I suppose this split thread is the place to make this point, or I'll be accused of derailing.
LibDems enjoy Clegg bounce in Scotland at expense of the SNP
Let's just remind ourselves of the actual Scottish votes in the last election held in Britain -
the 2009 European elections.
SNP 29.1%
Labour 20.8%
Conservative 16.8%
Liberal Democrats 11.5%
That isn't subtle and it isn't marginal. It's evidence of a completely different voting pattern compared to the rest of Britain. It demonstrates clearly why the SNP has a right to be treated as a "big player" in the context of Scotland.
Now I hear all the reasons for not including the SNP in the 2010 debates. Scotland is too small to matter, it would bore the English viewers and they're the people who really count, and so on. Indeed. But the fact remains, the debate was shown in Scotland and watched in Scotland, and gave the LibDems the opportunity to increase their voting share in Scotland by a very significant margin. The SNP, excluded from being able to present their case, saw their vote drop by about the same margin.
Anybody think this was accidental?
ETA: Opinion poll figures taken from the
Herald article.
Before the debate
SNP 32%
Labour 34%
Conservative 17%
Liberal Democrat 12%
After the debate
SNP 26%
Labour 36%
Conservative 14%
Liberal Democrat 20%
If a party performs badly and their support then drops, they don't have much to complain about. However, excluding a main player in this way is nothing but a subversion of the democratic process.
Rolfe.