Byelections to test ‘toxic’ Boris Johnson’s
appeal with voters
Analysis: Losing seats of Wakefield and Tiverton and
Honiton would be ‘massive overturn’ for Conservatives
Heather
Stewart
Fri 17 Jun
2022 16.17 BST
Last week’s
confidence vote showed that Boris Johnson still has the support of his
backbenchers – just. But on Thursday, the prime minister will face two critical
tests by the voters who really matter: the British public.
A pair of
byelections, one in Wakefield and the other in Tiverton and Honiton, will help
wavering MPs answer the question of how toxic their beleagured leader has
become with the electorate.
“It’s a
really interesting coincidence of the calendar that we’ve ended up with these
two byelections on the same day, because the key to Johnson’s victory in 2019
was his ability to win over these more socially conservative, leave-oriented
voters in the ‘red wall’ while retaining traditional Conservative support in the
south of England ... What the result next week may well point to is that
neither half of that works any more,” says Robert Ford, professor of political
science at the University of Manchester.
The
Conservative party HQ is strongly playing down the party’s hopes – losing both
seats has almost become the expectation in Westminster.
But
election experts say losing the Devon seat of Tiverton and Honiton, where the
Conservatives had a 24,239 majority just two and a half years ago, would be an extraordinary
moment.
“If they
lost both, that would really be a huge thing, because of Tiverton and Honiton.
That’s a massive overturn,” said Stephen Fisher, professor of political
sociology at the University of Oxford.
“The seat
has only existed since 1997. It was a close-run thing between the Liberal
Democrats and the Tories in 1997, but it’s basically always been Conservative …
Last time it was 60% for the Conservatives and just 15% for the Liberal
Democrats. It would be an enormous swing – and that’s in a seat that voted 58%
leave.”
Even a
narrow win by the Conservatives in this true blue, rural seat should represent
a shock, and could unsettle many Tories who had previously considered
themselves safe.
The swing
required for Labour to take Wakefield is smaller at 3.75% – much less than the
move in the national polls since the 2019 general election.
But Fisher
says even a 3.5% swing to Labour, if replicated nationwide, would be good news
for Keir Starmer. “If Labour win the Wakefield byelection, that suggests they
are at least on course to be the largest party at the next election,” he said.
The result
will certainly be closely monitored in Labour’s HQ. Starmer’s team have sought
to calm shadow cabinet jitters about his personal performance in recent days,
arguing that they have a clear strategy to win back swing voters in target
seats.
A solid
victory in Wakefield on Thursday would encourage them to stick to that
approach, guided by data analysis rather than short-term political pressures.
Many of the
former Labour seats Johnson won in the “get Brexit done” election of 2019 are
held by Conservatives with small majorities. If replicated nationwide, a swing
of 3.75% could see about 35 Tory MPs swept aside – though that could be
mitigated slightly if looming boundary changes are implemented.
If the
swing is bigger, it could prompt jitters among a much larger group of Tory MPs,
some of whom may not have thought of themselves as at risk before.
That may
help explain the fact that Tories are throwing everything at next week’s races.
Activists on the ground in both seats say the Conservative campaigns appear
better resourced and organised than recent contests, such as the North
Shropshire byelection last December where the Lib Dems scored a surprise
victory after the resignation of Owen Paterson.
Cabinet
ministers have hit both constituencies in earnest in recent weeks.
Johnson’s
allies have their script ready for Friday morning. They will argue a byelection
is a “free hit” for voters who are not choosing a government, and the outcome
would be different at a general election.
They will
also say that the kind of tacit pact around the byelections – with Labour
focusing on Wakefield and soft-pedalling in Tiverton, and the Lib Dems doing
the opposite – would be harder to pull off nationwide.
“It’s a
free hit,” said a party source. “It’s not going to change the government. What
you’re seeing is, the Lib Dems have shed the toxicity of the coalition days so
they’re now a legitimate protest party.”
But
whatever the spin, a bad night for the Tories will throw the focus back on to
Johnson, and the effect of the Partygate scandal on voters’ perceptions of him
and his party.
Ford says
that while the prime minister appears unlikely to be moved by even disastrous
results, his MPs should take heed. “It is my firm view that trust in
politicians and positive images of politicians never come back. It’s
asymmetric. If you lose it, it’s not coming back,” he says.
“Johnson is
not the kind of bloke who is going to take seriously a message like, ‘I’m
sorry, your appeal is now shot with voters’. He just won’t believe it. But the
truth is, he is toxic. He’s been toxic for ages. He will remain toxic all the
way through to election day.”
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