Trust has been badly eroded in recent years by the actions
of politicians, with that process having gained momentum in the five months
since Johnson took occupancy of Downing Street. Johnson has attempted to ride
roughshod over parliament; has thrown his political allies under a bus and
expelled 21 MPs from his own side in order to deliver a Brexit that in his
heart of hearts, he surely does not believe in. The reputation of the media has
also come in for serious scrutiny, with a large group of voters having lost
trust in the impartiality of the BBC which is viewed as having given the
Conservatives an easier ride. Former BBC insiders have queued up to suggest
that the Corporation’s judgement on a host of news items has been somewhat
lacking. I am not going to join the group of BBC bashers but the very fact that
so many now question its role suggests that its hard won
reputation will not easily recover.
And then there is the role of the judiciary, which was
forced to step in when the government attempted to circumvent the parliamentary
process. The Conservative manifesto promises to set up a Constitution,
Democracy & Rights Commission in order to “look at the broader aspects of our constitution,” giving rise to
fears that a Tory government may extract some form of revenge following its
defeat at the hands of the Supreme Court.
Predicting the outcome of the election is a mug’s game when
we are so close to the opening of the polls. But the updated results from YouGov’s MRP model,
published yesterday, suggested that the Conservatives will win a majority of 28
seats – in line with my prediction from last week – and which is down from 68 in the results released two weeks ago.
If we believe there is a 65-70% chance of a Tory majority and a 5% chance of an
outright Labour win, this implies a probability of 25-30% of a hung parliament
– in other words, not negligible but not a highly likely event. A majority in
excess of 20 should easily allow a Conservative government to ratify the
Withdrawal Agreement Bill (WAB) by January and permit it to pursue whatever
form of trading arrangements it wants with the EU. Since the Tories have made
it clear that they will not extend the transitional arrangements beyond the end
of next year, there may be nothing to stop a government with a decent majority from
triggering a hard Brexit at end-2020 – either by accident or design.
But given that there is a considerable margin of error
attached to any election forecast, we cannot rule out the prospect of a Johnson
government with a majority of less than 20. This would mean that Johnson would
be as beholden to the lunatic fringe in his parliamentary party as Theresa May.
He can still get the WAB over the line by January but his room for manoeuvre
thereafter is likely to be limited as he will not be able to afford many Tory
rebels on key pieces of legislation. Matters turn more complicated if the
Tories remain the largest party but fall short of a majority. After all, the
DUP will not help Johnson out after his betrayal over the Irish border
question, and the election designed to bring the country back together will
have proved to be another gamble that failed. There are other possible outcomes
which do not involve the Conservatives in government at all, but we will look
at those in the event they become a realistic prospect.
However, the fact remains that whatever the outcome, the country
will remain divided on so many issues. Given the philosophical gap between the
two main parties, it is hard to see much cross-party cooperation in parliament
which sounds like a recipe for more of the fractious deadlock that has been the
soundtrack to the last two years. As far as Brexit goes, Leavers may well have
lost the war, largely thanks to the incompetence of Leave-supporting
politicians, but they will not be assuaged. And those in favour of Brexit may
yet experience buyer’s remorse if it does not go as planned. With the Brexit
economic dividend remaining as elusive as the unicorn, I predict that GDP
growth will remain sluggish – which in fairness will also be due to the ongoing
global slowdown. But a lack of investment will mean that the capital stock slowly
becomes less productive with the result that productivity growth – the key
driver of living standards – will likely remain stuck in low gear.
Neither Labour nor the Tories will be able to deliver on
their promises. Labour simply will not be able to boost spending as quickly as
they plan: If they can get halfway to their targets they will be doing well.
Meanwhile, the Conservatives will almost certainly expand fiscal policy by more
than their manifesto currently suggests. Spending on the NHS will almost certainly
have to rise because otherwise it is likely to be a vote loser for them by the time of
the next election (on the assumption that Labour chooses an ABC leader – Anyone
But Corbyn – to oppose Johnson). But rather than increase spending there have
been suggestions that the Conservatives will cut taxes – something that was not
in their manifesto – with Johnson indicating in a BBC interview that “in our first budget we propose to do more to
cut taxes.” Whatever happens, fiscal deficits seem set to increase.
In just over 24 hours it will all be over. Whilst I don’t
buy the Johnson slogan of “get Brexit done” I am sure I speak for millions when
I say “get this election done.”
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