Monday, 10 May 2010



they wont suggest ukip ..will they!!!!!!!



From
May 9, 2010

Conservatives hung by just 16,000 votes

DAVID CAMERON was deprived of a Commons majority by failing to secure the votes of just 16,000 people, according to an expert analysis of election results.

The findings by Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher reveal that the Tories came tantalisingly close to securing a clean victory at the polls.

“Cameron came so near and yet so far,” write the directors of the elections centre at Plymouth University. “Just 16,000 extra votes for the Tories, distributed in the 19 constituencies in which the party came closest to winning, would have spared us a weekend of negotiation and speculation.”

The Tories failed to win majorities in about 30 Labour-held marginal constituencies they had expected to win, suggesting that in some seats the extra funds of Lord Ashcroft, the billionaire party donor, were less effective than hoped.

The smallest Labour majority, just 42 votes, was secured by Glenda Jackson, the former actress, in the Hampstead and Kilburn constituency in north London.

In several others, the Tories failed by a small number of votes, falling short by 92 in Bolton West, Ruth Kelly’s former seat. Ed Balls, the schools secretary, scraped home with a majority of 1,101 in his West Yorkshire seat.

The Rallings and Thrasher analysis shows the Tories ended up with 36% of the vote in the UK, followed by Labour on 29% and the Liberal Democrats on 23%.

With turnout in the election up from 61% in 2005 to 65%, the Tory share of the entire electorate, 24%, was higher than the 22% who voted for Labour in 2005.

Had the positions of the parties been reversed, and Labour secured 36% of the vote, Gordon Brown would have been returned with a majority of 64.

The analysis also suggests that a relatively small push would give the Tories a majority if a second election is held in the near future.

A swing of 1.8% from Labour would give the party an overall parliamentary majority, while a swing of 2.5% would put Cameron 20 seats ahead of all other parties in the Commons.

Another reason why Cameron failed to win outright victory was because the Lib Dem swing to the Tories was just 1%.