General Election 2005

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At 0705 this morning I left my local polling station having been the first to vote today. It was rather satisfying to hear my vote clunk into the empty ballot box.

The Braintree constituency was in the papers again this morning. I don’t know where someone came up with the second most marginal seat idea as according to the papers we are the sixth overall and the fourth most marginal Labour seat. The worst in the country? Cheadle which is currently Lib Dem and only has a majority of 33 votes (0.1%). That is pretty close.

Also in the news, I see that the statistics seem to show that the arguement for proportional representation could start up again. If you assume that the 4000 readers of the Metro newspaper who took part in the survey I was reading are representative of the country, then the results should be as follows:

  • Liberal Democrats 27% (of which 37% are definately voting as such)
  • Labour 22% (of which 43% are definately voting as such)
  • Conservatives 18% (of which 51% are definately voting as such)
  • Other 9%

What amazes me about these figures is that despite so many people saying that they are going to vote Lib Dem, only 2% of those polled thought that they would actually get into power and 87% think that Labour will get in for another term.
The Lib Dems have had this very problem for years. Despite most of the UK public seeing them as an alternative and saying that they will vote for them, when it comes down to it, nothing happens. It is worth noting that Charles Kennedy is also seen as the most honest of the main three party leaders.

Anyhow, went to the BBC News Election 2005 website and entered these figures into the Seat Calculator that they have there. The seats won results that came back were rather astonishing:

  • Labour - 328
  • Conservatives - 54
  • Lib Dems - 232
  • Other - 32

This would mean that according to the Metro poll, Labour would come to power with a 10 seat majority and the Lib Dems in strong opposition. Now that would be something to see in UK politics.

Popularity: 11% [?]

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