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Britain: Labour suffers heavy losses in local elections and
London mayoral race
By Chris Marsden
6 May 2000
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The Labour Party suffered a battering in elections held May
5 for London mayor and local councils. After seeing 560 councillors
lose their seats, Labour lost control of 15 metropolitan councils.
Its most high profile setback was the election of Ken Livingstone
as London mayor. Livingstone stood as an independent, after Labour
Prime Minister Tony Blair ensured that he was not selected as
the official Labour Party candidate, and then expelled him from
the party when he announced his candidacy.
Not only was the election the first for the mayor of a major
British city, it was held on a system of proportional representation,
with voters able to indicate their first and second preferences.
Labour's official candidate Frank Dobson ended a poor third. But
if all first and second preference votes had counted, he would
have come fourth, behind the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.
Despite near universal press hostilitythe usually pro-Labour
Daily Mirror had called for a vote for Conservative candidate
Stephen Norris in order to stop Livingstone, alongside similar
calls by the Tory pressLivingstone won 39 percent of first
preference votes, compared with 27.1 percent for Norris, and just
13.1 percent for Dobson.
In the accompanying election of 25 members to the newly created
Greater London Assembly, Labour and the Conservatives tied with
nine seats each. The Liberal Democrats won 4 and the Greens 3.
Labour fared no better in the local elections. It lost the
northern cities of Bradford and Oldham and suffered heavy losses
throughout the industrial heartland of the West Midlands, home
to the Rover car plant now threatened with closure.
Everything had been done to ensure a high turnout in the elections.
Polling booths were placed in supermarkets and postal votes were
extended. A massive budget was expended on the London Assembly
elections, which, together with the use of proportional representation,
was hailed as the onset of a new era of participatory democracy.
Yet two-thirds of the electorate stayed at home. Both the Conservatives
and the Liberal Democrats benefited from the widespread abstention.
Turnout in both the London mayoral race and local government elections
hovered around 35 percent, but was much worse in traditional Labour
strongholds in the inner cities. In one Liverpool ward turnout
was just 15 percent, and it is estimated that on a national scale
the percentage of Tory voters who went to the polls was twice
that of Labour voters.
The Liberal Democrats were the main beneficiaries in the metropolitan
areas. The Tories, on the other hand, scored their successes in
the countryside and coastal towns by mobilising their core supporters
on a law-and-order, anti-immigrant ticket. These policies, however,
proved unpalatable to the broad mass of the electorate. It is
significant that in Romsey, the one parliamentary by-election
held on the same day, the Liberal Democrats won with a 3,000 majority
in a former Conservative stronghold. Labour's vote collapsed to
under 5 percent.
Livingstone's victory in London epitomises Labour's difficulties
and the attitude of broad sections of working people to Blair's
government. Rejected as Labour's official candidate because of
his past association with the party's left wing, Livingstone's
victory was a slap in the face for the party leadership.
Blair's claim to fame was that he had secured Labour a broad-based
constituency and enabled it to break out of its past reliance
on the working class. In the event, however, Labour has succeeded
in alienating its working class constituency while simultaneously
losing the support of many of its new-found friends amongst former
Tory voters.
Livingstone, whose vote was gathered from across the political
and social spectrum, was able to trump Blair at his own game,
combining pledges to tackle poverty with appeals to big business.
He has promised a new style of politics and a new kind of
governance, inviting all-party collaboration in his cabinet
and a rotating deputy mayor post, with representatives of the
Tories, Liberal Democrats and Greens holding the position at various
times. But more than anything done by Livingstone, it was Blair
who was the architect of Labour's defeat.
The prime minister personifies the upper-middle-class layers
who enriched themselves during the boom years of the 1980s. He
was catapulted to political prominence at a time of deepening
Tory unpopularity and charged with overseeing Labour's final break
with its old reformist programme. Since coming to power, he has
relied on the media to present him as a great and popular leader,
and to proclaim his anti-welfare measures and pro-business politics
as the only game in town. His efforts to prevent Livingstone from
standing proceeded from an arrogant belief that his personal popularity
was unassailable, and that both the party and the electorate would
bow to his wishes.
Thursday's elections have proved how far removed from reality
the perceptions of the Blair leadership really are. No amount
of media hype or jigging with the constitutional set-up can conceal
thatthree years after taking office and with a possible
general election next Maythe government lacks any substantial
social base and is deeply unpopular with wide layers of the population.
This goes to the heart of a crisis of rule for British capitalism.
Throughout the last century the Labour Party, together with the
trade unions, functioned as the essential political mechanisms
for maintaining social order. Their advocacy of social reforms
enabled class conflict to be confined within a parliamentary framework.
Labour's right-wing evolution has left workers completely excluded
and alienated from official politics. With the gap between the
super-rich and the mass of ordinary working people growing ever
wider, this has explosive social and political implications for
the future.
See Also:
London mayoral elections: Livingstone
offers no alternative to Labour Party's pro-business politics
[18 April 2000]
Britain:
Politics
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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