Friday 7 May 2021

Left behind

Exactly eleven years ago, on 7 May 2010, we awoke to find that the Conservatives under David Cameron had emerged from the previous day’s general election with more seats than any other party. This proved to be sufficient for them to form a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats which lasted until 2015. The Tories have since won a further three elections under three different leaders and are unlikely to relinquish their grip on power any time soon. Although yesterday’s elections were less important than that of 2010, they were nonetheless an important litmus test of the state of domestic politics given that they represented the biggest plebiscite outside of a general election.

In England, 143 local councils (including London) were up for election; 129 members of the Scottish parliament were elected and 60 members were chosen for the Welsh Senedd. The full results are not yet in but the Conservatives have performed well in England and the SNP retains hopes of winning an outright majority in the Scottish parliament which will rekindle the issue of Scottish independence.

Labour’s decline and fall …

But the most significant result of the past 24 hours was the Conservatives’ victory at a by-election in the town of Hartlepool, called following the resignation of the sitting Labour MP.  This was a result of huge symbolism since Labour has held the seat since 1964 and indeed the Tories had previously only won the seat once since 1945. For those not familiar with the town, Hartlepool is traditionally one of the most solid Labour voting regions in the country, with roots in an industrial base extending back to Victorian times. Recent years have not been kind to Hartlepool as north east England’s industrial base has been steadily eroded (as a native of the region I have watched the steady process of deindustrialisation gather pace). As far back as 1971 the town recorded an unemployment rate of 12.3%, more than twice the national average, and in the early 1980s it was running at 33%. In 2016 the town voted 70-30 in favour of Brexit driven in part by the fact that successive governments had failed to deliver much prosperity to the area and its people were fed up. One can hardly blame them: In the words of Public Health England, “Hartlepool is one of the 20% most deprived districts/unitary authorities in England.”

We should be wary of reading too much into what most political commentators are calling a seismic shift in British politics and which the Labour Party itself described as a “shattering” blow. There have been numerous instances of by-election results over the years which have promised radical change only to find that business as usual was restored by the time of the next general election. But this time really does feel different.

One of the remarkable features of the 2019 election was the fact that huge numbers of voters in previously safe Labour seats voted Conservative (the so-called Red Wall effect). This was attributed to two factors in particular: (i) distrust of then-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and (ii) the promise by Boris Johnson to “get Brexit done.” In the subsequent 17 months Corbyn has vacated the leadership so in theory this should not have played a role (though there is a suspicion that he has poisoned the Labour brand). In addition, Johnson delivered Brexit and to the extent that a lot of Brexit Party votes in 2019 are likely to have transferred to the Tories in 2021, their Hartlepool triumph could be interpreted as a reward for getting Brexit done. There are also a number of other factors in play, notably the feelgood factor derived from the vaccine bounce and, perhaps more importantly, questions about what Labour stands for (see this article by political journalist Paul Waugh for more detail).

… despite the odds apparently being stacked against the Tories

What is even more striking is that the Tory win comes on the back of extensive media coverage of sleaze allegations against senior Conservative politicians. Former PM Cameron is alleged to have used his influence to secure aid for a company in which he had a significant financial stake. This was compounded by allegations that Johnson had improperly sourced funding to redecorate his flat in Downing Street; a spat with his former adviser Dominic Cummings on behind-the-scenes machinations in government and claims that Johnson was desperate to avoid a third lockdown at any cost (the “let the bodies pile high in their thousands” furore). In times past the torrent of bad news would have spelled doom for the Conservatives but it does not appear to have made a scrap of difference. In that sense there has been a seismic political shift.

What has changed? One possibility is simply that for all the frenzied speculation by journalists inside the Westminster bubble, the issue does not in any way impact on the lives of ordinary voters (there was no “cut through” to use the political jargon). After all, it seems that everybody accepts Johnson has a strained relationship with the truth and simply don’t care what he gets up to. Why should it matter to many voters that Johnson has engaged in “unethical, foolish, possibly illegal” actions if he has not personally inconvenienced them (not my view, by the way)?

A Europe-wide phenomenon

It is not only in the UK where the political centre-left has lost ground. The fortunes of the SPD in Germany have dwindled over the past decade to the point where the Greens are more likely than the SPD to form the next government if current polling results are repeated in the September election. Similar trends are evident across other European countries where centre-left parties have seen their vote shares collapse to varying degrees (chart below).

On the surface it would appear that there has been a reappraisal of the centre-left since the GFC (France being the partial exception where Francois Hollande won the presidency as recently as 2012). A one-size-fits-all explanation cannot be applied to all countries equally but there are some stylised facts which get us part of the way there. In many countries, what we once called traditional working class voters who worked in industry have become much more scarce and the retirees who once would have fitted that description are fewer in number. In addition to these demographic shifts, there is a sense that centre-left parties were left to carry the can for the fallout from the GFC. Many of them were in office in 2008-09 and chose to put in place austerity programmes which hurt their supporters the most, or they left power soon afterwards and were blamed for the austerity that followed. In reaction there was a surge in support across the continent for what could broadly be called right-wing (semi) nationalist parties as voters sought radical solutions to the economic woes that ensued. This was countered by a surge in radical left parties which overshadowed the more moderate centre-left.

Ironically, as Chris Giles pointed out in the FT last week, “the left is winning the economic battle of ideas.” As the pandemic has shown, government has a big role to play in stabilising the economy at a time of deficient private sector demand – a lesson which Keynes highlighted in the 1930s. As Giles put it, “the model of pre-coronavirus capitalism, with high levels of inequality, is losing popular support, suggesting the need for a post-Covid world with more support for the vulnerable and higher taxes, especially on extreme levels of income, wealth and profits.” If nothing else, this suggests that the policies of Joe Biden are in tune with a large part of his electorate.

Here in the UK, the Labour Party has tried to differentiate itself from its Conservative opponents in recent years by promising a bigger role for the state and increasing taxes on the more affluent. However, after having frightened voters by telling them that Labour planned to stymie efforts to reward enterprise, the Tories have since stolen many of their clothes by running huge budget deficits during the pandemic and committing to raise corporate taxes rather than lower them, as previously planned. Faced with this volte face, the centre-left are clearly going to have to find a different economic tune to play.

It is hard to know how to respond

For the British Labour Party, and indeed for their counterparts across Europe, it looks as though they will struggle to remain relevant unless there is a radical change of tack. Quite how that can be achieved right now is very difficult to imagine. They have nothing economically new to offer and in the UK there is no one who can compete with Johnson in the charisma stakes. Sometimes you just have to accept that it is not your day and the best you can do is hang in there and hope that the tide turns your way as the opposition makes mistakes. It is not a particularly palatable message for Labour leader Keir Starmer but it might be all he can do for now. If he cannot generate cut through sooner rather than later, the Labour Party’s spell on the sidelines looks set to continue for a long time yet.

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