Yes it’s quite true that people should vote for an MP and not a party, jim. But the unfortunate truth is that they do not. Being pragmatic my earlier remarks bore that in mind. I doubt anybody in Edinburgh South is considering the comparative prospects of having Ian Murray or Neil Hay as their MP. And even if they are they needn’t bother as these two gentlemen will be hidebound by the manifestos of the Labour Party and the SNP respectively. These proposals are well known and are unlikely to change significantly in the next seven days.
My overall point is that voters, who with few exceptions vote for a party and not for an individual, would be better off examining how their chosen party has performed in government, not how it now promises it will in the next five years. The exception of course is for the 25% or so of those that are predicted to vote for a party that has never held office. They obviously have their reasons which would, I imagine, be well framed by now.
The “election campaign” is a nonsense. Apart from the publication of their manifestos parties need do nothing to persuade voters to vote for them because almost all of what they say can be taken with a wheelbarrow full of salt. If standing on a street corner promising the earth (which in reality will translate into half a hundredweight of topsoil) sways a few voters then I would suggest those people are far too gullible.
The added dimension of possible Coalition combinations is largely irrelevant. Nobody knows what deals will be done behind closed doors by the party leaders to secure power. As has been seen over the last five years, principles (as well as manifesto promises and pledges made on “Question Time”) quickly go out of the window when the keys to No 10 are at stake. To suggest that people might vote (solely as an example) LibDem because they would prefer to see a Coalition between them and the Tories is simply nonsense.
In my lengthy experience of voting I have never been swayed by promises made in the run up to an election. I make my decision on what politicians have actually done not what they say they will do. This is difficult enough but it’s a tad more reliable than banking on promises because, quite simply, none of them can be trusted.
Nonetheless I wish the best of luck to those voters who have been swayed by the “Strictly Come Polling” (or perhaps the “X Factor” would be more appropriate) episodes that have been on the telly recently. But if they’ve relied on what they’ve seen then to provide them with a better future, they may be disappointed.