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Opinion

What will decide the 2021 Senedd election? Probably not what happens at the Senedd

19 May 2020 7 minute read
Paul Davies. © Russell Hart/Alamy Live News. First Minister Mark Drakeford AM. Mark Hawkins / Alamy Stock Photo. Kirsty Williams AM. Picture by Welsh Lib Dems. Adam Price: Picture by Plaid Cymru (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

Ifan Morgan Jones

There’s just a year to go until the 2021 Senedd election and it’s fair to say that after four already rather bad-tempered years, Welsh politics is likely to get a little more fractious.

Deliberation will give way to hyper-criticism as both the Conservatives and Plaid Cymru rip Labour apart on their record on health care, education and much more besides.

Ane the defensive attacks have already heated up, with Rhondda Labour MP Chris Bryant taking to Twitter to aim ‘Nazi’ jibes at Plaid Cymru.

With the polls showing that Labour could for the first time lose their crown as the largest party, the opposition will be motivated like never before and Labour keen to defend their last remaining electoral bastion.

However, I’d like to puncture that balloon a little bit with this article and ask whether anything that happens in Senedd politics actually makes much of a difference to Senedd election results.

One way of finding out is to look at the polls. If what happened in the Senedd mattered we would expect to see the polls for Senedd and Westminster elections look quite different.

I.e. events in the Senedd would impact the popularity of Welsh Labour or the Welsh Conservatives independently of UK Labour or the UK Conservatives.

 

Synchronised

So I compared Welsh Political Barometer Polls with YouGov’s UK-wide Westminster polls for the same month since the last Senedd election to see how much they diverged. Here’s Labour:

Labour polling since June 2016

As you can see, there’s no real divergence. Senedd and Westminster polls largely move in unison, as if they are a pair of synchronised swimmers.

If Labour are doing well at Westminster, they do well at Senedd, if they do badly at Westminster, they do badly at Senedd. There are a few kinks but it’s quite consistent.

Support is pegged at different levels, largely because of differences in turnout between different elections.

The same thing is true for the Conservatives. Support is clearly pegged at a lower level in Wales than across the UK because of differences in turnout but support goes up and down in a very synchronised manner.

Conservative polling since June 2016

Plaid Cymru don’t stand outside Wales so there’s no wider UK party to compare with them. But I think this graph provides a rather depressing picture for them.

Essentially, PC’s polling numbers don’t shift much, but a slight rise seems to coincide with times when the UK Labour Party are unpopular.

Plaid Cymru polling since June 2016 compared with Labour ‘s UK-wide polling

Psephologist Professor Roger Awan-Scully carried out a far, far more rigorous study of the 2011 Welsh and Scottish elections in a paper published in 2013. In conclusion, he wrote that:

“while the drivers of voting in Scotland appear to have been mainly general assessments of the parties and of their Scottish leaders, in Wales Labour Party support in particular was significantly associated with attitudes towards the Labour UK leader and towards assessments of the UK government […] Voting in May 2011 was a rather more distinctively Scottish affair in Scotland than it was Welsh in Wales.”

Resurgent

So what can we summarise from this? It would seem that, rather depressingly, that what actually goes on in the Senedd matters a lot (and increasingly so) to how Wales is governed, but it doesn’t have much knock-on effect on who gets to govern Wales. Senedd politics is just a little paper boat blown around by the political winds of Westminster.

The reason for this, and particularly the contrast with Scotland, seem fairly obvious:  we know the people of Wales don’t really know much about what goes on in Welsh politics. We have no real Welsh media and therefore no Welsh public sphere, and so people decide how to vote in Wales-specific elections based on Westminster’s political news.

Scotland meanwhile has a comparatively strong media and therefore politics there is noticeably ‘untethered’ from Westminster. The parties follow their own polling patterns not entirely but with a higher degree of independence from the wider UK.

So while we have half of the democratic equation in place in Wales – our political institutions – the other half is missing, which is a media that ensures that the political decisions of those institutions have electoral consequences.

