يحاول ذهب - حر
Labour Realism
July 21, 2024
|Outlook
Beneath Labour's supermajority of 412 seats, there are worrying undertows
IN the dying days of his vapid campaign, Rishi Sunak desperately urged voters to prevent a Labour supermajority: it would give Keir Starmer absolute power and would have lasting effects that would ‘wreck Britain’. This seems only to have reminded voters of how 14 years of Conservative rule had actually wrecked Britain. His warning, like the green shoots of economic recovery, came too late. Too many voters wanted to punish the Tories for too many things for them to return to the fold.
Labour’s supermajority of 412 seats is not the outcome of voters peeling off from the Tories and voting Labour: while no doubt some did, if outcomes on some dyed-in-the-wool Tory bastions like Witney, Henley or Maidenhead are anything to go by, the Liberal Democrats, who, at a record 71 seats, were the main beneficiaries of such defections.
As his detractors point out, Starmer’s Labour, in the end, received only 34 per cent of the vote, six points below the last opinion polls, but managed 65 per cent of the seats in Parliament. The Tories recovered from their projected 19 per cent votes to win a mere 18 per cent of the seats with their 121.
Nigel Farage’s Reform Party, another haven for further-to-the-right voters seduced by his sirensong of xenophobic nationalism, polled 14 per cent of the vote but managed merely five seats.
Labour’s own vote was actually split, but less badly than the Tories’, and they managed to gain some support among those who had moved to the Tories previously.
While the electoral map of Britain was transformed from largely Tory blue to Labour red, the supermajority was produced by the geographical concentration of voters, and the first-past-the-post electoral system.
هذه القصة من طبعة July 21, 2024 من Outlook.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Outlook
Outlook
Goapocalypse
THE mortal remains of an arterial road skims my home on its way to downtown Anjuna, once a quiet beach village 'discovered' by the hippies, explored by backpackers, only to be jackbooted by mass tourism and finally consumed by real estate sharks.
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
A Country Penned by Writers
TO enter the country of writers, one does not need any visa or passport; one can cross the borders anywhere at any time to land themselves in the country of writers.
8 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
Visualising Fictional Landscapes
The moment is suspended in the silence before the first mark is made.
1 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
Only the Upper, No Lower Caste in MALGUDI
EVERY English teacher would recognise the pleasures, the guilt and the conflict that is the world of teaching literature in a university.
5 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
The Labour of Historical Fiction
I don’t know if I can pinpoint when the idea to write fiction took root in my mind, but five years into working as an oral historian of the 1947 Partition, the landscape of what would become my first novel had grown too insistent to ignore.
6 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
Conjuring a Landscape
A novel rarely begins with a plot.
6 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
The City that Remembered Us...
IN the After-Nation, the greatest crime was remembering.
1 min
January 21, 2026
Outlook
Imagined Spaces
I was talking with the Kudiyattam artist Kapila Venu recently about the magic of eyes.
5 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
Known and Unknown
IN an era where the gaze upon landscape has commodified into picture postcards with pristine beauty—rolling hills, serene rivers, untouched forests—the true essence of the earth demands a radical shift.
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Outlook
A Dot in Soot
A splinter in the mouth. Like a dream. A forgotten dream.
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
