20 February 2010

Brown: "The Future is Ours To Win" - McAvoy: "I'm Offski!"

It's surely embarrassing that as Gordon Brown was trying to turn this year's contest into a "Them" and "Us" election, blow as many dog-whistles as he can through the repeated use of buzzwords like "progressive" (remind me how well the 'dog-whistle' strategy did for Michael Howard?), while talking in his peroration of how the future belongs to Labour (a slightly creepy mantra, I feel), it's reported that Labour Whip Tommy McAvoy (Rutherglen & Hamilton West) has opted not to be a part of that future.

Now, McAvoy was blamed is some circles for Janis Hughes standing down as MSP for Glasgow Rutherglen, so I imagine she'll be pretty hacked off: all she needed to do was hang in there for three more years. And Iain Dale refers to the Jim Devine affair: Devine told Channel 4 that a Whip told him how to fiddle his expenses, and an internal inquiry has been launched into which member of the Whips' Office it was. Although we can't yet say for certain, it's not hard to join the dots: McAvoy is the likely candidate.

And now he's not a candidate at all.

Still, with March being pretty much ruled out as an election date (Brown may as well have stood there in Warwick and started singing Waiting at the Church as one of his predecessors did at the 1978 TUC Conference), Labour have around two month to find a candidate.

Surely, with time so short, and little or no time available to put an AWS in place, the likeliest figure is Tom McCabe, the former Finance Minister. McCabe is no longer on the Opposition frontbench at Holyrood (though he is Labour's representative on the Corporate Body) so while he's a big-hitter and it would be grim for Iain Gray to lose him as well, it won't be as embarrassing as losing yet another member of the Shadow Cabinet. It would, however, further drain the pool of talent open to Gray in the most important year of an Opposition's life: the year when it has to start looking like a Government. And no matter what optimistic Labour figures would say, when Labour MSPs start to opt for the Westminster back benches over the Holyrood front bench, as they have done, there is no way on Earth that those remaining can look like anything other than the "Second XI". They certainly can't look like a credible alternative government.

But I digress. McCabe is presently MSP for Hamilton South, which has an electorate overlap of around 31,000 with Rutherglen & Hamilton West (focusing mainly around Blantyre), so will know a decent sized part of the area, and was rumoured to be looking for selection to Airdrie & Shotts when it was announced that John Reid was standing down. He would, therefore, be the logical choice: in the short term, his move south creates a vacancy for the SPCB, which is neither earth-shattering nor a major blow, he's relatively local and he knows the area. And the new Hamilton, Larkhall & Stonehouse constituency at Holyrood - roughly analogous to Hamilton South - requires a Labour-SNP swing of 6.28% for it to be lost (especially tempting and achievable if, as is likely, the SNP candidate is a sitting Regional MSP and Tom McCabe seeks and wins the Rutherglen candidacy), while the Westminster seat requires either a 16% Lab-LibDem swing or a 21% Lab-SNP swing. McCabe would be daft not to go for it.

And that too is good news for the SNP: leaving aside the Dennis Canavan result (which, given his status as an Independent, defied swing projections), there have been four instances of a sitting Constituency MSP standing down and a Regional MSP from another party vying to take their place. The aforementioned Janis Hughes was one (Robert Brown of the LibDems stood in Rutherglen); the others being Susan Deacon in Edinburgh East & Musselburgh (where Kenny MacAskill was the SNP's challenger); Henry McLeish stood down from Central Fife in 2003 (the SNP's Tricia Marwick was seeking that one); and Ian Jenkins in Tweeddale, Ettrick & Lauderdale, standing down in 2003 (the SNP's Christine Grahame sought to succeed him). On average, the four Regional quasi-incumbents picked up a 'bonus' swing of 6.08%. That effect, if borne out in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse, turns the seat into a supermarginal, before a single vote has been cast.

7 comments:

subrosa said...

Great analysis Will. I knew I could count on you for it. Thanks.

Bella Caledonia said...

Tom McCabe - he's the curfew man isn't he? The best Labour can offer is Eastern European style curfews of our
young people

Will said...

Good point, BC, though I use terms such as 'big hitter' with an element of relativity. McCabe was seen as Dewar and McLeish's 'fixer', and despite being caught up in McConnell's Bonfire of the Cabinet, was brought back into the fold to dig Jack out of a deepening hole, so he clearly has something about him in Labour circles. Even if it's not necessarily visible beyond them...

Many thanks, Subrosa - most of this required a just few quick checks of the facts (and I admit to guessing re Tom McCabe, though all the pieces seem to fit) and going through the background work that I've already done for the new boundaries - the only thing that's truly new is the 'bonus' swing, which I'll probably put together a separate post for, so as to give it a bit of extra discussion space...

Ted Harvey said...

Don't forget that the McAvoy family may come up with a candidate.
After all, it must be difficult for them to let too much go all at once when we had Tommy as long incumbent MP. with his tame MSP Tom Kelly, and the brother Eddie McAvoy as head of the South Lanarkshire Council. Perhaps a candidate could be summoned from any members of the McAvoy familiy already working for South Lanarkshire council?

Incidentally, for all that Tommy McAvoy is a Labour Cooperative Party MP (yes the ancient remnants of the Coop Party are still around) he seemed to do nothing to save the local Somerfield supermarket in his constituency, and a short walk from his house, being shut down within a short time of it being taken over by the Coop. Well done caring, sharing Cooperative as this will leave the locality without any decent shopping facility unless a 'big bad' private sector operator takes it over.

Andrea said...

Labour shortlist for Hamilton West is out...and there will no need to replace McCabe at Holyrood.

Will said...

Thanks for the welcome update, Andrea - has Ted called it right?

By the way Ted, just on the point of the Co-Op Party, I find it somewhat symbolic that Rochdale, the cradle of the Co-Operative Movement, has a Liberal Democrat MP...

Andrea said...

"Thanks for the welcome update, Andrea - has Ted called it right?"

The Final 6 for Labour nomination:
Tom Greatrex (Special Adviser to Secretary of State for Scotland), Allan Falconer (local councillor), Liz Anne Handibode (daughter of a local councillor; works for the council), Doug Maugham (stood in Perth last time), Matthew Kerr (Glasgow councillor), Paul Devlin (don't know)