Gordon Campbell on the snap election in BritainFirst published on Werewolf
Supposedly, Theresa May’s calling of a snap election in Britain is all about ‘getting a mandate’ and ‘leadership’ and other such cant. In fact, the election call is entirely opportunistic and self-serving and will – regardless of the outcome – put Britain in a worse negotiating position for managing its Brexit. Lets take these elements one by one.
Leadership. From the time Britain triggered article 50, a two year clock started running on the Brexit outcome. In reality, Britain
is fighting an asymmetric form of warfare in these negotiations, and it should be trying to make the best strategic use
of its self-imposed position of weakness. If May really cared a jot about getting the best outcome, it would be more
advantageous – tactically speaking – for her to be able to counter the European demands with the rejoinder that look,
the British people are divided on this, I’d never be able to sell that to the British people etc etc.
In other words, she could have made tactical capital out of her current position, by postponing the point at which she seeks a public mandate. As
things stand, she is cynically seeking a “mandate” from the British people before they have the slightest clue about the
deal they are being asked to endorse, and will thus be flying blind into rewarding the Conservatives with another five
year term. Whatever you call that ruse, it isn't leadership. It looks more like deception.
In reality, the June election outcome will (a) send her naked into the negotiations against the Europeans and (b) after
exposing many of her key negotiating positions to public scrutiny for seven weeks, during the glare of an election
campaign. You can bet the Europeans will be taking notes, reading the body language, and noting the disharmony between
May and Scotland’s leader Nicola Sturgeon. How will this be of any advantage to Britain in its dealings with Europe?
Mandate. May already has a (dual) mandate. She is the leader of the Conservative party, and she has the mandate of the Brexit referendum
outcome. By asking for a blank cheque from the British public in June, she’s buying a pretty cheap mandate. Even if she
wins more seats in June – as is likely, given the disarray within the Labour party opposition – it is hard to see how
another 50 seat majority, or 70 seats, or even a 100 seat margin, will materially change her negotiating power with
respect to the European Union.
The gains for her are entirely political, and belong entirely to the realm of British domestic politics. She will have
induced the British public to give the Tories a respite until 2022 – because she knows she could not go back to the
public in 2020 after the dismal deal on Brexit has been struck, and expect to be re-elected. The snap election is a
mechanism to avoid being called to account for failure, for as long as possible. Again, whatever you call this, it isn’t
leadership.
The Polls. The snap election won’t be an entirely risk free exercise for May. Nate Silver, the American poll analyst, wrote an interesting piece a few days ago about the relative unreliability of British political polling as compared to the US polls. Only some of Silver’s
commentary can be put down to sour grapes, given that he got to learn the hard way during his coverage of the last
British general election. Like everyone else, he expects May to win handily in June. Things could even turn out worse
for Labour than expected, what with the well known “Shy Tory” syndrome whereby Tory voters are unwilling to confess to
pollsters that they will actually be voting Conservative :
May’s Conservatives do have a massive lead, with recent polls showing them 9 to 21 points ahead of Labour and their
unpopular leader, Jeremy Corbyn. Also, while the polls in the U.K. haven’t been very accurate, they’ve tended to
underestimate Conservatives rather than Labour in the past. (See also: the Shy Tory Factor.)
But even so… here are Silver’s key paragraphs, which begin by him citing the wide range of error in British political
polling that’s been evident in elections since 1979:
But if polls are missing election outcomes by 5 or 6 points on average, that means the margin of error (or 95 percent confidence interval) is very large indeed. Specifically, a 6-point average error in forecasting the final margin translates to a true
margin of error of plus or minus 13 to 15 percentage points, depending on how you calculate it.
Exactly how sure Conservatives are of retaining a majority of seats in Parliament is a more complicated question than
who will take the most votes. This stuff is tricky to model — as we’ve learned the hard way — because the results are greatly dependent on where the vote is distributed and how third parties perform. The
Scottish National Party is likely to continue to control the vast majority of the 59 seats from Scotland, which gives Conservatives less margin for error in the event the
election tightens.
