UKIP lost because no one wants to vote for it. Simple as that. Between them, John Bickley and Nigel Farage have now failed to enter Parliament on 11 occasions. Eleven. John Rentoul (yes, John Rentoul) writes:
It had Jim McMahon, the popular and well-known leader of Oldham
council. It knows how to organise postal votes.
And journalists and party
activists assumed the result would be close, which not only helped boost
turnout but it made McMahon’s victory look especially emphatic.
You might have thought that you
would prefer to have a national party with a popular leader who isn’t engaged
in a civil war with his parliamentary colleagues, but it turns out that this is
an optional extra.
Given that the case against Jeremy Corbyn is that Labour
cannot win elections with him as leader, an increased share of the vote in a
by-election is an excellent result for him.
It was a poor result for the
Conservatives, although you would expect the party of government to do badly in
a by-election.
But it was a disastrous result for Ukip. It confirms that
the party is finished.
Having had a terrible general election, the party has
now lost its reason for existing. Its purpose is to win the argument for
Britain to leave the European Union.
Not only did the voters give it just one
seat in May, but they elected a Conservative government committed to a
referendum.
The question of our EU membership will be decided by the British
people in the next two years – and Ukip has so little support that the “leave”
campaigners want as little to do with it and its backward-looking image as
possible.
By chance, a new book about Ukip
landed on my desk on the day after the by-election.
Ukip: Inside the Campaign
to Redraw the Map of British Politics, by Matthew Goodwin and Caitlin Milazzo,
might as well be subtitled “The Failure of the Campaign to Redraw the Map of
British Politics”.
Goodwin was also the co-author with Robert Ford of the
definitive account of the rise of Ukip, Revolt on the Right: these are the best
academic minds on the subject, and Goodwin and Milazzo conclude that the
referendum “will be very difficult for Ukip and other Outers to win”.
They see a future for Ukip only
as a party of protest, “as an alternative political home for a significant
section of British society – an outlet for lingering worries over immigration,
its effects on changing communities, and in an age when the ability of
mainstream politicians to respond to these concerns has been greatly
reduced”.
Yet, what is the point of a party
of protest that cannot win a by-election, a device designed by the British
constitution for the purpose?
The book reminds me, too, that Nigel Farage declared,
“Corbyn is a gift for Ukip”, at his party’s annual conference, a few days after
the Labour leader’s election.
If so, he is the gift that hasn’t started giving.
Our ComRes poll last month found that 50 per cent of voters
already regard him unfavourably – the same rating as recorded for Ed Miliband
just before the election campaign.
Presumably the 22 per cent who have a
favourable view of him feel more strongly than the 20 per cent who had a
favourable view of Miliband, but there is no doubt that Corbyn has hit the
ground struggling.
That said, the Oldham by-election is a corrective to the
hothouse of Westminster, where the hyperbolists insist every day that things
are so bad for the Labour leader that he cannot go on.
That may mean normal
people have noticed one or two negative stories about him. Canvassers in Oldham
said that Corbyn disagreeing with a shoot-to-kill policy had “cut through” to
people.
If it had, it wasn’t a big drag on Labour support.
What the hyperbolists have failed
to notice is that some things are going Corbyn’s way. Rival opposition parties
are falling away and the Government is likely to be weaker at the next election
in one respect.
Not only is Ukip finished, ending
competition with Labour for the disaffected working-class vote, but the Liberal
Democrats have bowed out too. Unless they find some great cause, boundary
changes will cut their eight seats to four or fewer.
That means Labour
dissidents have nowhere to defect to, and there is no prospect of a breakaway
like the SDP.
Not only that, but the best politician in the country, David
Cameron, is going to give up power voluntarily, handing over to Boris Johnson,
George Osborne or someone else, none of whom is likely to be as formidable an
opponent (although Johnson could be).
All Corbyn has done is look around
disapprovingly over his glasses, and his opponents – outside the Labour Party –
seem to be leaving the field. Only in Scotland are Labour’s opponents standing.
If he could defeat his enemies inside his party, he would stand almost alone
against a weakened Conservative Party.
No one wants to vote for it.
ReplyDeleteExcept four million people at a General Election.
There's a reason your not paid to do political analysis.
Rentoul is. I assume that he must need to be. Imagine that. But he is.
DeleteUKIP is over. Get over UKIP.