Wednesday, 7 April 2010

An election you say?

Well, well, well.

It's finally been announced.  Four weeks tomorrow we (and I use "we" loosely - around half of us) will go to the polls and vote for a new MP and, consequently, a new government.  Those that want change will vote for someone different and hope they have enough support to be elected.  Those that want to stick with the devil they know will hope enough of their fellow voters agree with that sentiment.  Everyone has the choice to vote (even those in the 382 constituencies which are classed as "safe" seats - though in those cases the choice will probably be between the sitting MP and beating them).

Anyway, I know I haven't posted much - and probably won't improve that record over the next few weeks - but I thought I better put on record my predictions for May 6th.  So here goes.

David Cameron will become the next Prime Minister.  The Conservatives, despite all the recent chat about opinion polls tightening and hung parliaments, will end up with a majority of around 40.  The polls will tighten - but only in as far as cutting the Tory lead from the 10-11 points it currently is to 7 or 8.

In Scotland, the SNP will win the national share of the vote, but will get scant reward.  They'll make two gains - in either Dundee West, Livingston, Kilmarnock & Loudoun, Edinburgh East or (more doubtful but still possible) Stirling or Ochil & South Perthshire.  But they'll lose Glasgow East back to Labour and have to fight off Tory challenges in Angus and Perth & North Perthshire.  

The Tories will turn the borders blue, with wins in Berwickshire, Roxburgh & Selkirk, Dumfries & Galloway... as well as 2 potential surprises in Ayr, Carrick & Cumnock, Argyll & Bute, West Aberdeenshire & Kincardine, Edinburgh South and Edinburgh South-West as Scotland returns (vaguely) to the Tories, giving them 20% of the vote and 5 MPs north of the border.  

The Lib Dems will, I think, lose their position that the Iraq war gave them in 2005 and won't make any real gains but losing Michael Moore in the borders and potentially West Aberdeenshire & Kincardine, Argyll & Bute as well as the opportunity of a gain in Edinburgh South make it a tough night for Tavish.  I still expect them to hold on to around 8 or 9 seats, making them the second party in Scotland in seats but likely fourth on vote share.

And what of Labour?  Well, a night to forget.  They'll gain back Glasgow East from the SNP but most of the night will be a rearguard action, fighting tough battles across Scotland - and the rest of the UK - and several current Cabinet ministers are in danger of leaving the Palace of Westminster for the last time. I reckon to see 37 Scottish Labour MPs, down two from 2005 - probably in the shape of 2 losses to the SNP and one to the Tories - which, on the face of it, would not be a disaster, and they'd have the electoral system to thank for it.

So there.  I reckon some people may have better predictions (and advice on tactical voting) but I don't think I'll be far off.  Kind of makes the point the Electoral Commission is making - only a hundred or so seats will be proper contests, and only 6 or 7 seats in Scotland will (in my view) change hands.  But I guess that's what the next four weeks are about.  Onward!

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Saturday, 20 March 2010

Six Nations Week 5 - Predictions

For the final time this year:

Wales 24-17 Italy 
Ireland 23-18 Scotland 
France 30-15 England 

No shocks, I reckon.

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Thursday, 18 March 2010

Conference Paper

Been a bit busy recently, so I've been quiet on here.  Inevitable consequence of trying to do a million things at one time.  

One of those things I'd like to point you in the direction of is a conference paper which I've jointly written with my PhD supervisor, Dr Peter Lynch.  I will be presenting it (alone - Peter is out of the country!) at the PSA conference in Edinburgh on the 30th March.

The paper is entitled:

"From National Conversation to Independence Referendum?:  The SNP Government and the Politics of Independence"

You can read it on the PSA Conference website, along with the other papers which appear on the same panel.

For those of you who don't really want to wade through 6,000 words of research, the abstract is below.  But you know you want to...


This paper will examine the political background and activities of the SNP Government’s National Conversation to promote independence ahead of a referendum in 2010. It will set the process in the context of similar constitutional reform exercises in other countries (such as statute reforms in Spain) and look at the level of public and pressure group engagement with the National Conversation through assessing the range of events and media coverage of the process. The paper will argue that the National Conversation process has had little apparent effect on the popularity of independence – in terms of opinion poll support - but has allowed the SNP government to engage with community organisations across Scotland, boost its own popularity and play an agendasetting role over the issue of constitutional change more broadly.

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Saturday, 13 March 2010

Six Nations Week 4 - Predictions

Ireland 32-18 Wales 
Scotland 12-17 England 
France 41-13 Italy

Haven't really had time this week to get a grip of the teams etc (I've been in Rome on holiday) but here's what I think.  Wins for Ireland, England and France, the latter to set up a Grand Slam opportunity at home against England next week.

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