremy Corbyn or the Liberal Democrats’ Tim Farron could every
dream of for either party to have the slightest hope of winning East Devon?
So, why did both Labour and the Liberal Democrats fight this seat? Why
did they not do as the Greens did and put no candidate up? Why did they, as predicted
split the anti-Conservative vote? Those who are members and leaders of these
parties really need to think about the bigger picture. They need to start to
think about what serves the electors of East Devon best – is it having their
party name on the ballot paper or removing a Conservative MP?
Zorro is no mathematical genius but when you add the number of votes that
Claire Wright received to those cast for Labour and the Liberal Democrats in
the constituency yesterday you get – 21,270 + 6,857 + 1,468. All of this totals
29,595 or 49% of the total vote.
Compare this total anti-Conservative voting against (an even improved)
vote for Hugo Swire of 29,306 or 48.5% of the total vote. And what does that
show? It shows that a progressive alliance in East Devon could have won! Even
Hugo must be doing the sums and wondering what might have been or might be in
the future.
It is highly likely that before the year is out we will all be
subjected to another election. Whether the Conservatives are propped up by the
DUP and try to govern or whether Labour try to form a minority government the
margins on either side are so very slim that “stable and strong” (sic) politics aren’t going to be. And Zorro
hasn’t even mentioned the Brexit calamity facing whoever tries to govern.
So, Zorro argues that Claire Wright has demonstrated that she is the
leader of progressive politics in East Devon. Labour, Liberal Democrats, Greens
and East Devon Alliance need to collectively seize the moment. There are things
that need to be done at District and County Council level that require new
alliances to be built.
More urgently, the Labour, Liberal Democrats and Green parties need to
prepare for another general election by building on Claire’s excellent and engaging
campaign and ensuring that she is allowed to receive their support to
singularly take the fight to Hugo. The timing for this could not be better.
Here we should steal the Labour slogan “For the many, not the few”.
The many are the collective of anti-Conservative voters out in East
Devon who desperately want change. The few are those whose votes are
effectively thrown away in East Devon by being drawn to the vanity politics demonstrated
by both Labour and the Liberal Democrats.
The challenge is now to coalesce behind Claire Wright and prepare for
the next general election. It’s time for brave actions by anti-Conservative
parties!
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