Most Devon Conservative MPs are expected to be safe in their seats in the forthcoming general election, according to a top pollster.
But read Owl on “Where will Claire Wright’s vote land?” , Remember there are 26,000 votes in play in our two constituencies.
Guy Henderson www.exmouthjournal.co.uk
Dr Frank Luntz, an American political analyst, said on the first day of the Conservative Party conference that any MP with less than an 8,000 majority should be concerned about being re-elected.
Simon Jupp was the only Devon Tory to get fewer than a 12,000 majority in 2019’s general election, receiving 6,708 votes more than an independent candidate in East Devon.
The Conservatives held onto 10 seats, with Labour’s Luke Pollard winning in Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport and Sir Ben Bradshaw retaining the Labour seat he has held since 1997 in Exeter.
Liberal Democrat Richard Foord reduced the Tory stronghold to nine seats by winning a by-election in Tiverton and Honiton last year after the resignation of shamed Tory MP Neil Parish, who stepped down after admitting he watched pornography in the House of Commons.
Mr Foord and Simon Jupp will battle for the new Honiton and Sidmouth seat at the next election.
Labour has effectively conceded that it can’t win much in Devon, however well it is doing in the national polls.
According to a leaked list, it will not prioritise its resouces trying to win in Torbay, the newly configured constituencies of Honiton and Sidmouth, Tiverton and Minehead, Torridge and Tavistock, or North Devon.
And despite the Liberal Democrats believing they can take seats from the Tories, Conservative dominance in the county is likely to remain, according to Dr Luntz.
The pollster, whose has David Cameron and Barack Obama among his fans, has earlier told Tory backbenchers that anyone with a margin of less than 15,000 should prepare to lose their seats.
He now admits this figure was “provocative”.
Dr Luntz told Times Radio that some Tory MPs would be shocked on election day.
“Some of these MPs have already understood the frustration with the public, understood the tension between the economy and the environment, which is the conversation I kept hearing,” he said.
“[They] expressed their frustration about immigration, crime and the roads, don’t see that Labour’s going to bring about the change they want and they’re already winning back disaffected Tories.”
The next general election has to take place by 28 January 2025.
While no official announcement has been made, betting is increased on the chances of a May poll.
The Devon MPs in the 2019 general election won with these majorities:
- South West Devon, Gary Streeter (Con), majority 21,430
- Tiverton and Honiton, Neil Parish (Con), 24,239
- Torridge and West Devon, Geoffrey Cox (Con), 24,992
- Torbay, Kevin Foster (Con), 17,749
- Newton Abbot, Anne Marie Morris (Con), 17,501
- Plymouth Moor View, Johnny Mercer (Con) 12,897
- East Devon, Simon Jupp (Con), 6,708
- Totnes, Anthony Mangnall (Con), 12,724,
- North Devon, Selaine Saxby (Con), 14,813
- Central Devon, Mel Stride (Con), 17,721
Depends how much time elapses before the election. Currently, Tories who don’t wish to think (which is most, unfortunately, and a lot of them in East Devon) will be heading off to the nastier end of the Party, seething about ‘wokerati’, ‘immigrants’, ‘the BBC’ and the other regular culture war bugaboos. The rest – esp. those who supported Claire Wright, will find even more reason to vote Lib Dem by the time Rishi’s efforts to cope with the outcome of 13 years of Tories in power have made things much worse. So it mostly rests on what the new boundaries have changed in demographics, and sustaining or increasing the tactical vote into a general election. The key to any decent future lies in getting rid of a useless, witless and generally very nasty Tory administration. That’s what I shall be voting to achieve. I hope everyone will.
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