Blue wall (British politics)

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In British politics, the blue wall is a set of parliamentary constituencies in southern England which have traditionally voted for the Conservative Party, but generally opposed Brexit and are seen as being potentially vulnerable to gains either by the Liberal Democrats or the Labour Party. [1] This shift was noticeable in the UK general elections of 2017 (when Labour gained Canterbury, which had had a Conservative MP since 1918) and 2019 (when the Liberal Democrats gained St Albans and Labour gained Putney).

Contents

Overview

The "blue wall" is the inverse of the "red wall", a term coined in August 2019 to describe a set of constituencies in northern England, the Midlands and Wales that had long been held by Labour, and many of which were later gained by the Conservatives at the 2019 election. [2] [3] YouGov defines the blue wall as seats which are "currently held by the Conservatives; voted to Remain in 2016; and have a higher-than-average concentration of degree holders in the population (25%+)." [4] [5]

The term saw significant use following the 2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election, in which the Liberal Democrats overturned a large Conservative majority; Ed Davey, the Leader of the Liberal Democrats, knocked down a literal blue wall of bricks with an orange mallet to symbolise his party's victory. [6] He said afterwards that he believed "the blue wall in the south can be taken by the Liberal Democrats in large numbers of constituencies." [7] In July 2021, Davey started the process of selecting parliamentary candidates in blue wall seats [8] and the party revealed its first candidate, for Guildford, the following month. [9]

Starting in December 2021, with the 2021 North Shropshire by-election, the usage of this term has evolved to mean any seat which the Conservative Party has traditionally held. [10] The evolved usage has been demonstrated by Davey describing the North Shropshire seat as being another seat falling from the blue wall. [11]

In February 2022, think tank Onward posited that the north of England—as part of the red wall—would be "the principal battleground in the next general election" with there being "no evidence of a southern 'blue wall' ready to fall". The study found that only 20% of battleground seats at the next election would be in southern England, and in such seats the Conservatives could "gain ground". Onward's director Will Tanner said, "While the south is steadily becoming less Conservative over time, there is no blue wall waiting to fall across the Home Counties in two years' time". However, Onward did admit that certain seats "in London and the south-east are drifting away from the Tories and could fall in two or three elections' time", with data analyst James Blagden observing that "[t]he heart of the Tory party has been shifting northwards for the last 30 years" yet any potential of their "traditional southern heartlands slowly drifting away" existed in the long-term, with their "greatest short-term concern" being "backsliding in the red wall, losing their iconic 2019 gains, and putting their majority at serious risk." [12]

A few weeks after the 2023 United Kingdom local elections, which saw the Conservatives lose over 1,000 seats, former Conservative minister David Gauke told The Observer that he believed the blue wall "is going to crumble", but not for some time. "The Conservative party’s got a real long-term problem in the home counties," he said. "Rishi Sunak is perfectly capable of appealing to blue wall seats, but he's the leader of a party that people have seen over quite a long period of time heading in a particular direction. Those memories are not going to disappear quickly. There's an element of 'long Boris' about it all." [13]

Politics.co.uk has indicated "42 Blue Wells" that are vulnerable for Labour in the 2024 general election. [14] Campaigning in the 2024 United Kingdom local elections, Ed Davey said he was confident of toppling the "Tory Blue Wall in Surrey". [15]

Blue wall constituencies

The following constituencies, among others, are considered part of the blue wall.

ConstituencyCounty % Remain
in 2016 EU referendum
2015 result2017 result2019 result2021–23 by-electionsNext electionDescription
Canterbury Kent 54.7%Con +18.4Lab +0.3Lab +3.1Held by the Conservatives from 1918 to 2017
Chesham and Amersham Buckinghamshire 55.0%Con +45.4Con +40.1Con +29.1LD +21.2Held by the Conservatives from 1974 to 2021
Chipping Barnet Greater London 59.1%Con +14.5Con +0.6Con +2.1Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1974
Cities of London and Westminster Greater London71.4%Con +26.7Con +8.2Con +9.3Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1950
Esher and Walton Surrey 58.4%Con +50.2Con +38.9Con +4.4Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1997
Guildford Surrey58.9%Con +41.6Con +30.7Con +5.7Held by the Conservatives since 2005 and from 1910 to 2001
Hitchin and Harpenden Hertfordshire 60.3%Con +36.3Con +20.5Con +11.7Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1997
North Shropshire Shropshire 40.2%Con +31.6Con +29.4Con +40.6LD +15.6Held by the Conservatives from 1832 to 2021 (other than from 1904 to 1906) [lower-alpha 1]
Putney Greater London73.2%Con +23.8Con +3.3Lab +9.4Held by the Conservatives from 2005 to 2019
Somerton and Frome Somerset 46.7% [16] Con +33.6Con +35.8Con +29.6LD +21.2Held by the Conservatives from 2015 to 2023 [17]
South Cambridgeshire Cambridgeshire 61.6%Con +33.5Con +24.6Con +4.3Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1997
South West Surrey Surrey59.4%Con +50.0Con +35.7Con +14.6Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1983
St Albans Hertfordshire62.6%Con +23.3Con +10.7LD +10.9Held by the Conservatives from 2005 to 2019
Tiverton and Honiton Devon 42.2%Con +37.5Con +34.3Con +40.7LD +14.4Held by the Conservatives from 1997 to 2022
Wimbledon Greater London70.6%Con +26.1Con +10.9Con +1.2Held by the Conservatives since 2005
Wokingham Berkshire 57.6%Con +43.2Con +31.5Con +11.9Held by the Conservatives since its creation in 1950
Wycombe Buckinghamshire52.0%Con +28.9Con +12.3Con +7.7Held by the Conservatives since 1951

Criticism of the term

Just like "red wall", the concept of a blue wall has been criticised as a generalisation. James Blagden, Chief Data Analyst at the think tank Onward, said there was no evidence of a blue wall in Southern England that mirrored Labour's red wall. [18]

If a Blue Wall existed anywhere, it was London in the 1990s. The Conservatives polled better in London than they did nationally at every election between 1979 and 1992. But there was a 'correction waiting to happen'. Using regression analysis, we show that the Conservatives over-performed demographic predictions in 49 out of their 60 London seats in 1987. Only 11 of these remained after Tony Blair swept to victory ten years later. The pendulum swung hard against the Conservatives and has never returned. So much so that the Conservatives have never held a smaller share of London seats, while being in Government, than they do now.

See also

Notes

  1. North Shropshire was known as Oswestry from 1885 to 1983

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References

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