The Independent

Now is not the time to line up in opposition to the Tories

Ahead of more by-elections, Labour is under pressure to form a progressiv­e alliance with the Lib Dems and Greens, but there’s no common cause, writes John Rentoul

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The Labour Party’s mistake is to think that, when it talks to itself, the voters aren’t listening. Every time it loses, it starts talking about changing the voting system and doing deals with other parties. What the voters hear is that the party is a bad loser and wants to change the rules.

Other than that, a “progressiv­e alliance” is a great idea. Polly Toynbee, the grandee of Lib-Labbery, has called for Labour and the Greens to stand down in favour of Sarah Green, the Lib Dem candidate, in the Chesham and Amersham by-election, likely to be on 17 June.

The Conservati­ves won 55 per cent of the vote in the general election but, says Toynbee, many of those voters were “Tories who only stayed loyal for fear of Jeremy Corbyn”. The arithmetic is credible in a constituen­cy where a majority voted to Remain in the EU referendum – but it relies on a mood in the country against the government, a mood that looks on by-elections as a chance to make a protest.

That is why parties so rarely stand aside in each other’s favour, despite the incentives of the electoral system. The main recent example was the Brexit Party at the last election, because the priority of “getting Brexit done” was so clear and overwhelmi­ng.

So there is unlikely to be a pact in Chesham and Amersham, or in Batley and Spen, the other imminent byelection, in a Leave seat where Labour is hoping to avoid the fate that befell it in Hartlepool. The most that is likely to happen, as Andrew Grice wrote last week, is that Labour won’t try hard in Chesham and the Lib Dems will ease off in Batley.

The mistake often made by Labour people is to assume that they are part of an anti-Tory majority that fails to find expression because of the vagaries of the voting system. This is only sometimes true. You would have thought the coalition government of the Conservati­ves and Lib Dems would have cured Labourmind­ed supporters of a progressiv­e alliance of that idea. Admittedly, it was a long time ago, but Len Duvall, the leader of the Labour group on the Greater London Assembly, seemed surprised when Tories, Lib Dems and Greens united to deny Labour the committee chairs last week. “Green and Lib Dem candidates ... are betraying their progressiv­e values,” he thundered.

The thing about a progressiv­e alliance is that the politics has to come first: the parties have to unite around a common cause. That takes leadership, but it also requires a cause, and I just don’t see one at the moment.

Yours,

John Rentoul Chief political commentato­r

 ?? (PA) ?? An electoral pact against the Conservati­ves is harder than it looks
(PA) An electoral pact against the Conservati­ves is harder than it looks

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