Sunday, May 14, 2006

 

Not beaten yet

While I'll admit that election night wasn't much fun - Ponds Forge sports hall was full of Labour activists boistrously cheering every result, including the narrow defeat of Mohammad Azim by the Greens - a detailed analysis of the results gives us more cause for cheer than the headlines suggest.

This is the good news for Lib Dems in Sheffield:

We were defending 8 out of 10 of the most marginal seats in Sheffield

Obviously it would have been nice to take one of the two rather than lose any of the eight, but in the event we'll have to settle for what we've got. Defending Dore and Totley (by 1,100 votes!) and Walkley were pleasing results, particularly given the disaster that the other parties were predicting for us in those wards. As these are split wards, we have a chance of a gain in each of them in 2007.

Sheffield Central - the only seat to change hands in the event - was an odd result. Because of the three-way split of the seat in the 2004 election - and the poor showings of our other candidates - we were placed in the peculiar (but unenviable) position of having lost the seat despite our vote going up by nearly 4 percentage points. For reference, Labour's vote went down 1 point, and the Greens' went up 1 - enough to take the seat. Continuing this trend next year would put us in 1st place, the Greens in 2nd, and Labour in 3rd.

In the two vulnerable seats that Labour were defending, their majority was more than halved.

Our vote has increased across the city

More people voted for the Lib Dems than any other party in Sheffield on May 4th. Labour are now in second place - it is only a matter of time before this is reflected in the number of seats held.

Other parties are vulnerable next year

This is how hard a fight that Labour, the Greens and the Tories will have on their hands next year:
We have a plan to win (and a year in which to do it)

We won't be idle in the next year. Cllr Paul Scriven will be leading a detailed policy review to ensure that we keep in touch with the views of all Sheffield people - I doubt very much that Labour will be doing the same. Labour have been in back in control of the council for 3 years now, and we're starting to see the same old arrogance and swagger, particularly in the way they treat the other parties.

People in Sheffield are fed up of the "old model" of politicians sniping at each other across the Council chamber - we will change this and run a positive, issue-orientated campaign in 2007.

I'm personally convinced that Sheffield is changing into a vibrant, modern city that needs modern politicians, and that the last three years are a blip in the fortunes of a Labour party that's been on its way out for decades.

We'll see whether they're still cheering this time next year!

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