Nigel Farage has called the result an “earthquake in
British politics” as his party charges into first place with almost 30% of the
vote and 24 seats. Yet is this result, in a European election with a 34%
turnout, an indication of the 2015 General Election? The answer: Not if history
is anything to go by. Nobody is claiming that UKIP will beat the Tories or
Labour in next year’s election, not even the party itself, the question is will
it gain any seats, and if so, how many?
Remember back to 2009 when UKIP placed second in the
European elections with 16.5% of the vote? Everyone predicted that in the 2010
General Election that UKIP would gain some seats in the House of Commons,
especially considering voter hostility to both Labour and the Tories. Well in
2010 UKIP didn’t gain any seats and only received a paltry 3.1% of the vote.
Obviously a lot has changed in five years, but I doubt Farage will cause an
earthquake when the results of the 2010 election are revealed.
There was some good news though, support for the BNP
crumbled into nothing! In the 2009 European elections the BNP managed to gain two
MEPs, Nick Griffin in the North West and Andrew Brons in Yorkshire and the
Humber. This time around both MEPs were handily defeated.
The Greens had a reasonable night, although their share
of the vote actually decreased slightly they managed to gain one seat. This is
particularly th
anks to the implosion of the Lib Dems, who slipped into fifth place
and lost 10 of their 11 seats. This result, along with their obliteration in the
council elections has meant many in Nick Clegg’s own party calling for his
head.
Party
|
Vote
|
Change
|
Seats
|
Change
|
Pro or anti EU
|
UKIP
|
27.49%
|
+10.99%
|
24
|
+11
|
Anti
|
Labour
|
25.40%
|
+9.67%
|
20
|
+7
|
Pro
|
Conservative
|
23.93%
|
-3.80%
|
19
|
-7
|
Mixed
|
Greens
|
7.87%
|
-0.75%
|
3
|
+1
|
Pro
|
Liberal Democrats
|
6.87%
|
-6.87%
|
1
|
-10
|
Pro
|
SNP*
|
2.46%
|
+0.34%
|
2
|
0
|
Pro
|
Plaid Cymru*
|
0.71%
|
-0.13%
|
1
|
0
|
Pro
|
BNP
|
1.14%
|
-5.10%
|
0
|
-2
|
Anti
|
Undoubtedly Eurosceptics did quite well, but the result was not as Eurosceptic as you might have been lead to believe. 42% of people voted for pro-EU parties, 31% for anti-EU parties and 25% on parties that have mixed attitudes to the EU.
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