Why the Liberal Democrats love UKIP, and how Nick Clegg may be the saviour of the United Kingdom.
It is a truism that in politics as in
war, my enemy's enemy is my friend. This is being seen in Scotland
right now, where Alex Salmond is rooting for a Conservative comeback
in the opinion polls down south in the knowledge that the more likely
a Tory government in 2015 appears, the more likely Scotland will say
Yes to independence in September.
(It must be strange for David Cameron
to know that the more likely it appears he will win the UK general
election in 2015 the more likely it is it will be the last ever UK
general election. The only person I can think of to have perhaps
experienced similar emotions is Adolf Hitler in 1933.)
Nevertheless, this truism is something
that appears to have been forgotten in much of the commentariat's
analysis of When Nigel Met Nick, round 2.
I must confess from the outset that I
have not yet had the dubious pleasure of watching this intellectual
joust between a somewhat posh, privately-educated, former City
commodity trader, MEP and self-proclaimed man of the people, and a
somewhat posh, privately-educated, former political advisor, MEP and
self-admitted son-of-privilege. However, it is pretty clear
that the general consensus was that the UKIP leader Nigel Farage
trounced Deputy Prime Minister and Liberal Democrat leader Nick
Clegg, leaving Farage 2 for 2, as the Americans like to say.
According to the opinion polls Nick
Clegg lost the first debate. he appears to have changed tack for the
second resulting in even less success, leading some commentators to
opine that in agreeing to debate Farage the Liberal Democrat leader
had made an enormous error. He provided a fillip to the Kippers in
advance of the European elections, and in the longer run damaged the
pro-European cause and his own party, by reminding a broadly
Euroskeptic British electorate that the Lib Dems, as well as being in
favour of vivisection, chemical warfare, castration of homosexuals,
denying women the vote, a 90% top rate of tax and the closure of all
private television stations, they are an avowedly pro-European party.
(Admittedly, I made up all the other policy positions apart from
being pro-European, but given the current political mood in Britain,
being pro-Europe or a Lib Dem is about as socially acceptable as any
of the others).
Still cannot believe what persuaded Clegg to challenge Farage to a debate, nearly as bad as Cameron's mistake in 2010 to debate Brown/Clegg
— Lord Ashcroft (@LordAshcroft) April 5, 2014
So Calamity Clegg has made yet another
catastrophic miscalculation, or so the theory goes. It's a theory
that doesn't stand up to scrutiny however. In fact, quite the
opposite: agreeing to debate Farage was a masterstroke by Clegg, in
that it created a win-win for the Liberal Democrat leader and his
party.
Lib Dem support remains in the
doldrums, stuck at about the 10% core support level, having lost most
of the soft-left vote after entering into a coalition with the
Conservatives. This 10% is the hardcore Lib Dem vote, for a great
many of whom the party's pro-Europeanism is part of its appeal and is
something which accords with their own outlook. The prospect of UKIP
success in May's European Parliament elections is something that will
fill them with horror. The fact that Farage's Billy Bunter blather
appears to have triumphed in the debates is likely to be a huge
disappointment, so they will take action in the only way they know
how in order to push back against the leaping Kippers: get out and
vote.
In a traditionally low-turnout election
such as that for the European Parliament, getting out the vote is
even more important than in a general election, because the
prospective return on investment is higher. Across England getting
the Lib Dem core vote to the polling stations has the added (yet
enormously important) bonus of its potential trickle-down effect on
Lib Dem candidates in the council elections. Staunching the bleeding
of the councillor base will provide an important psychological boost
as well as preserving the on-the-ground infrastructure that will be a
key element in successful Liberal Democrat defences of seats the
party currently holds. The real return on investment on getting out
the vote in May 2014 will be reaped in May 2015.
There is also another segment of the
electorate out there that, while not core Lib Dem supporters, is
amendable to the party's pro-European message and which may have been
reminded of it during the debates: other Europeans. Given the
party's relative low standing in the polls right now, if I were
strategising the party's European election campaign, I would be
putting resources into making sure that the Poles and the French and
the Spanish and the Irish and the Czechs who are part and parcel of
every town and community across Britain, but particularly in the
South and East, are registered to vote and are being bombarded with
literature telling them, in their own language where possible, that a
vote for the Lib Dems is the only way to help ensure that the UK
stays in the European Union.
