Saturday, December 14, 2019

The usual over-reaction by both sides

I do tire of reactions after large and comfortable majority wins by one political party which hyperventilate along the lines of "this is a disaster for Party X and changes everything forever"; despite the fact that very often, within a decade, everything has reversed.

People might say "well with Brexit now happening, everything changing forever really is true for Britain", but I'm talking just about political control at the moment.

I mean, these are the figures for yesterday's election:


So the Labour, Liberal Democrat, Scottish Nationalist and Green combined vote was 50.4%, as against Conservative [Clown] Party at 43.6%.   I know you can't claim all Labour voters as remainers; but there is no doubt at least a smidgen of Conservative voters who are.   Hence, I doubt the election result really convincingly tells us much about how a second referendum would have gone, had the opportunity arisen. [For much more educated guessing about this by yours truly, see the update below.]

More broadly, see how first-past-the-post pans out?   43.6% of the vote gives the Conservatives 365/650 = 56.1% of the seats in parliament.   That...doesn't seem right.

Yet Imre Salusinszky, who I was thinking is a relatively sensible centre-right person, come out with this:

when asked why:


Yeah, not only win, but gain a 6% of the seats buffer, hey?    Imre's being saying a lot of things I don't agree with on Twitter lately, so I have to downgrade my opinion of him to "pretty stupid like most Conservatives these days."   I assume he is still a pal of Tim Blair, so what could I expect?

Anyway, the puzzle with Johnson is actually where his opportunistic brand of political views will take him.   What happens to Brexit now?  Is a soft one still the way forward, or is hard Brexit more likely?   No one seems to really know, but this BBC site explains that once it's started, it's still a process that has a long way to go.  What's the bet that the ageing Brexiteer in the high street has any clue about that?  

People say that his time as London's boss show Johnson as wanting to be a broad based populist:  he may be a lying, womanising, narcissist like Trump, but he is not going to let himself be beholden to the culture wars as are the American (and parts of the Australia) Right.    Or perhaps it's more a case that "culture war" means something different in Britain to what it does across the pond - with Brexit being Britain's culture war/identity issue -  but it doesn't seem to extend to things such as climate change denialism or gay marriage panic in the way American brand conservatism does.    And that, at least, is something to be grateful for.


[Update:  I've looking up some numbers to try to see what they suggest about what the election result means for Leave/Remain numbers if a second referendum was held.

I wasn't sure about the estimates for the number of Leave voters at the Brexit referendum who were Labour voters.  It seems the estimates are around 25 - 30%.  However, some of those at this election must have gone to the Conservatives already.  Also, it is a better informed electorate on what Brexit means, so presumably some former Labour Leave voters would have re-considered their position.   Hence, the proportion of those who voted Labour this time who would still want Leave remains very unclear.    Let's say 20% of Labour voters this time were still adamant Leavers.   That would put one fifth of the 32% Labour vote into the "leave parties" column - roughly 6% of the total vote.  So Tories and Brexit parties combined total of 45.6% of the vote would get boosted to 51.6% - almost identical to the Referendum outcome.   But it doesn't take account of several things if a second Referendum were held:

*  a leakage  of Conservative voters to Leave - this interesting article argues that 13% of "strong Remain" identified as Conservative in 2017, but at this election, they remained loyal to Conservatives because they would prefer to leave the EU than see a socialist Corbyn government.  That sounds pretty plausible to me, and suggests that (say) 5 to 10% of the Conservative vote yesterday could have moved to the Remain column on a second referendum - that's 2 to 4% of the total vote, and even at the lower estimate, could be decisive;

*  a likely greater turnout of Remainers, some of whom were presumably swayed by polling that they didn't really need to go and vote at the original referendum.  The turnout at the referendum was 72%; at this election 67% - it appears that the high 60's is now common for turnout at their general elections in recent decades, but it did hit 80% in the 1950's.   Thus a higher than 72% turnout in a second referendum would not have been out of the question, and I think there is every reason to expect it would have favoured Remain;

it's even been argued that demographic decline (that is, oldies dying off) amongst the original Leave voters might even have been influential in favour of a Leave win.