Part of what we’re seeing here is the British version of the Trump polling outcome. While the US polls came very close
to tracking the US national vote, the pundits chose to ignore the far closer contest that the polls were simultaneously
recording where it really mattered, in the Electoral College. In Britain, much the same situation is creating this
interesting divergence that Silver has noted down at the British betting shops:
Bookmakers give 20-to-1 odds against a Labour majority, but only 5-to-1 odds against a hung Parliament — about the same odds that many of them offered on “Leave” winning the Brexit vote last year.
None of this should be taken to suggest that Jeremy Corbyn has any hope of winning the June 8 election. Yet it does
indicate that a level of risk exists for May. Ultimately, what size majority would justify this election gambit? If even
a puny opponent like Corbyn can hold her to say, a seventy seat majority, wouldn’t that have to be taken as a less than
gilded “mandate?” The more crucial point: even if the snap election does deliver May a large parliamentary majority,
this will still do precious little to enhance Britain’s ability to minimise the fallout from Brexit. The Europeans may
choose not to be impressed. Partly because while Britain diverts itself with an election, the clock is continuing to
tick on the article 50 countdown to a ‘take it or leave it’ deal.
The Autumn of Jim Bolger
Interesting comments by former PM Jim Bolger about the failure of neo-liberalism, and the value of having a stronger trade union movement.
[Bolger] says neo-liberalism has failed and suggests unions should have a stronger voice. “[Neo-liberal policies] have
failed to produce economic growth and what growth there has been has gone to the few at the top,” Bolger says, not of
his own policies specifically but of neoliberalism the world over. He laments the levels of inequality and concludes
“that model needs to change.”
Coming from the guy who ended compulsory unionism, that is quite some admission. Anyone covering politics in the late
1980s would have been aware of Bolger’s personal disdain for the ideological zeal of colleagues like Ruth Richardson,
Derek Quigley etc Bolger would tend to depict them as people who had no idea how the other half lived, and would talk
privately about the political backlash likely to ensue if/when such policies were put into practice. As soon as he
practically could – ie in the wake of her draconian Mother of All Budgets - he got rid of Richardson as Finance
Minister.
That’s not to say Bolger was ever a closet left-winger. He and his friend Bill Birch eventually pushed through the
Employment Contracts Act that decimated the trade union movement – thereby atomising the workplace in a way that has
consistently denied New Zealand the ability to negotiate socio-economic outcomes in ways possible for Australia and
Germany, that have treated trade unions as being essential partners in their economic discourse. Instead here, employers and the public in this country have been encouraged to demonise unions.
Given Bolger’s comments, this does mean that both of the Prime Ministers who presided over this country’s devastating
romance with neo-liberalism – David Lange in the 1980s and Jim Bolger in the 1990s – have renounced the religion that
they did so much to impose upon the rest of New Zealand. Given that we still have a government that seems wedded to the
failed neo-liberal mania for budget balancing as an end it itself… maybe that alone is reason enough for regime change
this year. Unfortunately though, the Greens and Labour have signed up to the same economic settings. New Zealand seems
to be a Titanic that’s intent on hitting the same iceberg, over and over and over again.
Waxahatchee, Returns
Katie Crutchfield records with her band under the name Waxahatchee, and their last outing Ivy Tripp was one of the most under-rated albums of 2015. Many of the songs on that album had a desperate, plaintive edge to them
- yet this first single from her new album has a serene confidence that feels entirely different, without losing any of
her trademark melodicism. This is a farewell/breakup song, but it is resolute in tone, and not in the least bit
woebegone:
The whole world keeps turning
I went out in the storm
I felt the house burning
The kiss on my lips starts to feel unfamiliar
A part of me rots
My skin all turns silver….
If I turn to stone
The whole world keeps turning
I went out in the storm
And I'm never returning
By way of contrast, here’s one of my favourite cuts from the Ivy Tripp album. …“ I left you out like a carton of milk” is such a good line:
And “Under a Rock” is pretty great, too: