The Welsh vote was a fairly unique anti-Labour vote continued over from what happened at the General election but I fully expect Labour to win it back at the next General election when the Labourites realise that every seat will count.
As for Bromley, I am afraid it is another false dawn for the LibDems, another one of those Return to your constituencies and prepare for Government delusional results. I am afraid
by-election results like that mean nothing for the LibDems, except to get their hopes up. At a GE the Tories would bother to turn up and Labour would return to voting for Labour. (just look at the turnout only 40%, down from 64%.)
The opinion polls are more accurate than by-elections and they put the Tories slightly ahead of Labour (in the 35-40% area) with the LDs languishing in their usual 18% third place.
Cuivienen said:
One position that could allow the Lib Dems to expand their share of the vote at the expense of the Tories (and, to a lesser extent, Labour) would be to take up the English Dem position of advocating an English National Assembly. This sidesteps the West Lothian Question, and I can hardly see the idea being unpopular in Scotland or Wales (although the Welsh might demand more power for the Welsh Assembly). It also plays into the Lib Dems' position of wanting to make political decisions as local as possible, and of course is a huge vote-getter in England. What are English (and Scottish and Welsh) Lib Dem supporters' thoughts on this?
England has already rejected regional assemblies and I dont think any of us really want another layer of MPs anyway. Besides, the cost of an English Parliament would be horrendous and then what would be the point of Westminster? It would not have very much to do at all and no-one, least of all the MPs, would want that.
Anyway, the Tories have started the ball rolling over the weekend by saying they want a Parliamentary debate on English votes on English issues
I started a thread on this a couple of weeks ago
here
and this could have very interesting repercussions for the whole of the UK. To me this is all very much in the favour of the Tories if they managed to reduce Labour and LibDem power north of the border.
I doubt if the Scots would like it either as their MPs would be regarded as second class Westminster citizens. Indeed I see the SNP is now ahead of Labour in the polls in Scotland (30% v 28%) when a year ago they were miles behind (47% v 18%)
We have very interesting, even a little scary, times ahead of us as the UK becomes more and more ungovernable (Just look at this to see one example of why (imagining, if you would, a Tory Govt in power) :-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/5138858.stm
BBC said:
While energy policy is reserved to Westminster, Scottish Executive ministers could use planning powers to block new power stations.