If Labour was passive in Newark, the Lib Dems were non-existent. Not a single Lib Dem MP campaigned there, and only a single peer. (Lord Newby). The cash-strapped central party gave no support to the local candidate. Finishing sixth and losing the deposit surprised no one.
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Oh, first!
http://bit.ly/1nnXXkw
They've just lost another 300 councillor seats, and 10 MEP seats. There will have been a loss of income tied to that.
As long as you don't have difficulties with the concept of data sharing, that is.
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/2015guide/libdemdefence/
I'd hazard a guess at Eastbourne, which I think will be tougher ask for the Tories than some of the seats requiring a bigger swing.
I suspect that the Lib Dems will (as usual) be a bootstrap operation with most of the effort coming locally from their councillor base (much diminished) and volunteers. That makes focussing on 30 seats pretty unrealistic. Are those in NE Fife really going to conclude this is hopeless and pop up to Inverness to help Danny? Not a chance.
The Lib Dem campaign will therefore have greater similarities to the Somme than Rorkes' Drift. Everyone will fight for their own bit of trench and go over the top into the machine guns. God help them because Lib Dem HQ won't.
P3 underway. Sharapova quite selfishly won the first set.
Pitiful sinning.
The first two being the Lords Rennard and Oakeshotte?
We still have the northern Irish, the nationalists and possibly a green but how many Lib Dems should be added to that? The total seats held by tories and Labour combined are likely to increase (unless UKIP do something amazing) probably by at least 15, more likely 20. Those betting on a hung Parliament should reflect on that.
The Zulu training and discipline were not to be sneezed at, either: quite the opposite. The message I got from the book was that it was command decisions by the Zulu subordinate commanders that were the key mistake leading to their defeat - but a very close run thing. It was the outstanding initiative on a local level by Chard and Bromhead and their men, above all in preparing their position the moment they learnt the Zulus were coming, that saved their own bacon.
I can see that the LDs might survive in RD-like outposts like the Northern Isles, but the question is perhaps whether Mr Clegg is allowed to emulate Lord Chelmsford and come back to a final victory after such a defeat.
What Newark really told us is that every party but one is being beaten by a "genuine joke candidate".
That should be CON down 10, Labour up 7, LD down 11 and UKIP up 10 and a swing of about 8.5 to LAB from CON.
If you count the by elections since the UKIP surge in Eastleigh those numbers are CON -11, LAB +1, LD -16, UKIP+21 for a swing of 6 to LAB from CON.
Can you take the 2010 share of those 16 constituencies to the total 2010 GE vote and then apply it as a weight to the by election shares?
National % share is irrelevant - they will either get a majority in any given seat of they won't. A 2% national share with those voters concentrated in a score of seats is better for winning seats than 15% spread everywhere.
In a multi-party system national %, UNS etc matters far less.
However the number of hold swill depend on the final swing figures at the GE particularly tp the Cons who are the second placed party in the majority of LD seats.
I am a bit more optimistic about the final national share..Ironically the Lib Dems are less visible
as a junior coalition partner than they were in the last a pariament as a strong opposition party.
As we get nearer to the next GE there will be clear Lib Dem publicity particular if the messages on achievements and policy for the future focus on a few simple and strong messages.
As UKIP shares fall back in the next few months (barring any sensational by election results ) I would expect Lib Dem vote share to overtake UKIP, This will happen first on ICM the gold standard in GE shares.
I would expect a final LIb Dem share of around 15%.The critical factor for seat loss will then the Tory share going into the GE.
It took the Liberals 20 years after they collapsed totally in 1931 to be almost non existent.
Their vote share fell from 24 to 7 and remained in a band of 7-9% but their number of seats fell gradually from 59 to 32, then 21, then 12 and finnally 9 before they gave way to nothingness in 1951.
Trend here:
http://t.co/BpexFKU1lZ
But as you say, Rorke's Drift was a close run thing and if we are to draw an analogy, I think you're right to point to the criticality of the middle command, which in the current case is the constituency-level resourcing and decision making.
The one big difference, of course, is that the Lib Dems are something of a sideshow to the main battle, which is between the Conservatives and Labour (one of several sideshows, it has to be said, with nationalists in Wales and Scotland, and other minor parties too). Maybe TSE should find something Lawrence of Arabia-ish to depict that aspect?
They just dont have a purpose anymore, just like then, if you are a Liberal you vote Conservative, if you're a lefty you vote Labour and if you want to protest there is UKIP.
Massa going very nicely.
The political and media class have simply gone back to ignoring it.
Of course this concept is hard for many (93%) of the poorly educated Uk population to undestand. Hence Lib Dem voters have the highest IQ of all the parties.
1931 is interesting as the Liberals were defending 59 seats and a 23.6% share which isn't massively dissimilar to now. They dropped to 6.5% but retained 33 seats. Of course I'd love the other feature of that election to hold as well and Labour to lose 200 seats to the Tories
If they look at opinion polls, then it's Sheffield Hallam.
If they have a serious strategy, then any seat battle with the conservatives will do.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/southafrica/10883462/South-African-president-Jacob-Zuma-admitted-to-hospital.html
I certainly hadn't heard that was going on there. Linky?
