- Fri Jul 21, 2023 11:02 am
#49209
Well, two cheers on the by election results, with the Tories managing to hang on to Uxbridge and West Ruislip by the skin of their teeth, thanks largely to successfully weaponising an essentially local issue(ULEZ expansion) in a seat that has always been Conservative. On the bright side of the ledger, an absolutely massive swing to Labour to gain Selby and Ainsty and a fine demonstration of the value of tactical voting to deliver the kind of stunning by election win that has become a bit of a Lib Dem speciality.. Both of the latter two results bode rather well for the coming General Election - for Labour, and for the Lib Dems, too.
What are the lessons for Labour? First, the Tories' use of the ULEZ expansion issue to shore up their vote is a useful reminder of what we are up against at the coming general election. The Tories will undoubtedly fight like a cornered rat. Imagine that Starmer had trimmed Labour's policy positions to advocate Brexit reversal, immediately scrapping the two child benefits restriction, and the wholesale nationalisation of the rail, water, and energy utilities. Then substitute any one of those issues, particularly Brexit reversal, for the ULEZ expansion issue, and you can see why Starmer's strategy to deny the Tory election machine that potentially election derailing ammunition is absolutely correct.
Secondly, tactical voting via an informal, tacit agreement between Starmer and Davey mutually (though not actively) to assist the campaign of the candidate best placed to defeat the Tory is an absolute must at the general election. It helped to achieve the landslide result in 1997, and can do something very similar in 2024.
Third, the magnificent Selby & Ainsty result confirms that Labour is still on course to return to government at the election. I hold still to my theory that the electorate has arrived at that "tipping point" at which voters are determinedly intent on evicting the Tory government by whatever means necessary when the election comes. Keir Starmer's achievement has been to position Labour in opposition perfectly to be the principal beneficiary of that tipping point, which is no mean feat in itself, given the Corbyn legacy. As has been noted by many, Labour still needs to "seal the deal" by putting forward an attractive manifesto offer that will provide people with a positive, active reason to vote for a Labour government. With possibly a further 18 months to the election, this is, and always has been, the final phase of Starmer's plan to achieve victory and restore Labour to government. I'm confident that this will materialise precisely as planned.
On the ULEZ expansion issue, I don't see it as something that will obstruct Sadiq Khan's re-election as London Mayor. Labour support in inner city London in particular is just too strong. It is also very unlikely, I think, to be a salient issue at the general election.
Last edited by Abernathy on Fri Jul 21, 2023 11:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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