Who has most to worry about from the 09 County elections?

August 16, 2008

A prolific reader of my blog, Comrade, left a short but interesting comment on my last post. He, once a Labour councillor left to join the LibDems, urged us to “bring on” the county elections. It made me think about who had most to gain, or lose, from that poll.

First thing to note is that it is not likely to be on the same day as a General Election and thus a much lower turnout may hit some majorities that were previously very high. And also being on the same day as the Euro elections may bring the right-wing vote out in much greater force. However, the statistics show some worries for all the parties.

In terms of marginal seats (those with a majority of less than 5%), the Tories hold 8 (out of 46), Labour have 5 (out of 22) and the LibDems have 6 (out of 14) – hence nearly half of the LibDem county group are vulnerable on quite small swings. Melton Constable has a LibDem majority of 0.02% (yes, a single vote) and the Tories in North Norfolk will be gunning for electoral revenge there. Kings Lynn South is held by the LibDems by 0.3% and East Depwade by 0.4% – both in areas with big swings back to the Tories in recent years. Clavering had a LibDem majority of 3% but the Tories won that back in a by-election last year so it may be difficult to hold. I would imagine at this stage that all four seats would be very difficult for them to hold. The LibDems also have a 0.6% majority in Aylsham (but a much better majority at the recent by-election) and a 2% lead in Cromer and both would be vulnerable to a Cameron surge. If the Tories do very well on polling day then Reepham (LibDem maj 7%) could also be at risk. Other LibDem seats should fare better – despite a fairly low 9% majority in Fakenham, the party are odds on to hold it. Their 22% majority in Eaton will look more vulnerable given the strides made by the Tories at City level, and a similar 22% majority in Thorpe Hamlet – their second safest seat – is under threat from the rampant Norwich Green Party who took the identical ward by 501 votes at City level.

Labour’s urban outposts in Norfolk will face the test of a resurgant Tory Party next year as well. Great Yarmouth will see some pretty close fights – the semi-rural Lothingland Division has a Labour majority of just 0.5% for example. Thetford East (Labour maj 0.7%), Dereham South (Labour maj 3%), Caister (Labour maj 5%) and Gaywood North & Central (Labour maj 3%) would all become Tory seats based upon district results, let alone the opinion polls. And the news becomes worse for Labour – their 6% majority in Sprowston and 8% lead in Gaywood South (Kings Lynn) would currently both be wiped out. Breydon in Great Yarmouth had a Labour lead of 15% in 2005 and will certainly be top of the Great Yarmouth Tories hitlist, especially if Brandon Lewis is to be their next MP. It may even get worse than that, because a lot of very, very safe Labour seats in Norwich will also come into play on a low turnout. A 25% lead in Bowthorpe and a 22% lead in Catton Grove may also disappear if recent City elections are repeated and gains could be made by the Tories. Labour also hold seats in Lakenham, Mancroft and Wensum where the LibDems and Greens have since made City gains. Labour’s county group could easily be reduced from 22 to 15 on a small swing back to the Tories and down to 10 if things go badly in Norwich.

The Greens, of course, start from a low base and should gain seats from Labour this time around. Town Close, despite the by-election win, won’t be a guaranteed hold but Nelson should be pretty safe territory for them.

The Tories have most at risk, having most seats and an overall majority on the council – it would take just the loss of 4 seats for our overall majority to go. The LibDems will be looking no doubt at Long Stratton (Con maj 2%) and Diss (Con maj 4%) but given the massive Tory strides in South Norfolk, neither look vulnerable at the moment. They may rather fancy their chances in North Norfolk wheer the Tories currently lead by 4% in both Wells and Mundesley. On the outside, the LibDems may also choose to mount a strong challenge in Hellesdon (Con maj 8%) and Hoveton (Con maj 7%) but at the moment both look beyond their reach. Labour really have very few opportunities to make gains from the Tories – even a 0.7% Tory majority in the Broadland seat of Woodside looks a bit far fetched. Gorleston (Con maj 3%), Acle (Con maj 10%) and Old Catton (Con maj 7%) may all get Labour going but I don’t think they stand a chance in those wards either.

So who are the likely winners and losers from this? The Tories look pretty secure and have plenty of chances to gains seats from both Labour and the LibDems. Few Tory Councillors will even be challenged by Labour, although a coupel of seats may have strong LibDem campaigns. I suspect we’ll talking about the size of the Tory majority rather than if there will be one! The Labour Party pretty much face meltdown and their urban bases look set to fall; facing a Tory onslaught in GY, KL and Norwich (plus the Greens in Norwich too) they could be squeezed from all sides and could fall to third. The party with the biggest risk is the LibDems; on a good day they could hold seats and make a few gains, but they haven’t had many good days recently. With the Greens stealing their clothes in Norwich and the rampant Tories in the county they could as easily be fighting the Greens for third place on county and they could fighting Labour for second. At the moment, I wouldn’t want to be a LibDem strategist – over-stretch could cost them seats.

So that’s it as I see it at the moment; things could change (and do) in politics) but I have tried to be honest. I’ll let you guess the seats, but currently I think we’ll see 54 Conservatives, 14 LibDems, 11 Labour and 5 Greens – an overall majority of 24 for the Tories.

The Tories have this election to win, Labour have it to lose … but its the LibDems who should most fear the ballot box at the moment!


UPDATED: City Elections: Nominations revealed

April 5, 2008

Yesterday was the last day to get your nomination paper in for the City elections. You can get a full run down here but I thought I’d just summerise the situation. The main 4 parties are contesting every seat – Conservative, Labour, Green and LibDems – plus there’s UKIP in Lakenham and Norwich-over-the-Water in Sewell.

In terms of interesting candidates;
For the LibDems its all change; the talented Gordon Dean is relgated to an absolute thrashing in Catton Grove, whilst his former Councillor Colleague Chris Thomas takes on Mile Cross – the LibDems say this indicates how seriously they are taking the ward, but I didn’t know Chris was that keen on getting back on the council. Nelson stalwart David Fairbairn now ends up defending Hereward’s old patch in Lakenham, whilst Judith Lubbock takes on Eaton. Interestingly former Heathersett Councillor Jackie Sutton – who lost her seat in the South Norfolk Tory landslide of 07 – reappears as candidate for ultra-marginal Thorpe Hamlet. Lastly I suppose is the decision of another former Councillor, Ian Williams, to take on Sewell. The NOTWP candidate will I’m sure shake this seat up and any party who effectivly harnesses the anti-Labour vote may do well. Williams has been, in his (and my) time, a formiddable candidate and this could now be the ward to watch.

Labour have had an easier time of candidate selection. Their sitting Councillors have a tough time – Mick Banham in Sewell, Brenda Ferris in Bowthorpe and Julie Westmacott in Catton Grove all have the fights of their lives. Deborah Gilwahi (Mile Cross), Brenda Arthur (University) and Bob Sanderson (Lakenham) all hope to step into LibDem shoes and the hopes of the party will essentially rest upon their shoulders. Dvaid Bradford, a real champion, stands again for Crome. The most interesting candidate in many ways is Steph Clark – standing in Wensum – incidentally standing against a LibDem called Brian Clark. Labour feel they have a real chance here and have certainly done a lot of work. And, of course, we have to mention the gallant Phil Taylor who is leading the Labour chances in Eaton.

The Greens have a full slate again; one switch is being made with Adrian Holmes leaving Wensum and seeking election in Mancroft leaving his old ward to UEA student Ruth Makoff. There are also some relationship candidates this time. Adrian Ramsay’s girlfriend is their candidate in Bowthorpe and Janet Bearman’s husband is standing in Eaton. Stop-the-War campaigner Peter Offord leads their charge in ultra-marginal Thorpe Hamlet. In Town Close the unknown Samir Jeraj is standing (more of this later).

Please feel free to post your predictions


Tories announce local poll candidates

March 28, 2008

The Norwich Conservatives have announced the 13 candidates who will contest the local elections on 1st May, ensuring that everybody in the City has the chance to vote for a Conservative candidate.

Conservative Group Leader Cllr Antony Little said: “Everyone in the City now has a chance to vote for a hard working, common sense ConservativeCouncillor who will put tackling anti-social behaviour, cleaning up the streets and fighting for our Post Offices at the heart of their work.”

“The Conservatives are a very different political party for Norwich – the only party that spoke up against the millions wasted on the unitary project and the only party that voted to freeze council tax levels this year.”

“Last year we won the same number of wards as the LibDems and gained as many seats as the Greens. Every year we win more votes and more Councillors. This year could be crucial, and every new Conservative Councillor will mean we have a better chance of a value-for-money council that puts residents first.”

The full list of candidates is:
Bowthorpe – Niki George
Catton Grove – John Fisher
Crome – Ernie Horth
Eaton – Niall Baxter
Lakenham – Eileen Wyatt
Mancroft – Andrew Wiltshire
Mile Cross – Clive Smith
Nelson – Malcolm Chamberlin
Sewell – David Mackie
Thorpe Hamlet – Matthew Davison
Town Close – Tak Man Li
University – Paul Wells
Wensum – Mike Gillespie


It’s a done deal

July 27, 2007

The EDP reports this morning that a senior source in Whitehall says that the Greater Norwich bid is now a done deal. Nothing we, or the public, can say will stop this now. Apparently everything from Taverham in the North to Long Stratton in the South is about to come under City Hall control. A few points, randomly and in no particular order, spring to mind:

This is the most undemocratic and political move ever by a British government towards a faction of local government, outstripping even the 1974 reorganisaion. I think a lot of people who oppose this move will punish Labour at the polls.

If they do that the irony is, as suggested by the EDP, that the Tories could just form a majority administration in the City. I’m sure that will thrill Morph, Read, Ramsay, Cooke and all the other unitary cheerleaders who did this to get away from Conservative control!

It will mean massive ward boundary changes. I think wards ought to get smaller and that we should have 2 member divisions with bi-annual elections, but anything could now happen.

Broadland and South Norfolk become untennable as districts. What do they do now?

And one final thought – do the Leaders of Norfolk, South Norfolk and Broadland now accept the fait accompi and work towards getting a good deal in the breakup of the councils or do they die in a ditch for their residents and risk letting Labour set the post-unitary agenda? I personally don’t think that the residents would accept anything short of death-in-action over this. We must oppose this to the bitter end – and then win the unitary poll.


How one vote for Eileen Wyatt changed politics in Norwich

May 14, 2007

We had a friend round for dinner tonight and after a little discussion about the local election results it soon became clear that she may well have swung the whole poll in Norwich – and altered political history too.

You see, she did live in Thorpe Hamlet but very recently moved to Town Close. On the last day that it was legally possible to do so, she changed the electoral roll and did so in order to vote for Conservative candidate Eileen Wyatt, whom she had met and liked, despite normally being a Green Party voter.

Eileen came third and polled 620 votes – a historic high for the Tories in Town Close but a little away from winning. However, in Thorpe Hamlet the Greens lost by one vote and thus failed to become the country’s first Green opposition party and thus Ramsay failed to become the first Green Leader of the Opposition.

When this dawned upon us both tonight it really made us think about the importance of a single vote in our democracy. Such tiny and insignificant acts have a huge part to play in shaping our democracy.

So as Cllr Ramsay settles back into the job of not being Leader of the Opposition, he might well curse Eileen Wyatt – a Tory candidate in another ward – who robbed him of the job he wanted!

(*** ps. I know everyone can find a case like this when it goes to a single vote – the EDP recently carried the story of a voter who was planning to vote Green but switched to the LibDems after being bombarded with Green leaflets which he thought was wasteful. But it’s still good fun!)

(*** pps. My favourite random vote of the year goes to a lady whom I met when she was on Initial Teacher Training. She spent just a few hours in my company about three years ago – and rewarded the Conservative Party (in this case, Eve Collishaw) with her vote because I was kind to her.)


The Low Expectations of the Norwich LibDems

May 7, 2007

The Norwich LibDems are celebrating still being the opposition party on the council here and their PPC is looking on the bright side here.

The Council Group seems to have very low expectations of themselves whilst at least the PPC has the ability to (badly) spin the result. I shall post more on this later.


The Result

May 4, 2007

I’m too tired to set out all my thoughts on this, but here are the results … Jeremy Hooke, the LibDem who won Thorpe Hamlet by 1 vote last night, stood between me and correctly predicting the whole election!

Bowthorpe – Con GAIN from Labour – Tory John Wyatt takes this traditionally safe Labour seat from backbencher Chrissie Rumsby

Catton Grove – Con hold – Eve Collishaw extends her majority following Labour’s negative campaign

Crome – Lab hold – Alan Waters hold off a late challenge from the Tories and does so by some margin

Lakenham – Lab hold – Keith Driver demonstrates his popularity in the ward by stopping a LibDem campaign which looked unstopable

Mancroft – Green hold – An easy win for new boy Tom Dylan, replacing one-year-wonder Steve Altman.

Mile Cross – Lab hold – The rumours of Steve Morphew’s political death were rather over-exaggerated … an easy 300 vote win that will make the LibDems wonder why they bothered.

Nelson – Green hold – Adrian Ramsay just takes the piss with the size of his majority.

Sewell – Lab hold – Julie B-C wins again, helped by the lack of a Norwich-over-the-water candidate. Is this a future Green target?

Thorpe Hamlet – LibDem hold – Thank god Jeremy voted for himself.

Town Close – Green GAIN from LibDem – Long serving Councillor Chris Thomas was left by his party to be slaughtered here – and slaughtered he was.

University – Lab hold – Lord Mayor designate Roy Blower puts this ward as Labour’s safest. My word how things have changed in just a few years!

Wensum – Green hold – I just wonder if Rupert gets annoyed that Adrian’s is bigger than his (talking majorities, of course…)

Norwich City Council:
Labour 15 (-1)
LibDems 11 (-1)
Greens 10 (+1)
Cons 3 (+1)

More over the weekend!


Vote Conservative today

May 2, 2007

Norwich has a chance to vote for something completely different today. A chance to reject Labour’s negative campaign attacks, the LibDems fiscal incompetence and the Green’s fantasy world politics.

A chance to vote for a party that believes in good quality public services at a vlaue-for-money cost.

A chance to vote for a party that is environmental in outlook.

A chance to vote for a party that is serious about cleaning up our neighbourhoods.

A chance to vote for a party that really will tackle anti-social behaviour.

So don’t leave the act of participation in our democracy to somebody else – there is a difference between the parties and your vote will count!

Labour, LibDems and the Greens want to raise your tax, the Conservatives will cut it.

Labour, LibDems and the Greens want to shut off the City Centre, the Conservatives will free up our roads and support public transport.

Labour, LibDems and the Greens would waste millions on local government reorganisation, the Conservatives would put that money straight into local services.

Don’t say your vote doesn’t matter – it does.

Norwich matters to you, and it matters to us.

So take a few moments today … and vote Conservative.


Manifesto Launch

April 24, 2007

Just in case you didn’t see the excellent coverage of our City Manifesto in the Evening News (who are, for the record, handling these elections quite well) then please do take a look on our Norwich Conservatives site where it can be downloaded in full, or you can read part of my speech to the party.

One elector – from Lakenham – rang to say that having read three manifesto documents (apparently he couldn’t find Labour’s!) he was voting Tory because ours made most sense. *Blush*


The Glamerous Life of the Election Agent

April 24, 2007

Apart from holidng down a full time job, I have in the last 3 nights spent my time putting up posters, delivering leaflets, bundling up for deliverers, canvassing, printing leaflets, writing to electors and sending e-mails.

But, In the words of a certain former PM, “I’m enjoying this!”