It’s difficult to
know how seriously we should treat any individual opinion poll. Different
organisations use different methods, particularly when it comes to ‘weighting’
to try and ensure that the sample is representative. But when multiple polls by
different organisations over a lengthy period show broadly consistent trends,
it’s reasonable to suppose that they are telling us something about what is happening. In the case of the upcoming Senedd elections, I’m still struggling to
believe how well in the one case, and how badly in the other, Reform Ltd and
the Labour Party are doing. Whilst I can’t simply ignore the data-driven
evidence in front of us, I’ll admit that, for someone who spent decades
campaigning door to door, the extent and speed of the change is something I’m
struggling to understand and accept. It somehow doesn't 'feel' right, and evidence which contradicts experience is
always a difficult thing.
Once
we get to a situation where there are two obvious front-runners, it’s probably
inevitable that those two will start trying to ‘squeeze’ the votes of the other
parties by presenting the outcome as a binary choice. That doesn’t mean that it
isn’t intensely disappointing. In most of the campaigns I ever fought, I was more
of a squeezee than a squeezer, left trying to convince people to vote for what they wanted
most rather than against
what they wanted least. So-called tactical voting is harder to determine under
the new voting system for the Senedd elections, since it will probably only
really have an impact on the sixth, or at best fifth and sixth, seats in any
constituency, and it’s really hard to predict what will happen as we get down
to that level of vote counting. Some of the politicians try to tell us that the
new system makes every vote count, but it really isn’t true. Anyone voting for
a party (or independent candidate) receiving less than around 10-12% of the
vote in a constituency will effectively be, in the eyes of those trying to use the
squeezing tactic, ‘wasting’ their vote; such votes will have no impact on the
outcome of the election. Denial of the opportunity to register a second or
third choice is my main criticism of the new system.
The
question isn’t just about the mechanics and technicalities, however. I’ve long
wondered just how effective the pressure to choose between Labour and Tory has
been or, rather, to what extent the polarisation of electoral politics in the
UK between the two largest parties was down to this tactic as opposed to other
factors. Purely on the numbers, more recent elections show an increasing
tendency away from a two-party polarisation – if it did work in the past, it
hasn’t worked so well recently. Not only is it essentially a negative approach,
but to the extent that it did work at all, it was never based on any careful
analysis of opposing manifestos before choosing the lesser of two evils – it was
far more visceral than that. A hatred of ‘the Tories’ on the one side and of ‘the
Socialists’ on the other was always a substitute for proper debate between
alternative visions for the future. Perhaps the fact that the ‘alternatives’
were generally not that different when analysed more objectively helped that
framing. Whether either Plaid or Reform Ltd attract that sort of folk history-based hatred to a sufficient degree (outside the bubble in which the political
anoraks live) is surely an open question. 'Stopping Reform' may not be quite the killer line that some seem to think.
They say that
generals always prepare to refight the last war rather than the one that might
actually happen, and I can’t help wondering if adopting a tactic based on what
has historically believed to have been the case and trying to apply it in an
entirely different scenario isn’t acting in a similar manner.