This has obvious ramifications for the political parties. While it takes the heat off both Welsh Labour and the Welsh Conservatives to a large extent, it’s particularly depressing for Plaid Cymru whose entire political strategy is based on winning power at the Senedd by providing effective opposition there.

If no one is paying attention to what they’re up to, are they largely running on the spot like Wile E. Cayote, unaware that their feet aren’t touching the ground?

We also need to factor it into our assessment of the expected winners of the next election too. After 21 years of Labour government, it has been predicted that they are heading for defeat to a resurgent Welsh Conservatives.

But let’s consider where the ebb and flow of Westminster politics is likely to have taken our little paper boat by that time. We’re likely to have a mid-term Con government in the middle of a recession, with all the aftermath of Covid, and a possible Starmer bounce.

Under that scenario a ‘give the Tories a bloody nose’ message in a Senedd campaign could be surprisingly effective, even if it is the party of perpetual Welsh government making that argument.

Scrutiny

However, there are a few things that could change this dynamic in time for the Senedd election next year.

The most obvious is clearly the coronavirus pandemic. By diverging from the UK Government the Welsh Government has attained a media profile it has probably never experienced before. Their decision making has been the subject of scrutiny in UK media such as the Sun and the Daily Mail.

It’s hard to believe that a higher percentage of the population would not now be aware that the Welsh Government control the NHS, than the only 48% who knew that to be the case when BBC/ICM polled on the matter in 2014.

There is some evidence of wider UK media scrutiny of Wales specific political decisions having an impact on Senedd elections in the past, specifically the 1999 election when Tony Blair’s decision to select Alun Michael as First Secretary of Wales rebounded on the Labour party.

The other factor could be the increasing reach of Welsh national news sources, both established and upcoming (like this website). Could they ‘break through’ and reach a wider, popular audience beyond the 5% who usually take a bit interest in Senedd politics?

Will these factors be enough to make any difference? Perhaps marginally, yes, although I suspect that what happens at Westminster between now and May 6 2021 may well be a better guide to the Senedd election than what happens at the Senedd itself.


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Huw Davies
Huw Davies
3 years ago

Depressing that. It suggests that while canvassing on the streets or communicating via the various media any criticism of the party in government here in Wales is likely to be ignored. Are we that frozen rigid ? Answer must be to drive in hard on local issues as a wedge to raise wider policy concerns. This will require a great deal of micro-planning on a constituency/regional basis and giving a wide berth to fluffy remote ishoos.

John Ellis
John Ellis
3 years ago
Reply to  Huw Davies

Local issues are indeed the key. At least they’re one key, and the only one I’ve seen employed with quite a degree of ultimate success, though it took quite a few years serious impact was felt. The Lib Dems did it in two boroughs in the Manchester area during the time when I lived in those parts; ‘pavement politics’, as they called it. In one of the metropolitan boroughs they ultimately won control of the council and then went on to win two of the borough’s Westminster constituencies. In the other they gradually consolidated in one quite large area until… Read more »

Rhosddu
Rhosddu
3 years ago
Reply to  Huw Davies

If Senedd election results are so strongly influenced by Westminster poiltics and by the British media, then it’s indeed beyond doubt that focusing on local issues can be a game-changer in this severely compromised electoral set-up. Here the Welsh National Party have an immediate potential advantage, because they seem to have the will and desire to shine the spotlight on local problems. It will also be to their advantage if a more Wales-friendly element of the mainstream media finally notices them (if such a thing exists), but I fear that the likes of the Sun and Mail could make the… Read more »

Neil McEvoy
Neil McEvoy
3 years ago

One factor not considered is the Welsh National Party. We are the only challenger to the First Minister in Cardiff West. The other members of Wales’ political Cartel will do their best to try to ensure that the Bay status quo continues, with the First Minister being returned. We though, are looking forward to knocking him off his perch. Given the interest in the WNP, I see us challenging in some other seats also and of course in every region. Interesting times.

