In
theory the forthcoming European Elections on 23rd May should be an
opportunity for Remainers to translate the clear majority for staying
in the EU that we see in the polls into actual votes. Remain has been
ahead of Leave since the summer of 2017, and recent majorities have
been above 5%. Indeed some
in the smaller anti-Brexit parties have been suggesting exactly this:
the EU elections should be about Remaining rather than Leaving.
Unfortunately things are not that simple, as the following YouGov
poll illustrates.
The
smaller columns for the parties represent the data with ‘Would not
vote’ and ‘Don’t know’ included.
The
first point is that the anti-Brexit parties are polling at around
half the level of the pro-Brexit, anti-People’s Vote parties. The
key problem, as it has always been for the Remain cause, is that the
Labour vote is mostly made up of Remainers. In this poll, 77% of
Labour voters voted Remain in the 2016 referendum, and some of the
other 23% may have changed their minds since then. Labour is an
overwhelmingly Remain party in terms of who votes for it, but its
leadership is in favour of its own form of Brexit and appears
ambivalent towards a People’s Vote.
Some
Remainers would love voters to desert Labour and vote for one of the
three unambiguously anti-Brexit parties. But this is very unlikely to
happen. Many voters, even though they might support Remain, want a
Labour government above all else, and they will vote for Labour
despite this being about elections to the European Parliament. This
is of course exactly what happened in the 2017 general election.
Voting left is hardly an irrational choice for these Remainers,
because if we do not leave the EU the European Parliament does play a
minor role in EU affairs and it is important to have left wing voices
there.
The
second point is that the elections for the European Parliament is
actually about voting for MEPs, so seats matter as well as the
popular vote. The D'Hondt voting system used in British elections for
the European parliament combined with voting for MEPs on a regional
basis does penalise smaller parties. The Liberal Democrats only
received 1 seat out of 73 in 2014, even though they got nearly 7% of
the overall vote. As a result, if the Remain vote splits badly it is
conceivable that the total seat count for the Remain parties combined
may only be a few seats, which will not look good compared to the
double figures that Farage will get.
A
very good question is why the anti-Brexit parties have not
cooperated. It would be difficult to choose just one of the three
parties to stand in each district, but it would not be impossible.
Without this cooperation, tactical voting is unlikely to prevent the
anti-Brexit vote being split three ways in each England region. It
would seem these parties think it is more important to fight among
themselves than unite in sending a clear message on Brexit. That will
be sad if this failure leads to MEPs only being in the job for a few
months. Remain can get a million on the streets and 6 million
signatures, but it seems getting small parties to cooperate is a more
difficult task.
Another
possibility would have been for the People's Vote campaign to do as Nigel
Farage has done, and put up candidates themselves on a pro-EU ticket.
Unlike Farage, the People's Vote campaign would face problems in
doing so. Electing individuals on a simple pro-EU ticket only makes
sense if these MEPs only have a very short tenure. If the campaign is
successful, you want proper MEPs representing different political
perspectives. That is probably one of many reasons why the People's
Vote campaign will not field candidates of its own, and is
perhaps another reason why the smaller parties do not cooperate.
Given
Labour's position and the lack of cooperation among the anti-Brexit
parties, Remainers should not turn these European elections into a
vote about being anti-Brexit, because they will lose badly. The
combined vote for UKIP, the new Brexit party and the Conservatives is
almost certain to exceed the combined vote for the LibDems, CHUK and
the Greens. A smarter tactic would be, through the People’s Vote
campaign, to make these elections into a vote about a People’s
vote. The key difference of course is that Labour can potentially be
counted as being in favour of a People’s Vote, and so making the
European elections as a kind of referendum on a People’s Vote might
succeed. Using the poll numbers above, the pro-People’s Vote
parties have an overall majority.
In
reality Labour’s position on a People’s Vote is nuanced, or
perhaps just confused. It is in favour of a People’s Vote for a
deal it does not like, but is rather ambivalent if the deal is its
own. The leadership is divided on the issue. Apparently Keir Starmer
was described
by Tories in the joint government/Labour negotiations as the
‘ideologue’ for wanting a People’s Vote, while his colleagues
were described as more reasonable! The European elections could force
Labour’s hand on the issue. This is obviously what the People’s
Vote campaign will hope for, but how much the Electoral Commission
will allow it to campaign over the election is unclear.
If
Labour did unambiguously commit to a People’s Vote in all
circumstances it could take votes from the smaller parties, and this
may well dominate any votes it my lose from Labour leavers. Labour
has the opportunity
for an overwhelming victory in these elections, as Brexit will take
many votes away from the Conservatives to pro-No Deal parties.
However that inducement may not be enough, in part because Labour are
constantly thinking about the possibility of a General Election where
they do not want to be painted as the anti-Brexit party. Remainers
should also have the sense to see that a Labour victory in a general
election would be a better option from a Remain point of view than a
People’s Vote, for reasons I set out here.
Without
a general election, the Brexit position has become a stalemate.
Theresa May is set against holding a People’s Vote, and so are
Brexiters. Behind all their guff about such a vote being an insult
against democracy (“War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is
strength”), the real reason Brexiters hate the idea of a second
referendum is that they think they will lose. Nor has parliament been
able to force the government to hold a referendum, with the latest
vote in parliament being
280 voting in favor of a People’s Vote and 292 against.
However
no other option looks like getting over the line anytime soon either.
Brexit has become a war of attrition. Brexiters are in no mood to
accept May’s deal, and instead some have pinned their hopes on
replacing her. Even if they succeed, it is unclear how this changes
the parliamentary arithmetic. The Tories also fear a general election
for the same reasons Brexiters fear a People’s Vote. Talks between
Labour and the government are unlikely to get anywhere because a
compromise that didn’t include a People’s Vote would be
devastating for Labour, and any compromise by the government would
pour oil on the fire of Tory divisions. Finally the new October
deadline set by the EU is unlikely to force anyone to change their
mind, because there is a belief in the UK that the EU will always
allow another extension rather than risk an exit with no deal.
In
these circumstances, a People’s Vote (PV) is going to be seen more
and more as the only way out. In parliament it is already the option
with most votes. It is just possible that the European Elections
could change some minds if it was seen as an endorsement for holding
a PV. But for this to happen the PV campaign needs to persuade the
smaller parties to stop talking about this election as being about
Brexit and instead start talking about a People’s Vote.
As
far as the media is concerned, the European elections will be about
the showing of the pro-No Deal parties. Indeed it could all be about
Nigel Farage. His new Brexit party is well organised, well funded
(from sources unknown), and is likely to get extensive publicity from
the BBC at least. (To see the BBC choosing his “put the fear of god
into MPs at Westminster” line as their headline quote illustrates
all too well the themes of last week’s article
on how the media encourages far right extremism.) The poll above,
taken before his party was formally launched, indicates that his
Brexit party could easily end up beating the Conservatives and coming
second, as UKIP voters switch to his party. This will become the main
new story.
That
will be painful to watch for Remainers, but ironically it could
indirectly help the People’s Vote cause. Moderate Conservative MPs
will see the poor showing of their party in the European elections
and begin to understand more clearly the bind they are in. For as
long as Brexit is an issue, they will be in danger of hemorrhaging
votes to pro-No Deal parties, but if they accept No Deal the
Conservatives will not be in government for decades. A People’s
Vote on May’s deal may be the only chance they have of changing
that situation any time soon.
This is a thoroughly commendable and timely analysis which certainly does make me and many other UK ex-pats who live in EU pause and become slightly less comfortable with the polls visual trend shifts that were so encouraging since July 2018. Is Jeremy listening at all?
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