The Independent

Johnson’s popularity boost won’t last for long – Starmer should hold his nerve

We have a premonitio­n of that struggle now, with the backlash against the proposed 1% pay rise for nurses

- JOHN RENTOUL

Markets in political commentary overshoot. The trade among hyper-political obsessives has swung from “Keir Starmer had an amazing start as leader of the opposition” to “Labour is doomed” in just a few weeks. One opinion poll putting the Conservati­ves 13 points ahead and Labour’s sky has fallen in.

The truth lies between the extremes. For most of last year, Boris Johnson had a hard time and was thought to be handling the Covid-19 pandemic badly. This year, the vaccinatio­n programme has gone well and he gets some of the credit. Starmer’s fortunes have largely reflected those two phases. Most normal people, who pay little attention to politics, have noticed that he isn’t Jeremy Corbyn, that he seems competent – if a bit dull – and that he tends to complain a lot. That means he is doing better than most opposition leaders. Labour under Starmer is ahead of the average opposition party since 1983, according to an analysis of Ipsos MORI opinion polls by Dylan Spielman.

The average path of the opposition in those nine election cycles is that its level of support rises from the previous election by 15 percentage points until it reaches a point two-thirds of the way through the time between elections. If Starmer follows that path, and assuming the next election is in 2024, Labour would be at 48 per cent in the polls at the end of 2022.

The bad news for Labour is that, on average, opposition parties then fall back 10 points in the remaining period before the election, and end up only 5 points ahead of where they started. This is probably because government­s control policy and try to maximise support at election time, and because voters switch from protesting against the existing government to making a choice between alternativ­e government­s.

Still, a 5-point gain might be enough to wipe out Johnson’s majority, and it would put Labour within range of forming a minority government in a hung parliament.

Those averages summarise a wide range of variations but provide a better context for analysing today’s politics than a single YouGov poll. In the longer view, Starmer is likely to continue to make progress, not because he will “articulate a compelling vision” or whatever it is that commentato­rs are urging him to do, but because the Conservati­ves will continue to govern. To govern is to choose, and to choose is to create losers, which is why government­s tend to become more unpopular until the turnaround point two-thirds of the way through their term.

I boldly predict that Johnson’s popularity boost from the success of the vaccines will not last. Partly, this is because life is likely to return to pre-coronaviru­s normal more quickly than seems possible while we are still in the coronaviru­s abnormal, but partly just because voters tend to be ungrateful. They are pleased about the vaccines now, and give Johnson some grudging credit for them, but the jabs are unlikely to be a big feature of the next election campaign.

The main way in which the pandemic is likely to be an issue in that election is its effect on the public finances, and the struggle waged by Johnson and Rishi Sunak to try to prevent the word “austerity” from sticking to them. We have a premonitio­n of that struggle now, with the backlash against the proposed 1 per cent pay rise for nurses.

I suspect Johnson will change the proposal, and end up with a 2.1 per cent pay rise, as originally planned. I doubt if this is a deliberate ploy, but if the government had simply proposed 2.1 per cent in the first place, the howls of protest would have been almost as great. This way, Johnson can say nurses are getting more than twice as much as the number he first thought of.

They are pleased about the vaccines now, and give Johnson some grudging credit for them, but the jabs are unlikely to be a big feature of the next election

This is just the start of a long and difficult period in which pressure for more public spending will be hard to resist, and every attempt to resist it will be portrayed as “austerity”. Many of those attempts will fail, meaning the government will both be tarred with the A-word and end up looking fiscally incontinen­t.

Sunak’s Budget tried to push as much of the fiscal pain as possible into future years – which had the unintended effect of prompting speculatio­n that he and Johnson want to go for an early election in 2023. I am sure Johnson wants to keep that option open, but I don’t think it is the central planning scenario.

Even so, the prime minister will have noticed other premonitio­ns of unpopulari­ty ahead. Three times in five days this week, the pro-Tory, pro-Brexit Daily Mail has led its front page with a story about his fiancee’s redecorati­on of the Downing Street flat. She has been dubbed “Carrie Antoinette” on social media.

These kinds of stories – the fuss over Cherie Blair buying two flats in Bristol was another – are barely political and rarely inflict serious damage, but they cut through to non-political audiences with a discordant “us versus them” background noise.

So Starmer should hold his nerve. Johnson’s poll boost may last for a few months, but it will be subject to the laws of political entropy. Starmer does not yet have the luxury that Blair and Cameron enjoyed in opposition of representi­ng “time for a change”. He has done what he can, setting up a solid base from which to take advantage of the government’s inevitable mistakes. Now he has to wait.

 ??  ?? If he plays his cards right, the Labour leader could guide his party to a tight election win
If he plays his cards right, the Labour leader could guide his party to a tight election win

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom