Election Fall-Out
John Osmond assesses the impact of the May 2003 National
Assembly election on the fortunes of the political parties.
The headline story of the May 2003 Welsh Assembly elections was of
Labour recovering its heartland Valley seats of Rhondda, Islwyn and
Llanelli from Plaid Cymru and placing itself firmly back in its traditional
saddle of dominance, if not complete control, of Welsh politics.
However, a glance at the statistics summarised in Tables 1 and 2 reveals
a rather more complex picture. Certainly Labour fought a shrewd campaign
and reaped dividends on election night. However, the figures suggest
that overall Plaid Cymru lost the campaign as much as Labour won it.
This judgement should also be set against the eight per cent decline
in turnout, from 46 per cent in 1999 to 38 per cent. This was a situation
which had previously been thought to help Plaid Cymru, the party that
traditionally had been the most successful in mobilising its core
vote.
Table 1: Constituency Vote
| |
2003 |
1999 |
| |
Votes |
%Vote |
Seats |
Votes |
%Vote |
Seats |
| Labour |
340,535 |
40.0 |
30 |
384,671 |
37.6 |
27 |
| Plaid
Cymru |
180,185 |
21.2 |
5 |
290,572 |
28.4 |
9 |
| Conservative |
169,842 |
19.9 |
1 |
162,133 |
15.8 |
1 |
| Lib
Dem |
120,250 |
14.1 |
3 |
137,857 |
13.5 |
3 |
| Independent
(John Marek in Wrexham) |
6,539 |
- |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
Table 2: Regional List Vote
| |
2003 |
1999 |
| |
Votes |
%Vote |
Seats |
Votes |
%Vote |
Seats |
| Labour |
310,658 |
36.6 |
0 |
361,657 |
35.5 |
1 |
| Plaid
Cymru |
167,653 |
19.7 |
7 |
312,048 |
30.6 |
8 |
| Conservative |
162,705 |
19.2 |
10 |
168,206 |
16.5 |
8 |
| Lib
Dem |
108,013 |
12.7 |
3 |
128,008 |
12.5 |
3 |
There was a good deal of comment during the campaign that it lacked
the feel of a general election with national themes running across
the country. Rather, the impression was one of a series of localised
contests, typified by John Marek’s falling out with the Labour
Party in Wrexham, as a result of which he deprived his former party
of an overall majority in the Assembly.
Plaid Cymru’s underlying failure in the election was that as
a nationalist party it did not manage to capture any clear or distinctive
national themes. Apart from the Welsh language, which did not play
a significant part in the campaign, Plaid Cymru is of course, most
clearly identified with its constitutional aspiration of greater self
governance for Wales. However, in this election it very deliberately
put this to one side, saying that the constitution could be considered
at a later date, if necessary by a convention of all the parties.
Instead it chose to concentrate on bread and butter health and education
issues and service delivery in a way that failed to distinguish itself
from the Labour Party.
For its part Welsh Labour, under Rhodri Morgan’s leadership,
spoke very clearly to its core supporters in the Valleys with a rhetoric
built around free prescription charges for all, free breakfasts for
all primary schoolchildren, continuing free bus travel for people
over 60, no top up fees at Welsh Universities, and scrapping home
care charges for disabled people.
Plaid Cymru (along with the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives)
failed to question any of this despite the fact that, for example,
free prescriptions already extend to 88 per cent of the population.
Extending the entitlement to the remaining 12 per cent who can well
afford to pay will take £30 million away from the Assembly’s
overall budget, and probably more since free entitlement for all will
undoubtedly expand demand for prescriptions.
For Labour, however, the commitment played perfectly to its traditional
supporters in the key target seats of Rhondda, Llanelli and Islwyn.
Not only that, the commitment was firmly attached to an intellectual
rationale repeatedly articulated by Rhodri Morgan in the months leading
up to the campaign. The clearest expression came in his much quoted
‘Clear Red Water’ speech made in Swansea in November 2002.
There he stated that free entitlements such as prescription charges
stressed the individual’s position as a citizen rather than
consumer. He said it underlined Welsh Labour’s objective of
achieving equality and holding together “a complex modern society
such as ours … by a powerful glue of social solidarity.”
The force of this position was acknowledged by the most thoughtful
of Plaid Cymru’s emerging younger leadership, Carmarthen MP
Adam Price. As he put it, “Rhodri Morgan’s speech ditching
New Labour and declaring henceforth that there would be ‘clear
red water’ between Cardiff Bay and Downing Street is massively
significant. Not just for Welsh politics, but for all of us who believe
in restoring democratic socialism as the animating principle of the
Left.”
It was noteworthy that while Labour did badly in the local elections
in England, and also faltered to an extent in Scotland, it emerged
as the clear victor in Wales. More than anything else this must surely
be due to Rhodri Morgan’s success in carving out a distinctive
position against New Labour for his Welsh Labour Party, freshly-minted
in its new identity in the wake of the Alun Michael débacle
four years ago. Labour’s new and distinctive Welsh profile must
surely have acted as a firewall between it and such influences as
fall-out from the Iraq conflict.
To be fair to Plaid, its breakthrough across the Valleys four years
ago owed a lot to Labour disillusionment with the way Rhodri Morgan
had been treated in successive leadership elections and the perception
that Alun Michael had been imposed on Wales as a compliant Blair supporter.
These circumstances made it easy for Plaid Cymru, the self-proclaimed
‘party of Wales’, to present itself as the patriotic party.
But they were circumstances that could not be repeated. Welsh Labour,
ably led in this respect by Rhodri Morgan who quickly established
himself as the most high profile and likeable figure within the Assembly,
took the lesson to heart.
It should also be noted that Labour now holds many constituencies,
in particular Conwy, Llanelli, Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire,
Clwyd West, Cardiff North, and Preseli on very narrow majorities,
ones that will be highly vulnerable next time round. Unlike its Westminster
seats, Labour’s majorities in Cardiff Bay have to counted not
weighed.
Nevertheless, in May 2003 Plaid sorely felt the loss of their former
leader Dafydd Wigley, who through dint of tireless campaigning over
three decades, had made himself known and appreciated across the party
divides in Wales. His absence may have lost his party as much as half
the 10 per cent of the vote it slipped between 1999 and 2003.
Despite this Plaid could have defined itself far more distinctively
against Labour. There were policies in its manifesto that could have
helped it achieve this but they were simply not exploited. One was
its commitment to spreading wealth and economic activity across the
regions of Wales, for example through insisting on regional growth
targets, instead of seemingly resigning itself like Labour to the
perceived inevitability of continued development along the M4 and
A55 corridors. An aggressive campaign on this issue would also have
blended well with an insistence that the Objective 1 programme must
be made to work more effectively in west Wales and the Valleys, Plaid
Cymru’s sphere of influence and potential growth. Such a strategic
approach failed to be emphasised, however, and that points to an underlying
issue of leadership for Plaid Cymru. As ever, it faces the challenge
of blending much more effectively the different character and interests
of rural Wales with the Valleys, a challenge that it avoided in May
2003.
The other parties had varying fortunes. Among the longer-term impacts
of the result will be the relatively good showing of the Welsh Conservative
Party. With its eleven seats and 20 per cent of the vote it is now
firmly established as a party of pro-devolution party in the Assembly
and a potential future coalition partner. It was noteworthy that in
the constituency vote it was the only party to increase its votes
despite the drop in turnout. Its future participation in government
will be strengthened if it emphasises the social democratic side of
its personality, rather that its harder edged, more anglicised dimension.
With Labour in the ascendant the Liberal Democrats did well to hold
on to their position, performing especially well in places such as
Cardiff Central and Ceredigion. However, they will miss the gloss
that coalition government gave them in the first term when, as now
seems inevitable, Labour forms the next Assembly Government alone.
In these circumstances the Welsh Liberal Democrats will struggle to
carve out a distinctive role.
As for Welsh Labour, they now have to deliver their ‘ten pledges’
and trust that the inevitable slings and arrows of fortune continue
to treat them kindly. This will be in a political environment that
can hardly continue to be so benign as in the first term, when the
Assembly Government was held afloat on the British Treasury’s
ever rising tide of public expenditure.
John Osmond is Director of the IWA.
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