Analysis
Yes, the Tories kept Uxbridge. But the general
election will be a referendum on Sunak, not Ulez
Robert Ford
With a local dispute swaying voters, the result in
Boris Johnson’s old seat did not accurately reflect the national mood
Sat 22 Jul 2023 15.58 BST
One out of
three ain’t bad? A surprise win in Boris Johnson’s former seat of Uxbridge gave
Conservatives something to cheer on Friday morning as Rishi Sunak narrowly
avoided being the first prime minister since Harold Wilson to suffer three byelection
defeats on the same day. But with a local dispute swaying Uxbridge voters, the
contests in Selby and Somerton may provide a clearer indication of the national
mood. The picture they paint is bleak: two heavy defeats for the government to
different opponents at opposite ends of England.
In the week
when Labour leader Keir Starmer took to the stage for the first time with his
predecessor Tony Blair, Labour achieved a byelection breakthrough in North
Yorkshire worthy of Blair’s mid-1990s prime. Selby and Ainsty’s 20,000-vote
Conservative majority is the largest ever overturned by Labour in a byelection,
and the swing to Labour was the second largest recorded. Labour comfortably
outperformed its current polling with a swing which would decimate the Conservative
benches if replicated in a general election. This was the performance of an
opposition on its way back into government.
The result
for the Liberal Democrats in Somerton and Frome was less historic, but only
because overhauling massive Conservative majorities has become business as
usual for Ed Davey’s party. The Lib Dems achieved a 29-point swing to take
Somerton, the fourth gain from the Conservatives on swings of 25 points or more
in less than two years. A big breakthrough in the south-west will be
particularly cheering – this region was a stronghold for the party for
generations before the coalition wiped them out, and as the local opposition in
many seats, they are well placed to gain from a broader turn against the Tories
in the region.
The results
in both seats also suggest the return of large-scale tactical voting, with the
third-place Lib Dem vote squeezed in Selby while Labour slumped in Somerton.
Tactical coordination on this scale may have delivered dozens of extra seats to
opposition parties in 1997 and could be a critical factor in whether a big
swing against the government at the next election turns into a Commons rout.
And so to
Uxbridge. Labour had high expectations for the seat, which should have been an
easy gain on current polling. Yet Uxbridge rejected Starmer, as it rejected his
predecessors Harold Wilson and Tony Blair in earlier by-elections. The swing to
Labour was just under seven points, which would be nowhere near enough for a
majority if replicated nationally. Yet there are good reasons to think Uxbridge
was an outlier, a seat where voter anger is trained on the unpopular policies
of a local Labour incumbent. Campaigners reported widespread discontent at the
ultra-low emission zone (Ulez) scheme being rolled out by Labour mayor Sadiq
Khan in this commuter-heavy corner of west London.
However,
the Conservatives’ success at mobilising Uxbridge motorists should not be
treated as a broader public rejection of green policies. The prospect of Ulez
will likely be more controversial than the reality, when most motorists
discover they won’t need to pay. Local controversies also matter much less in a
national contest, and equally potent local issues don’t exist anyway in most
battleground seats. While the surprise Uxbridge win will boost Tory morale, the
general election will be a referendum on Sunak, not Ulez.
Whether
Brexit would endure as an electoral force once it moved from open argument to
settled policy was one of the great open questions of this parliament. Just
over two years ago, the Conservatives achieved the largest ever swing to an
incumbent when they took heavily leave-voting Hartlepool from Labour. This, we
were told, was the Brexit realignment at work, yoking together all Brexit
backers in an enduring alliance with the party of Get Brexit Done. Yet while
all three of the seats up last week voted heavily to leave, Brexit was barely
mentioned by the Conservatives or their opponents. Leave and remain allegiances
are losing their hold over voters.
As Brexit
fades, older patterns are reasserting themselves. Byelection performances
matching those of the mid-1990s will boost Labour hopes that they can channel a
wave of anti-incumbent sentiment into government. A big, broad swing is needed
if the opposition is to return to majority government in one big leap from the
worst starting position in postwar history. Lib Dem resurgence in the
south-west and the return of widespread tactical voting will increase
Conservative worries that another 1997-style rout may be just around the
corner, with even towering majorities no sure protection against an angry
electorate.
Yet while
Selby and Somerton provide further portents of a potential electoral
earthquake, Uxbridge underlines the challenges that would follow. Labour’s
current high poll ratings are driven more by hostility to the Conservatives
than ardour for the opposition or its leader. Without the wave of public
goodwill that buoyed up Blair after 1997, a Starmer administration will find it
hard to hold voters’ loyalties through the disappointments of government. And a
Labour government entering office burdened by high debts and low growth will
have many disappointments to deliver.

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