A good reason for Gordon Brown not to have an early general election

I’m pretty sceptical of the chatter about Gordon Brown calling an early general election*. Here’s one the reasons which hasn’t been much talked about.

Imagine we have an early election. Imagine too that Labour manages what is probably the limit of its hopes – largest party in a hung Parliament. (Witness Labour MPs going round telling Liberal Democrats how much they now love voting reform.)

Labour then hangs on to power.

But in May along comes a round of local elections, in which Labour will – almost certainly – suffer massive losses. If you’ve got experience of a no overall majority council, you’ll know just how much the political momentum – and hence the range of plausible governing arrangements which can hang together – can get shifted by election results one way or the other.

It immediately makes clinging on to power that much harder.

Don’t forget too that the logic of calling an early election is meant to be to hold it before the budget. So you do that, and then have to have the budget and get thumped in the local elections: two big hits to your popularity just as you’re trying to hang on. Not exactly a plan that stacks up is it?

* Pedantry corner: of course, a general election in May is itself an early election as you have to dissolve Parliament after five years, which means when you add on the length of election campaigns that it can be more than five years between general elections. But ‘early’ is generally being used to mean ‘before May’.

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13 Comments

  • Chris Stanbra 12th Dec '09 - 12:59pm

    More pedantry corner please!
    Seriously, May has got to be the most likely date. Mark’s right about the downside of a March date. To have a GE campaign which consisted of several weeks of debate over the content of the pending budget including a dutch auction of tax increases and spending cuts (if such a thing is possible) would be horrendous. On the other hand, you never know….

  • Roger Roberts 12th Dec '09 - 5:15pm

    Imagine the difficulties a March election would pose for Electoral Officers already preparing for the May 6th local elections. Thousands of extra staff would be needed, polling stations hired, plus much more. Who would meet the additional cost ? Ashcroft – not likely ! Just an additional charge on each one of us.

  • Herbert Brown 12th Dec '09 - 5:40pm

    “They kmow they are nowhere near where they need to be and want the extra time until May/June.”

    Judging by the recent movement towards Labour in the polls, I should think the last thing the Tories want is “extra time”.

  • In a poll out tonight.
    Tory lead soars to 17% again in new ComRes poll
    No way will Brown call an election before May 2010.

  • Herbert Brown 13th Dec '09 - 9:31am

    But it’s always wise to avoid concluding too much from a single poll. Two other new ones paint a very different picture:

    YouGov: CON 40 (-) LAB 31 (+4) LD 16 (-2)

    BPIX: CON 41 LAB 30 LD 17

  • “But in May along comes a round of local elections, in which Labour will – almost certainly – suffer massive losses.”

    That may not hold in a post GE where Labour have done (in perception terms) well. The tories did well in 1992 post GE – with gains in contrast to 1990, 91, 93 and 94.

  • Mark’s got this wrong (unusually) – people really only make their minds up once, so an early GE locks down voting intention for the locals a few weeks later (as it did in 92). The point for Labour is two fold – they’re likely to poll better in a national election than in a local one (so will boost their local turnout due to the ‘lock down’) and even if they don’t they really don’t care enough about local government to bother about losing a few dozen more councillors on top of the 6,000 they’ve lost over the last 10 years.

    25th of March it is – Malcolm Tucker said so!

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