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Major is not the model

  • Posted by Martin Bright
  • 23 May 2008

The Labour Party is in serious trouble if it is looking to John Major for comfort in the wake of the Crewe and Nantwich by-election

I knew the game was up when people around Gordon Brown started to talk about the John Major parallels. The former Tory leader had some whopping great by-election defeats in the run-up to the 1992 election, but still managed to pip Neil Kinnock in the end. I must say I think the Labour Party is in serious trouble when it starts to look to John Major as a role model. For a start, David Cameron is no Neil Kinnock. In this game of political parallels, government spinners have been at pains to play down the idea that Cameron is the Tories’ Tony Blair, preferring to liken him to the Labour Party’s Welsh “nearly man”.

But none of this really washes after Crewe and Nantwich. The Labour Party now finds itself in a unique position. The swing was nearly 18%, which is admittedly (28%) not as bad as some of John Major’s by-election defeats in the early 1990s. But these defeats at Ribble Valley (25 % swing), Newbury (28%) and Christchurch (35%), where all to the Liberal democrats.

But this is the first time in 30 years that the Tories have taken a seat from Labour. Tamsin Dunwoody was gracious in defeat, but she was wrong to suggest that the defeat was largely down to getting out the Tory vote that had previously stayed at home. The chilling fact is that former Labour voters are now switching to the Tories. Perhaps a more telling parallel would be the 1997 Wirral South election when the seat went from the Conservatives to Labour on a 17% swing.

Political comparisons have been flying around even since Gordon Brown came to power. I’ve indulged in a fair amount myself: is the Prime Minister more of an Eden than a Macmillan or more of a Callaghan than a Wilson? In reality he is Brown. As the local elections and now Crewe and Nantwich demonstrate: that is the problem.

There was a time when the Brown circle liked to talk about their man as the new Harold Macmillan, who took over as Prime Minister from Anthony Eden in 1957 and led the Conservative Party to victory two years later. He would do well now to heed Macmillan’s words: “Power: It’s like a Dead Sea fruit. When you achieve it, there is nothing there.”

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4 comments from readers

Assegai
24 May 2008 at 22:45

You need to distinguish between the by-election defeats which came before the 1992 election like Ribble Valley and after 1992 like Newbury and Christchurch. it was in Wirral South where the votes went from Tory to Labour, rather than to Liberal, that we knew the game was up.

Labour is finished because for the first time in a generation Labour votes went straight to the Tories rather than to the Liberals.

There are countless previous by-elections where the Tories had been in second place to Labour but had been beaten by the third place Liberals as they were the party to collect the protest votes. This didn't happen in Crewe and has to be a watershed.

Derek Bennett
28 May 2008 at 15:45

There was a time, come hell or high water, whatever the election, my cross would go in the Tory box without fail - then came John Major, the grey man.

In the early nineties I realised that the Conservative Party no longer existed, it had been replaced by a useless pro-EU party, but I still - reluctantly - I voted for it in 1992. That was the very last time I voted Tory.

When Major signed the Masstricht Treaty I was finished with them - the swine had signed our country away without consent. Gordon Brown too has done exactly the same, we are all screaming for a vote on the EU's Lisbon (Constitution) Treaty but he has ignored us all and signed tha dreadful thing anyway - now ratification awaits and the end of the UK as a soverign nation looms.

Gordon Brown has had his John Major moment and the Labour voters in Crewe have come to the same conclusion as I did about the Conservative Party all those years ago, the Labour Party no longer exists. It is no wonder why they deserted the party they used to support, Brown and his cohorts have betrayed them. The only problem is, they voted for the wrong party, they should have voted UKIP which is the only real alternative to the equally pro-EU: Labour Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties.

knave
01 June 2008 at 20:01

Why are you bothered Bright you man is going to get in ?.

Nice work by your mate wheen, in private eye doing hatchet job on the opponents of the Cameroonies.

Labour are a mess but I couldn't keep my meal down to be on the same side of the voting box as you and Cohen.

knave
02 June 2008 at 17:29

I hear the the right wing jason cowley has taken up the role of NS editor. A good friend of Cohen and Bright

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About the writer

Martin Bright

Martin Bright began his journalistic career writing in very simple English for a magazine aimed at French school children. This experience has informed his style ever since. He worked for the BBC World Service, and The Guardian before joining the Observer as Education Correspondent. He went on to become Home Affairs Editor before becoming the New Statesman's political editor in 2005.

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