As for the IQ, the LD proved it when they committed electoral suicide again by going in coalition (the first time was supporting the first Labour government).
its all their own fault.
http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/canada-pre-qualifying.html
No tip, just some idle musing on the changing pecking order.
Their core is middle class public sector so prosperous Lib vs Con seats dominated by that should be safest but it depends on what the RedLibs do in those seats. I think in the end they will still vote Lib at the GE to stop Con whatever they say now but not certain e.g. Richmond at the locals.
(This may vary depending on how close or far they are to the overwhelming demographic change the political class are engineering i.e. urban prosperous going Con and more rural prosperous staying Lib).
In some less prosperous urban Lab vs Lib seats a bit of their vote in the south and a lot up north was median income floating voters who floated between Lab and Lib instead of Lab and Con for various anti-Con reasons. Those people are much closer to Ukip and only needed it to get big enough to make it a worthwhile option.
In other less prosperous urban Lab vs Lib seats the Lib vote relied on Lab voters who had switched for anti-Iraq and RedLib reasons and those votes went with the coalition.
In the SW rural seats the Lib vote was partially an anti-westminster vote who are also probably closer to Ukip or don't like the coalition or both. I also wouldn't discount the EU's plan to flood large parts of the SW to meet the EU's biodiversity target.
So in order of most safe
1) rural leafy Lib vs Con seats with a lot of public sector ABs not effected by the demographic transformation yet
2) urban leafy Lib vs Con seats with a lot of public sector ABs starting to be effected by the demographic transformation (to Con maybe)
3) urban non-leafy Lib vs Lab seats where the median income floating voter vote was key (Lab or Ukip)
4) rural non-leafy Lib vs Con seats where the anti-Westminster vote was key (to Con or Ukip)
5) urban non-leafy Lib vs Lab seats where the anti-Irag vote was key (to Lab)
imo
Re-build into what? The deserts of Liverpool and Manchester etc? Telling swathes of activists "you do not matter" in their local areas will destroy the ability of the LDs to come back.
It is of course a position made worse by attempting to be seen as an opposition to the coalition whilst asking for votes to help form another coalition.... This Janus stratagy helped get them so far but was fatally flawed.
Is he related to the honourable Lord of Seagrove Bay?
Most of the 1929 liberal vote voted conservative anyway in that election or supported joint National Liberal candidates.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2545770/New-book-claims-THIS-picture-proves-Hitler-escaped-Berlin-bunker-died-South-America-1984-aged-95.html
The process from 1931 to 1950 is an indication, 1931: 7% 33 seats, 35:7% 21 seats, 45: 9% 12 seats, 50: 9% 9 seats.
Hmm I think that is what I would call a novel and interesting theory.
http://www.bild.de/politik/ausland/jean-claude-juncker/wie-lange-haelt-juncker-noch-durch-36301054.bild.html
"relative of Hitler living in Israel" !!!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/10881748/Sajid-Javids-first-keynote-speech-as-Culture-Secretary-I-like-Star-Trek.-I-like-U2.html
* [second thoughts and a quick glance in TSE's direction] No offence!
Brent Central, Manchester Withington, Redcar, Burnley, Solihull, are surely write-offs.
Sutton and Cheam, Kingston, Cheadle, Bradford East, Portsmouth South, Torbay, Eastbourne, Bristol West, Cardiff Central, Edinburgh West should all e pretty tight..
The nearest LibDem constituencies to Redcar are Leeds NW, Westmoreland and Berwick.
Are the Redcar LibDems to be told to campaign in the others ? Leeds NW and Westmoreland should be safe, Berwick is likely to be lost in any case.
At least in Redcar the LibDems can actually show something that they've achieved in government.
On a wider point writing off seats already LibDem or where the LibDems have been strong previously will make it harder for the LibDems to rebuild.
Eagles is wrong saying that this would only be for one electoral cycle. If they lose by 10,000+ votes rather than 2-3,000 the LibDems will need several electoral cycles to rebuild, in many places they could disappear forever.
For me the interesting bit next year will be how the incumbent LD MPs campaign. They will probably campaign almost like a group of I dependants rathèr than using the. LD brand as they can sell themselves as individuals standing up for constituents. If however they start to us Clegg in literature or the. Lib Dem mantra it could become counter productive for them.
It will also be in their interests in the SW London seats to hope that turnout is low as they will get their core vote out better than the Tory's. If the. Tories become motivated to vote,which they didn't in the locals,then incumbents could be in a spot of bother.
Where as winning a national election and seeing your vote share increase almost 600% is bad news for UKIP
This was their tweet:
Con. History Group@ConHistGrp·1 hr
MT @DanKellyEsq: it appears that of the 24 MPs killed in action in WWII, 21 were Conservatives.
I can't believe the @conhistgrp are trying to make political capital out of MPs killed in WWII. No sense of decency sometimes.
Con. History Group@ConHistGrp·33 mins
.@ChrisBryantMP We really aren't: just retweeting a point we didn't know and found interesting. They fought and died for us all.
Speedy Indeed, though does not say if they are Jewish
Mr jones I think he has more claim to be a relative of Prince Charles