I think, therefore, that there is a pretty convincing argument that the election result is not the overwhelming endorsement of the will of the people on Brexit, at all.   Of course, Johnson would claim it as such, but anyone who factors in the British first past the post system and its inflation of seat numbers, as well as looking at the evidence listed above, should not make such claims.  Brexit got through its referendum on a 1.9% majority on a turnout that was big, but no where near a record for past elections.   There is reason to think that on a re-run, even despite yesterday's outcome, it could have lost.

Feel free to point out the error in my arguments, anyone, because I'm giving myself a pat on the back for this post.]

12 comments:

  1. Sweet Jesus you can talk. You overreacted to a phone call that only existed between the ears of the lunatic Schiff. Imagine what people like you would be like in the Old South

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  4. "Hence, I doubt the election result really convincingly tells us much about how a second referendum ..."

    Talk of a second referendum is an obvious obscenity and usurpation. So if Labour reps were talking like this, thats a clear referendum on their own character. So I don't think there is any great mystery here.

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  5. I have said it time and time again. People could vote labour last time knowing they could not win and give May a bloody nose for being so cocky.
    This time around they could not. Add that to Corbyn being unable to talk on Brexit and wella!

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  6. Anonymous1:54 pm

    You idiot, why would you be placing the lib Dems vote tally in with the Liars Party? It's nonsensical. And if you're going to accumulate votes, add in the Unionist party to the Conservatives.

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  7. Wake up Steve.

    The Left is coping a flogging because it has become far too obsessed with Identity Politics and political correctness. There was an interesting example of this in the USA last week. Bloomberg referred to Cory Booker as "well spoken" and had some good ideas. Many took offence at the "well spoken" because as Booker is black it was deemed a racist observation. Bloomberg had to publicly apologise. That's nuts, that's the modern Left and until it stops with all that nonsense it will continue to bleed votes.

    Besides, the Labour Party was promising far too much. Their program was fantasy land stuff that had to be rejected.

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  8. John: my commentary is solely related to the question of "is this result a ringing endorsement of Brexit?" Any matter - such as identity politics being a Labour thing that many are tiring of - which may contribute to the reason Labour did not so well can be used to add support to my argument that it was not a clear endorsement of Brexit being wanted by a majority of the population despite superficial appearances.

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  9. By the way, I assume that was JC saying why was I adding the Lib Dems to the Labour vote - obviously, it was because I was trying to estimate what the vote might indicate about the number of likely Remainers, and the Lib Dems (and Scottish Nationals) both ran strongly on a position that they were "Remain" parties. I think (much more so than Labour) that it's fair to guess that very, very few would have voted for them and actually wanted to Leave.

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  10. "John: my commentary is solely related to the question of "is this result a ringing endorsement of Brexit?"

    Note the three weasel words .... RINGING .... ENDORSEMENT .... OF.

    Many people, enough to make a difference, would have reluctantly voted for Boris, or stayed home, because of the labour party poopy-pantseria that Corbyn was stuck with. Now thats got to be the case. But is that a ringing endorsement? No because you chose your words in the usual weasel fashion.

    We already had a RINGING ENDORSEMENT OF BREXIT. Thats what the referendum was. What is the matter with you? You are seriously fucked up. We had the ringing endorsement. Now we got the election. And in this election the better candidate (in my view) had an albatross hanging from his neck. He actually had three of these birds dragging him down.

    Now thanks to shithead leftists like yourself he will be dragging his ass around the world with this albatross, the rest of his days on the planet.

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  11. The fate of Jeremy Corbyn thanks to the mindless left:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrqW_BZu5Xk

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  12. Look at what you've done to my Jeremy you stupid leftists.

    Learn to think properly. Learn what evidence is. So you don't damage another good man and turn him into a shell of his former self.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRGnoFf2cZQ

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