Yesterday’s by-election was more or less a foregone
conclusion, with the Tories’ original promise to ‘throw the kitchen sink’ at
Rochester & Strood having been ashes in the mouth of the Prime Minister for
at least a week. So, Mark Reckless – UKIP’s candidate – retakes the seat he
held as a Conservative MP from 2010, and no-one in the country with so much the
suggestion of a finger on the fluttering political pulse of the nation should
be at all surprised.
That doesn’t mean
the win is insignificant, however – not by any means. There have been noises
for a few days now about a UKIP win triggering at least two more defections
from the Tories. There are about as many candidates for this as there are Tory
backbenchers, but two frontrunners are the arch-Eurosceptic Peter Bone – who has
called for UKIP and the Tories to work together in the past – and John Baron,
who when questioned about whether he would defect replied with the deliciously clichéd
‘never say never’.
With the General
Election approaching fast, it is more and more unlikely that the new tradition
of forcing a by-election if you decide to jump ship to Farage’s mob would hold.
Therefore, any future defections could well be automatic, potentially swelling
the ranks of UKIP substantially in the run-up to May 2015. However, whilst Farage
will be keen of course to pinch as many Tories as he can get his made-in-the-UK
purple mittens on, what he is really after now is a Labour defector. This would
fit in with his growing narrative about UKIP being a party of neither the left
nor the right – and, considering polling shows their appeal among former
Conservative voters is approaching its critical mass, it is looking increasingly
necessary if UKIP want to keep up their admittedly impressive momentum.
And what about
Rochester & Strood itself? Well, with a much-reduced majority of 7.3% on a
low turnout of just 50%, Reckless is far from secure. Lord Ashcroft’s polling
shows that the Tories are likely to reclaim the seat in 2015, when – as Grant
Schapps put it this morning – ‘the future of the country will be on the ballot
paper’. Lib Dem, Labour and even Green supporters might be willing to lend
their votes to the Tories to keep out a UKIP MP for a full parliament where
they were not willing to do so for the sake of five months. We shall see.
Speaking of the
other parties, it didn’t go too well for them either. The swing against Labour
was -12%, nearly as much as against the Tories, while the Lib Dems got just 1% and
lost their deposit once again. The Green Party, meanwhile, continued their
recent trend of thrashing the Lib Dems into fourth place with 4% at the expense
of some of the Labour vote. Sixth place, for those who are interested, went to
a dominatrix who was last year voted Britain’s favourite sex worker. She got
just 300 votes less than the Lib Dem candidate.
To summarise: UKIP
continue their march, while the Tory and Labour high commands will be quaking
in their respective boots at the prospect of further defections. The Greens are
still doing quite well and the Lib Dems look like the next general election may
well see them wiped off the face of the Earth. 2015 is going to be an
interesting one, methinks.
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