Britain’s Silent Election
LONDON – Other
people’s elections are usually baffling and boring, which is certainly
true of the United Kingdom’s coming vote on May 7; indeed, many Britons
share the sentiment. The longest election campaign in UK history has
been strikingly short of focus. Nonetheless, the campaign contains three
important pointers for other Western democracies.
The
first pointer is that Bill Clinton’s famous campaign slogan from 1992 –
“It’s the economy, stupid” – is itself stupid, or at least
insufficient. If it was the economy that would decide Britain’s
election, Prime Minister David Cameron would be leading a much more
confident campaign.
For the past 18
months or so, the UK has had Europe’s fastest-growing economy, and at
times has even outpaced the United States. The unemployment rate, now
5.6%, has fallen to less than half that of the eurozone.
But favorable
economic indicators have made little difference to the standing of
Cameron’s Conservatives in opinion polls, and have done nothing to save
their coalition partner, the centrist Liberal Democrats, from a severe
slump. Too many voters, it seems, still do not feel better off, and for
good reason: average incomes have barely begun to rise, following seven
painful years.
So the right slogan
in this campaign might be, “It’s the living standards, stupid.” Or, more
accurately (though more cumbersomely): “It’s the perception of future
living standards, stupid, and the perception of fairness surrounding
those prospects.” Either way, the point is straightforward: statistical
recovery is not enough.
This seems to be why,
although it has only a small lead of 2-4 percentage points in the
polls, the center-left Labour Party has had the best of the campaign.
Labour’s leader, Ed Miliband, was widely derided last year as weak,
unconvincing, and unlikeable; but, perhaps benefiting from low
expectations, he has looked steadily more credible and statesmanlike as
the campaign has gone on.
The second pointer is
that foreign affairs, though rarely a major factor in any country’s
national elections, can contribute to a general sense of unease about
political leadership. It had been widely assumed that the UK’s continued
membership in the European Union would be a leading campaign issue,
given the rise of the UK Independence Party and Cameron’s pledge that,
if re-elected, he would hold a referendum on the question by 2017.
Indeed, Cameron’s
promise is arguably the most consequential issue at stake in the British
election: if he remains Prime Minister, there will be a referendum; if
Miliband takes over, there will not be. Britain’s strategic future rests
on this choice.
Yet there has been
near-silence on this choice. Both UKIP and its charismatic leader, Nigel
Farage, have slipped in opinion polls and have struggled to get
attention. More important, Cameron has said almost nothing about either
Europe or immigration; and, though Miliband’s clearly stated pro-EU
stance has endeared his candidacy to many business leaders, he, too, has
played down the issue.
Perhaps this reflects
my own bias, but I suspect that this evasiveness on the part of
Britain’s main political parties has weakened support for them, by
diminishing their status as valid representatives of the country. Voters
may not list Europe or foreign affairs among the main issues that
concern them. But the daily news about migrants dying in the
Mediterranean, the war in Ukraine, Greece’s possible default, the
turmoil in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Libya, and Gaza, Iran’s nuclear program,
and more heighten voters’ awareness that their country needs to be
defended robustly, by a government with a coherent foreign policy.
And yet Britain’s
defense forces are weaker than at any time since the 1930s. The general
perception is that Britain’s voice in international affairs is less
influential than at any time since then, too. Whatever voters think
Britain’s foreign and defense policy should be, they believe their
country should have one.
The final pointer of the UK election may partly reflect the vacuum in national leadership that such silence epitomizes. Whatever the result of the election, the most striking phenomenon will be the rise of regionalism, most notably a surge in support for the pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP).
No one can predict whether the SNP might end up in the paradoxical position of joining a coalition with Labour to govern a country that it was campaigning to leave in last September’s independence referendum. But the SNP’s likely electoral gain is too large to be explained by secessionist sentiment alone. The party appears to be attracting many people who voted against independence but who want more regional autonomy and a stronger voice for Scotland in the Westminster Parliament.
The absence of a
broader “feel good” factor from economic recovery, resentment of
economic inequality, mistrust of national political leaders, and greater
faith in localism: these are the main features of Britain’s election
campaign. Whether or not they make Miliband the next prime minister (in a
coalition with the Liberal Democrats, the SNP, or both), they are
likely to characterize elections elsewhere as well in the years ahead.
Bill Emmott, a former editor-in-chief of The Economist .
MAY 1, 2015
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