A complaints system in any organisation is the vital lightning conductor which provides early warning of
malfunction – one complaint can tell you more than a thousand satisfied customers. Ignore the complaints and you
have a problem.
That is one way of looking at by-elections, specifically last night's crop of local council election results, where
the BNP made serious inroads. In two Carlisle wards, they scored respectively 9.5 and 19.7 percent, in Newcastle
under Lyme they picked 20 percent and in North Warwickshire the score was 21.6 percent.
The Newcastle Ravenscliffe ward was particularly interesting. The Tories won the seat with 229 votes, but only just
seeing off the Labour challenger who came in at 213 votes. Yet, in May 2008, the Tories picked up 399 votes as
against 224 for Labour.
Also, in the Carlisle wards, the Tories lost more votes than Labour, the Belah ward delivering 700 for the Tories
this time, against 1212 in 2008, compared with 307 for Labour, which took 431 votes in 2008. In Castle ward, taken
by the Lib-Dems, the figures for the Tories were 143 this time, against 206 last time, Labour polling 304 against
299 last time.
Neither is there any comfort for UKIP. In the single seat contested – Newcastle - UKIP polled 189 votes in 2008,
tying with the Lib-Dems for third place while this time they trailed in fifth place with 131, behind the Lib-Dems
at 149.
The usual health warnings apply, but the
BNP regards the contests as a "temperature gauge" in the two key areas of
the North West and West Midlands, just three months before the euros on 4 June. On last night's showing, they are
confident of winning two seats in the EU parliament.
While the media might be content to ignore these results, and largely
ignore the BNP altogether, it is very clear
that Labour takes the threat
seriously. And they are not the only ones to do so.
Tony Travers, director of the Greater London Group, London School of Economics, is looking to
the eventuality of
the BNP winning control of a major authority. He suggests that it is "difficult to imagine senior officers being
willing to work with such an extremist administration." Whitehall, he writes, "will be forced to intervene, though
it not entirely clear how."
One thing Travers seems to have missed though, is the possibility that BNP is also pulling votes off the Tories –
as the Newcastle and Carlisle votes could suggest – with the added dynamic of it taking much of UKIP's share, many
of those formerly in the Tory fold.
This would seem to suggest that the BNP is a Tory problem as much as it is one for Labour. Depending on how many
seats they contest at the general, there is the interesting prospect of a "UKIP effect", where the BNP cream off
sufficient Tory votes in some constituencies to cost them a number of seats. That effect could be exacerbated by
UKIP votes, the combined effect doing some damage which could sometimes be significant.
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