When the dust settled, the ‘too-close-to-call’ by-election in Gorton and Denton turned out to be no such thing, and the Green
Party gained a very clear victory. That is good news, of course, but even
though the margin of victory was solid, the winner only got 41% of the vote.
Under a more proportional system of voting, that means that second preference
votes would have needed to be counted, and the mathematician and amateur would-be
psephologist in me speculated about how the result of that might look.
Of the 11 candidates, eight (accounting for 1892
votes in total) would have been eliminated fairly rapidly and, unless we choose to believe that they would have overwhelmingly
(including the 706 Tory votes) gone to Labour, the second choices of those
voters would have made no difference to the order of the first three
candidates. The final stage of counting would thus have seen the Labour
candidate eliminated as well, meaning that there were then 11,256 voters whose
second choices would have determined whether the victor was the Green Party or
Reform Ltd. With a margin of 4402 between those two parties, those 11,000 votes
would have to split something like 2.3:1 in favour of Reform Ltd for their
candidate to overtake the Green Party’s candidate and seize the seat. We don’t
know, of course, how they would have split in practice. Unless and until
someone does some detailed research, it’s all speculation. But the key element
of that speculation is a very simple question: of those who voted Labour,
despite everything that has happened since the last General Election, would
they have tended towards the Green Party or towards Reform Ltd?
Those who cling to the notion that the Labour Party
is still a progressive force, and that its supporters are committed to a
progressive platform (whatever the word ‘progressive’ means) will be utterly
convinced that they would have gone with the Greens, leaving the outcome
unchanged. I’m not at all sure that they’re right. Much of the support which Reform
Ltd have picked up over the past few years has come from Labour – amongst Labour
voters, there is a deeply conservative streak when it comes to issues such as
immigration. I don’t think it at all impossible that Reform Ltd would have won
the seat in that scenario. (That doesn't make me reconsider supporting Proportional Representation - we need to win the arguments against the likes of Reform Ltd, not rig the voting system to keep them out.)
That brings us to an interesting alternative view of
the ‘vote-splitting’ concept. The worry of some before the election was that
the Greens and Labour would split the ‘progressive’ vote and allow Reform Ltd
to win. What if the real story here is that Labour and Reform split the
reactionary, neoliberal, authoritarian, anti-immigrant vote and thus allowed
the progressive candidate to win? Those who are still clinging to the idea that
Labour is somehow on the side of the good guys might be blinding themselves to
the true extent of the danger.