Labour should campaign on AV

Andy Burnham says "It would be a recipe for chaos and confusion if Labour candidates were also supporting AV in their literature." He's wrong - the party should campaign for AV.

Late on Friday afternoon, the Guardian’s Patrick Wintour revealed that Labour would not be campaigning in the alternative vote referendum. Aside from John Rentoul’s Independent on Sunday column, which lamented the death of electoral reform, the story sunk without a trace. The media may not be interested but progressives should urge Labour’s leadership to have a rethink.

The Guardian quoted Labour’s election coordinator, Andy Burnham, arguing that:

“The referendum should have been held on its own day, when the yes and no campaigns could have argued it out. Our sole priority has to be, and will be, winning in Scotland, and Wales, and doing well in the local elections.

“It would be a recipe for chaos and confusion if Labour candidates were also supporting AV in their literature. The election and referendum campaigns have to be separate and distinct.

Burnham’s pronouncement is counter-productive for five reasons.

First, it belies the spirit of Labour’s existing policy at a time when the party is (rightly) criticising others for veering from their previous objectives. Labour’s manifesto said:

“To ensure that every MP is supported by the majority of their constituents voting at each election, we will hold a referendum on introducing the Alternative Vote for elections to the House of Commons.”

During the leadership campaign Ed Miliband went further and told Left Foot Forward, “I support AV for the House of Commons and will campaign for it.” Little wonder, when the system worked so well for him during his own leadership contest. Reversing this position now will look to political and constitutional reformers like rank opportunism.

Second, given the likelihood of future hung parliaments (perhaps even next year in the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly), Labour has to show that it can work across party lines on areas of shared interest. Labour’s new leader recognised this during his conference speech so it seems odd that he should abandon this position at the first significant opportunity presented to him to work with Lib Dem colleagues.

Third, there is no obvious reason why Labour can’t, in LBJ’s words, “walk and chew gum”. Why shouldn’t Labour’s candidates support AV in their literature? After all, there is no additional cost to including a line in a direct mail or leaflet that is already paid for. While the party can be excused for prioritising victory in Scotland and Wales, campaigning for AV need not be a huge drain on resources or time.

Fourth, from a narrow party interest perspective, AV is in the Labour party’s interest. A projection by the Electoral Reform Society suggested that Labour would have won four more seats in 2010 under AV while the Tories would have won 26 fewer seats. Analysis from the BBC suggests that Labour would have won more seats in 1997, 2001, and 2005 (although it would have had fewer seats in 1983, 1987 and 1992).

Finally, those hoping that the defeat of the AV referendum will deliver a hammer blow to the Coalition are misguided. Nick Clegg has already told activists that he will remain Deputy Prime Minister regardless of the result. Clegg, as has often been observed, looks comfortable with his Conservative colleagues. Hours spent sitting around the Cabinet table adjudicating on the cuts has left a strong bond between the Lib Dem leader, Danny Alexander, George Osborne and David Cameron. A “little local difficulty” in May’s elections will hardly puncture those relationships.

NB: I look forward to Tom Harris’ fisking!

121 Responses to “Labour should campaign on AV”

  1. merthyr_bill

    I like Andy Burnham, I would vote labour with him as a leader. He’s down to earth. Ed M is rubbish so far and his background – a property millionaire champagne socialist from Primrose Hill – doesn’t strike a chord with me. That and his treacherous father spending his whole life attempting to enslave through Marxism the people who had offered him sanctuary frankly disgusts me.

  2. Matthew McGregor

    RT @leftfootfwd: Labour should campaign on AV as @Ed_Miliband promised they would http://bit.ly/c7psx3

  3. Wes Streeting

    RT @leftfootfwd: Labour should campaign on AV as @Ed_Miliband promised they would http://bit.ly/c7psx3

  4. Chris

    @merthyr_bill

    Thanks for that little insight, did you work hard to become an uninformed moron or does it come naturally?

  5. Richard

    I can agree with all points except the third. It shows little understanding of the realities on the ground for local candidates, and I speak as one. Firstly most of us hold down full-time jobs, so have limited time for campaigning. Therefore our priority on the doorstep will be local issues, not explaining the pros and cons of a new voting system which most of our electors don’t understand. Secondly, there are the local political realities. In councils such as mine which is a minority Tory-led one, our priority is to win back traditional Labour wards taken by the Tories and Lib Dems who are currently plotting to turn the council into a Suffolk-style EasyCouncil, with the Lib Dems the treacherous villain in the piece, backing Labour ‘call-ins’ to the hilt, speaking in favour of them in the chamber, then calling adjournments just before the vote on the motion to horse-trade with the Tories. So our energies will be going into securing more power in the council.
    More generally and on a national level, I would also say that, given all the talk of an informal pact, I fear AV is something the Lib Dems can’t be trusted with. They would be hijacking electoral reform – in which I strongly believe – for political gain. Were it being introduced by a majority government, I’d have no reservations about campaigning for it.

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