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Weekly Worker 576 Thursday May 12 2005
Law of the valleys
If one of the more interesting facts of the general election was that
the Tories actually managed to achieve a higher percentage of the popular
vote in England, then the same could not be said in Wales. Despite a reduction
in its vote, Labour still polled double that of the second-placed Tories,
whilst Plaid Cymru slumped to a poor fourth.
Nevertheless, not all was sweetness and light for Labour. As has been
widely reported, a massive swing of 49% saw Peter Law, the independent
socialist candidate in Blaenau Gwent, defeat the Labour candidate
in this safest of Welsh seats.
Some on the left have hailed this as a victory for socialism in this heartland
of Labourism. Not quite true. Until his sacking as a minister in the national
assembly a few year years ago, Law was a rather typical traditional
Labour politician not noted for his leftwing outbursts.
Yet since falling out with the apparatchiks who now control Welsh Labour,
Law, like John Marek before him, has skilfully portrayed a leftwing image
to hit back at his erstwhile friends. The imposition of an all-women short
list on the Gwent constituency, which caused not unjustified outrage amongst
party members there, enabled him to present himself as the authentic Labour
candidate in a seat that had been represented in the past by such illustrious
names as Aneurin Bevan and Michael Foot.
There had been some speculation before the election that Law - also the
AM for the constituency - might decamp from Labour to John Mareks
Forward Wales project, home also of another ex-Labour grandee, Ron Davies.
No doubt Marek will continue to woo Law, but his partys general
election results are unlikely to make FW an enticing prospect for the
new MP.
Standing in a half a dozen of the 40 constituencies in Wales, FW gained
no more votes than those associated with the normal fringe
candidates of the left. Even in Mareks own Wrexham constituency,
which he held at the 2003 assembly elections, the FW candidate could muster
no mote than 1.3% of the vote.
Indeed it has to be said that in general, left candidates in the principality
did even worse than when the Welsh Socialist Alliance stood in six seats
in 2001. The two Socialist Party candidates each received less than one
percent of the vote. Despite the successes Respect has achieved in seats
with large muslim populations in England, none of this has rubbed off
on Respect Wales, which in the two seats it contested polled just on and
just under one percent.
The left generally in Wales remains divided and completely peripheral
to politics. The results on election night might be seen as a wake-up
call, but it is likely that this is one law whose time has
yet to come.
Cameron Richards
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