These fellow European Union citizens
will not have a vote in the referendum that David Cameron has
promised for 2017 on whether the UK stays in or leaves the EU. The
European elections are their opportunity to express their opinion:
make this their referendum.
Brytania poza UE jest złe dla Wielkiej Brytanii i złe dla Polski! Głosować na Liberal Democrats!
La Grande Bretagne à l'extérieur de
l'Union Européenne est mauvais pour la Grande Bretagne et mauvais pour la
France! Votez Liberal Democrat!
Britain outside the EU is bad for
Britain and bad for Ireland. Vote Liberal Democrat!*
You get the idea.
It's not going to win massive numbers of votes and voters (because
contrary to the popular belief there are not actually that many
European migrants in Britain), but in whatever regions the party does
manage to retain an MEP, it will be the last seat on the list, and
the extra votes could just make the difference between scraping home
the last seat and leaving empty-handed.
Losing all its MEPs (unlikely but not impossible), would certainly wipe out any psychological boost that could be gained from not getting quite the kicking in the councils that had been feared and leave the party in bad shape looking ahead to the general election of next year. It'd be a small investment with a potentially pretty big return.
2009 West Midlands result; BBC |
Consider the plight of the Green Party in 2009: in the East of England, just 16,000 more votes (1% of the vote), would have won them at extra seat at the expense of UKIP; in the South West 12,500 votes (0.8%) would have given them a seat that was in the end won by the Conservatives. If the West Midlands had had 7 MEPs in 2009, as it currently does (it was awarded an extra one in 2011 when the Lisbon Treaty came into force), an extra 1315 votes (0.1%) would have given the seventh seat to the BNP instead of the Tories.
Losing all its MEPs (unlikely but not impossible), would certainly wipe out any psychological boost that could be gained from not getting quite the kicking in the councils that had been feared and leave the party in bad shape looking ahead to the general election of next year. It'd be a small investment with a potentially pretty big return.
A further advantage
from the debates for Clegg is that he got to try out two different
debating styles in front of prime time(-ish) audiences in advance of
the presumed pre-general election debates next year. Neither of them
worked particularly well from what I have read, but that then gives
him a year to work on it. Similarly the arguments in favour of
Europe and the EU have been given a dry run and need, it must be
said, some further fine-tuning.
But the real boost
for the Lib Dems comes from the boost for UKIP. Politics is a very
cynical game at times, and the bottom line is that the better UKIP
does in 2015 the better it is for the Liberal Democrat Party. A
plurality of UKIP support comes from former Tory voters: the more
votes the Kippers smoke out of the Conservatives, fewer of the 38
seats where the Tories are breathing down Lib Dem necks will be lost. That is the real prize, and the plan appears to be bearing fruit.
The changes since last week in @Survation Mail on Sunday Euros poll. pic.twitter.com/aLHqQgVC1X
— Mike Smithson (@MSmithsonPB) April 5, 2014
The change over past week in Survation/Mail on Sunday general election poll. Not good for blues pic.twitter.com/wx9yOg2rtL
— Mike Smithson (@MSmithsonPB) April 5, 2014
What's more, by
boosting UKIP and keeping the Tory vote down, the Liberal Democrats
are helping to spike Alex Salmond and the SNP's guns in Scotland (a traditional Lib Dem stronghold though one in which coalescing with the Tories is viewed only slightly more preferably than interfering with animals).
According to a new poll out this morning, the referendum result in Scotland is getting close to, in the words of a famous Scot, squeaky bum time. The No campaign needs all the boost it can get, because momentum is clearly now behind Yes.
According to a new poll out this morning, the referendum result in Scotland is getting close to, in the words of a famous Scot, squeaky bum time. The No campaign needs all the boost it can get, because momentum is clearly now behind Yes.
Panelbase #IndyRef poll reported in S Times has the gap down to 53-47
— Mike Smithson (@MSmithsonPB) April 5, 2014
Which just goes to
show that in politics my enemy's enemy's enemy also turns out to be
my enemy. Or something.
*I could have translated this into Irish, but as the Dutch authorities discovered, the result would be that pretty much none of the intended Irish recipients would understand a word of it.
*I could have translated this into Irish, but as the Dutch authorities discovered, the result would be that pretty much none of the intended Irish recipients would understand a word of it.
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