As the dust settles
in Caerffili, there is widespread relief that the threatened victory for Reform
Ltd didn’t happen, despite what some of the polls suggested. But whether it
really signifies a victory for ‘progressive’ views over conservative ones is
rather harder to determine. One simplistic analysis I’ve seen suggests that
adding the Plaid, Green, Labour, and Lib Dem vote percentages together and
comparing that with the total of Reform Ltd, Tories and UKIP gives a ratio of 61%
to 38%, a very comfortable margin. (It’s not entirely clear where Gwlad
fits in this analysis, but at 0.3% of the vote, it’s hardly a significant factor.
Where the Lib Dems sit is another variable, it may depend on who you speak to
and whether there’s an ‘R’ in the month, but again, at 1.5% it’s not a huge
factor.)
Everything depends,
though, on whether those who voted for the Labour candidate can really be seen
as ‘progressively minded’ voters. On matters such as immigration, climate
change and economics, Sir Starmer’s Labour is moving ever closer to the Reform/Tory
position; in policy terms they don’t deserve to be included on the same side of
the balance as Plaid/ Green. If their 11% gets moved from one column into the
other, the result looks very different. Plaid and Green on 48.9% compared to Reform/Tory/UKIP/Labour
on 49.2% is no longer a victory of any sort, let alone a sweeping one.
We don’t know what
exactly happened to Labour’s traditional vote, but we can assume that some
stayed at home, rather than voting at all. Of the rest, the more ‘progressive’
elements may well have switched to Plaid as a block on Reform Ltd. But we also
know that there has been movement from Labour to Reform across the UK; there’s
no good reason to assume that some of that didn’t happen in Caerffili. Not all
Labour voters are as ‘progressive’ as myth and wishful thinking might suggest.
Those who were left are probably Labour’s hard core – ‘My party, right or wrong’
– and are, at the least, generally content to go along with Starmer. That gives
no reason to place them in the ‘progressive’ column.
There is a danger of
complacency – because Caerffili sent Reform Ltd packing, maybe they’re not the
threat many feared. But that complacency is based on an outdated and romantic
view of the average Welsh voter as inherently ‘left’ of the average English
voter. The views of Reform Ltd, whether expressed directly by them, or by the
Tory and Labour parties rushing to ape them, have taken root more than we might
care to admit. The danger hasn’t gone away.
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