The Scotsman

Labour can’t hope for a UK majority unless it recovers in Scotland

Comment John Curtice

-

Aparty loses a general election for the third time in a row. It falls as many as 65 seats short of what it needs to win. Indeed, it barely wins any more seats than it won the first time it lost in 2010. Yet its performanc­e is met with a mixture of astonishme­nt and applause.

That was the curious experience Labour enjoyed on Thursday night. The explanatio­n of course lies in expectatio­ns. Just a few weeks ago the party seemingly faced the prospect of suffering its worst result since the 1930s. Against that backdrop, what was still quite a substantia­l defeat felt like victory, especially as it was enough to deny the Conservati­ves an overall majority.

But once the wave of relief that has swept over Labour has faded away, together with the pleasure that some in the party derive from having won a higher share of the vote than the former leader, Tony Blair, managed on two occasions, the party will have to face the fact that it lost quite heavily.

One central issue is the dire position of the party north of the Border. When Labour lost in 2010 it won just 191 seats in England. This time it won 226 – 35 more.

However, those hard-won gains have effectivel­y done no more than compensate for the weakness nowadays of the party in Scotland. Seven years ago, Labour had 41 seats in Scotland. On Thursday, in contrast, it won just seven.

While Thursday’s performanc­e represente­d a marked improvemen­t on the solitary seat the party won in 2015, it is still 34 seats short of the tally it secured in 2017.

If Labour had done as well in Scotland as it did in 2010, the party’s tally of seats on Thursday would have stood at 296. That still would not have been enough to be even close to having an overall majority, but it would leave the party in a position where it would look capable of winning next time around.

As it is, if the party remains so weak in Scotland it needs to be able to win another 64 seats south of the Border. That would require more than a 6 per cent swing from the Conservati­ves – the equivalent of no less than a ninepoint national lead in votes. Absent of any restoratio­n of its fortunes in Scotland, a Labour majority government still looks a very long way off.

 ??  ?? The election could be seen as a curious experience for Labour
The election could be seen as a curious experience for Labour
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom