Scotland: Has Red Clydeside turned Yellow? Print E-mail
By Ewan Gibbs and Patrick Orr   
Friday, 01 August 2008

The SNP victory in the Glasgow East by-election certainly marks a new low in the recent history of the Scottish Labour Party but the question is now posed: does it mark the seismic shift in Scottish politics that Alex Salmond has declared? The SNP and political commentators have pointed to the 22% swing against Labour, throwing away a thirteen thousand vote majority and the fact that this was previously the third safest Labour Westminster seat in Scotland. It must be remembered that this was a by-election and the SNP has beaten Labour in such events previously and that this was the narrowest of victories, at only 365 votes.

However, what is perhaps more relevant than these statistics in themselves is the background to the election. This election was not won by the SNP as much as it was lost by Labour. This by-election came at the worst possible time for Scottish Labour after the resignation of their leader Wendy Alexander for taking illegal donations to fund her "leadership campaign". On top of this the Labour Party has been utterly incapable of mounting a serious opposition to the SNP Scottish Government. But possibly the most damaging factor was that the poll in Glasgow East came at a time when the Westminster government has launched a series of attacks on the poorest sections of society with the excuse of trying to avoid a recession. In real terms this has meant pay cuts for public sector workers, and all low paid workers have been hit with the scrapping of the ten pence tax band. On the week before a by-election in one of the most deprived parts of the country the government then went on to announce that it was going to launch an attack on the unemployed and infirm through a proposed overhaul of the benefit system that would make it far more difficult to be recognised as disabled and the implementation of dole slavery via so called welfare to work programs.

Unsurprisingly, the product of this was that a section of traditional working class Labour voters voted SNP with the aim of giving the government a well deserved bloody nose and swathes more simply did not feel enticed to vote at all.  The SNP tried to pose the by-election as a contest between a failing Westminster Government and the more popular Holyrood administration. Indeed, it has seemed that the SNP are still enjoying their "honeymoon period" from their election over a year ago. Their tactic has been to blame any problems on Westminster and claim that if only they could run Scotland without interference from London then they could shield us from the effects of the credit crunch. This tactic may be politically expedient but is unsustainable. The SNP have been forced to make centre-left pledges, such as free prescriptions and abolishing the hated Public Private Partnerships, in order to gain the support of a section of the Scottish working class. But as the credit crunch starts to hit harder the Nationalists' business backer will not let them continue with their frivolous promises. As Scotland starts to feel the pinch of the economic crisis the SNP are going to find it more and more difficult to fulfil their pledges and working people may start to see that the SNP are nothing more than Tories in tartan clothes.

In the midst of the two way contest in Glasgow East there were also seven other candidates standing, including those from no less than two parties claiming to represent a socialist alternative. The Scottish Socialist Party and Solidarity both gained less than 600 votes and even with their votes combined would still not have claimed their deposit back. In such a tightly thought contest, however, the totals of both parties were well above the margin between the SNP and Labour. Glasgow East is a traditionally militant working class constituency and in a situation where Labour is taking a hammering to achieve so few votes is an indictment of the strategy of forming an "alternative" left party. Similarly this was shown at the 2007 Scottish Parliamentary elections and for this to be repeated shows the failure of this tactic as a means to engage with class conscious workers and youth.

Working class voters feel betrayed by the right-wing policies of New Labour and will not be tempted to the polling stations by more of the same. Brown seems to increasingly be under the delusion that by moving more to the right he will gain more support, but this is just wishful thinking. Working people will come back to Labour but only when Labour Party policy reflects the real aspirations of the working class. If Labour was to propose a bold socialist manifesto it could regain the support of millions of disillusioned working class voters and build a base of mass support with which to face the next election.

 

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