Him wrote:
It's not as simple as just blaming Ed Milliband. The rise of UKIP and the SNP plus the collapse of the Lib Dems is what ultimately did for Labour in this election.
The Labour vote held up ok in England & Wales. It was Scotland that took 40 odd MP's away from Labour plus UKIP siphoning votes in some constituencies that were only narrowly held or gained by the Tories, plus too many Lib Dem constituencies turning blue instead of red.
I agree. There is also one other factor. Luck.
The collapse in the price of oil handed the Tories an economic gift not of their making on a plate. It undermined Labour's "cost of living crisis" stance which before that happened had quite some traction. The fact the electorate have not realised the respite will be temporary is testament to the stupidity of most of it.
But it isn't quite the disaster for Labour that's being made out. Nor is it a brilliant victory by the Tories. The Tories have benefitted from those issues Ive mentioned but their support is wafer thin. If the Lib Dems produce a decent leader and speak sensibly for 5 years then those Lib Dem constituencies will return and the UKIP vote has a good chance of collapsing if Farage isn't leader.
I think the UKIP factor will diminish pretty rapidly whatever the outcome of any EU referendum but I think the Lib Dems are toast for a long, long time. They are back to where they were in the 60's and 70's which was tantamount to being politically irrelevant.
As to Labour and Tories, Labour have potentially dodged a bullet and I don't mean dodging any impending economic disasters.
Even had they won their target seats they would be a minority yet would feel obliged to vote down a Tory Queens speech. Even if the rules say that then Labour gets a go at forming a government and if they did despite the fact it would be technically legitimate the Tory press would never have it. They would in my view have set themselves up to fail far worse than now between now and the next election. For that not to happen they would have had to have been very successful and given the current economic state of the country that would be very hard to do.
The Tories might be delighted today but reality will soon set in. I was half convinced they didn't want to win this time given the way the economic pointers are going. They have cut and sold just abut all there is cut and sell. Not much low hanging fruit left to prune and they have no other ideas. It won't take much for the odd by-election to turn them into a minority government and even as it is, the sh !t wiil hit the fan pretty soon internally with them. They are a divided party when it comes to the EU and other things as well.
Having said that there was plenty Labour did wrong. Not challenging the austerity/over-spending/Labour crashed the economy charge laid at their door from day 1. Not advising Milliband well enough (bar one or 2 moments he only got going in the campaign by which point it was too late). But the main issues for me were:
- putting Ed Balls as Shadow Chancellor - he's been terrible. Could never properly challenge Osborne or the Tories even when the economy was shrinking. And just comes across as if he doesn't really know what he's on about.
- not having a strong enough shadow cabinet/leadership around Milliband. When you compare to what Tony Blair had at his disposal (Brown, Blunkett, Cook, Mandelson etc).
They need to change that if they want to win next time.
The point about not challenging the austerity/over-spending/Labour crashed the economy charge is spot one and one I have made before. Miliband only started to do that in the last few weeks. Too late.
Most of the shadow Cabinet were pretty anonymous it must be said.
I can't remember which senior Labour politician it was was but they said they thought the biggest test of Miliband's leadership was if he dared not appoint Balls as shadow chancellor. At the time I thought he should have gone for Cooper, balls wife but it didn't and despite Balls having probably forgotten more about economics than Osborne will ever know, he was damaged goods and could not articulate his points well enough. Overcoming a stammer as he has done is not to be decried but alas as a politician if you can't articulate yourself well enough you are at a severe disadvantage regardless of how bright you are.