j humphrys
j humphrys
3 years ago
Reply to  Neil McEvoy

If WNP get members in Deeside, things could take off in the North, too. Plaid growing in Wrecsam

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
3 years ago
Reply to  Neil McEvoy

Neil, will the Plaid voters and members of other independence parties split the voters and let Labour back in? You know there is still strong support for Plaid in the area. What are you doing about that? The Remain vote was split we do not want the Welsh independence vote split too. I’ve looked at the policies of all the pro-independence parties – you have more in common than you think. Work together.

Huw Davies
Huw Davies
3 years ago
Reply to  Steve Duggan

Can you get the others to fall in line behind Neil McEvoy in Cardiff West ? That would be the acid test of willingness to work collaboratively. The answer is already writ large, yet if a trendy alternative turned up from another party the likes of Plaid might back him/her/it. Fickle, bitter and twisted doesn’t do it justice.

Johnny Gamble
Johnny Gamble
3 years ago
Reply to  Steve Duggan

Steve that strong support for Plaid was nowhere to be seen at the December General election. Its hypocritical of Plaid to be standing against Neil in Cardiff West when they stood aside for the Unionist Lib Dems in that disastrous PR stunt at the Westminster General election.
Plaid Cymru it seems these days are on the road to nowhere.

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
3 years ago
Reply to  Johnny Gamble

Look I’m not outwardly supporting any Welsh independence movement or party on here. I’m a LibDem councillor who supports independence as Wales is neglected by Westminster and I want the best for my countrymen and women. I do not wish to see the independence vote split and that is a real risk as the movement grows.

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
3 years ago

Hopefully, as the threat of a no-deal Brexit becomes more apparent the closer to December we get, the more the Welsh Parliament will speakout and act in some way. Whether it is powerful enough to change things in any way is debatable but it must shout as loud as it has over Covid-19. The Welsh economy can not take another economic blow. By somehow diverging from England to protect Welsh jobs and livelihoods it will once again draw the attention of the right wing press and Westminster, just as it has done recently. Ultimately we need far more money pumped… Read more »

j humphrys
j humphrys
3 years ago
Reply to  Steve Duggan

I agree, as there will always be strings attached. Perhaps worse with Starmer, through the devils temptation: “I will give you this federal land”. But it’s our land already. Perhaps an agreement; YES CYMRU will take over the general Independence struggle, and the parties can compete at local level and the Senedd, and put forward ideas for post Indy to the Senedd. (One thing; the 3rd sector must go, and extra-citizen lobbying banned.)

j humphrys
j humphrys
3 years ago
Reply to  j humphrys

Works like; TR Davies W. Con. YES.
So if you want a Welsh Conservative and you want Indy, you vote TR Davies W.Con. YES?

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
3 years ago
Reply to  j humphrys

I agree – some sort of compromise between the various parties and movements needs to be sought.

Convention.cymru
3 years ago

Will Wales have Labour in a minority in the Senedd, yes or no? If yes, Labour no overall control, Wales gets a very big opportunity. What laws will the Senedd pass? Only feelgood SJW ones? What about a law providing for an All-Wales Constitutional Convention? All parties can support this, because a better political settlement will lead to a better economy – a virtuous circle.
Start with “Citizens’ Assemblies” or where you like. But a majority vote in the Bay needs to pass a law.

Sian Ifan
Sian Ifan
3 years ago

YES! a matter of media but forget Cyber Nat Web Waffling as that will not scratch the public surface and post Covid 19 concerns me regards growing power of Mega IT Companies not least FB et al being more in control than ever as many newspapers will fold, note pre Covid 19 I know of three Swansea Newsagents that closed. But other realities as how many of our people bother with ‘Welsh Media’, television aside lets consider one example as the Western Mail around Swansea hardly sold at all and if so in few numbers ( more during Rugby season.)… Read more »

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