Skip to main content
Category

Media

Michael Stephens: Is it over for the Tories in London?

By Centre Write, Media, Politics, Towns & Devolution

The May local election was not a happy one for southern Tories. With the notable exceptions of Croydon and Harrow, Conservative Councillors found themselves facing a backlash from voters which saw prized Councils such as Westminster, Wandsworth, and Barnet, fall to Labour for the first time in decades. In Richmond, which had 39 Tory Councillors in 2014, only one remains. Similar stories of woe were to be found across Kent, the South Coast and Wales. 

The traditional London Conservative strongholds in Wandsworth and Westminster collapsed is probably not all that surprising. For weeks worried Conservative pollsters announced that Partygate might spell the end for the Tories in Wandsworth, but Westminster falling only added insult to injury. The eight percent slide in the Tory vote across the parliamentary constituencies of Battersea, Putney, Wimbledon and Richmond Park in 2019, was an ominous warning which 2022’s results have only reconfirmed

So what is to be done? Firstly, Tories should not panic. Despite the bruising defeat that myself and hundreds of others suffered, I firmly believe that reports of the death of the London Tory might be greatly exaggerated. 

Much has been written of London’s changing demographics, primarily that stable middle-class communities of homeowners are being replaced by more diverse transient renters, which erodes the base upon which Conservatism naturally lies. True, homeowners are more naturally inclined to vote Conservative, and yes the Borough of Wandsworth now experiences a 20% annual turnover in registered voters. But wealthy suburbs like Putney and Balham are still filled with homeowners, many of whom are more than comfortable, and can absorb the recent uptick in the cost of living. Additionally local elections rarely see more than 40% turnout, and it is transient voters who are the least likely to vote in such elections. So, while this might partly explain Conservative woes it certainly does not account for why key Councils were lost. 

In my experience as the local candidate for 15 months in East Putney (a Wandsworth Tory stronghold where Labour gained a seat) it was clear that for many voters the Conservatives had lost both their moral authority to govern, and their reputation for sound financial management. Losing one pillar was damaging, but losing both proved fatal, and critically undermined the Local Conservative message of Low Council Tax as the bastion of decades of good governance. 

I come away from this election cycle feeling that the Conservatives were punished because core voters were left behind. Elections tend to focus voters’ minds on one or two key issues that really matter, and time and again it was clear that the Local Conservative message of Low Council Tax simply could not cut through to soft Conservatives and floating voters. 

Even more concerning was the Local Conservative message began to whither among the normally reliable base of Middle-Class white voters, and it was from these disenchanted Conservatives that the anger was most apparent: “You’ve lost us”, “I’m a Conservative but you deserve a good kicking”, “Not while you’ve got that man in charge”, are all memorable doorstep quotes that came my way in the final days. 

The sharp rise in split ballots across Conservative strongholds attests to this sense of anger and disillusionment. Council Elections can always throw up odd results owing to the number of candidates on the ballot, but in this instance the number of split ballots this time was quite unparalleled. Alienated from the Conservative Party by relentless scandals, and impending economic woes, many voters had nowhere to turn. Rather than swing hard to Labour, many simply ticked boxes for anyone that was not a Tory. The bleed of split votes proved to be too much across a number of important Tory Wards, proving Benjamin Franklin’s maxim right that eventually “a small leak will sink a great ship”.  Thus, the message was sent, the voters were unhappy and gave the Conservatives the “good kicking” that I was promised on the eve of the elections. 

With the kick having been administered it is now time to think about how the Conservative Party reconnects with its London voters and across the South more broadly. While some may argue that solid results in the North might mean the Tories simply abandon London to focus on lower income constituencies in the North, the Telegraph rightly notes that this will lead to almost certain defeat at the next general election. Boris might have had the force of personality to drag the party over the line back in 2019, but relying on the Prime Minister in today’s political climate looks an increasingly dangerous strategy.  

Reengaging the South requires a complex re-evaluation of policies past and present. The days of the “Cameroons” and their big society are well and truly behind us, and the financial woes induced by the pandemic mean that a low tax high growth economy so favoured by London’s middle classes is but a pipedream. To compound the problem increasing inflation means that interest rates will surely rise, increasing the cost of borrowing and with it the cost of mortgages that mean an even larger percentage of Southern voters under 40 are unlikely to be receptive to the Tory message. 

Red meat policies like sending asylum seekers to Rwanda or the levelling up agenda do not appeal to Southern voters, and especially not London voters. Rather concrete policies to tackle the cost of living crisis, and stabilise both the housing and rental market would go some way towards bringing back voters who do not wish to be paying half their monthly salary for cramped accommodation. If this can be done while reinjecting a little more integrity back into politics, then Southern voters might, just might forgive us in the years to come.

Michael is an associate fellow for Bright Blue. Views expressed in this article are those of the author, not necessarily those of Bright Blue. [Image: Peter Laskowski]

Peter Wilson: Is local radio news safe with the demise of well-known stations?

By Centre Write, Media

The demise of the well-known local radio stations including Eagle FM, KL.FM, Minster FM, Radio Aire, Spire FM, Stray FM, Swansea Sound, Wessex FM and Yorkshire Coast Radio and their replacement by Greatest Hits Radio (GHR) was a great pity in 2020, especially for those staff members who have lost their jobs and for the many listeners who miss them. 

A similar process had previously happened when other local stations became part of the Capital, Heart and Smooth networks when the local presenters lost their jobs and local broadcast studios were closed.

However, the seeds of these changes could be seen back in the 1990s when extra local stations were licensed to broadcast formats like jazz music – Jazz FM and Christian music and speech – Premier Christian Radio in areas where local commercial radio stations already existed plus three national commercial radio stations started broadcasting including Classic FM and DAB (Digital Audio Broadcasting) appeared on the scene thus increasing listener choice.

When the first land-based local commercial radio stations were licensed by the Conservative Party in the mid-1970s, every area that was granted a commercial radio license had a monopoly of radio advertising in its own area apart from London where both Capital Radio and LBC were both given licences. Similarly, by the time Harrogate’s Stray FM and Yorkshire Coast Radio were given their local licenses they still had a local monopoly over radio advertising and so their financial state was solid. This enabled them to offer a wide mix of popular music alongside good local news and information that pulled-in the local listeners. Some of these stations even broadcast specialist music programmes in the evenings.

By the 2010s local stations had started to form financial groups to save money on technical and administrative work. Eventually most of the locally owned companies sold out to one of two major radio groups – Bauer Media, who own Absolute Radio, Country Hits Radio, Greatest Hits Radio, Hits Radio, Jazz FM, Kiss, Magic & Scala and Global, who own Capital, Classic FM, Gold, Heart, LBC, Radio X & Smooth. Audiences also started to prefer to listen to specific types of music and so the wide variety of music offered by the radio stations owned by the two major radio groups started to dominate listenership. 

These networked services such as Greatest Hits Radio and Heart have had to promise Ofcom to provide an enhanced news service on local transmitters in order to broadcast only three hours of regional programming each weekday.

While these changes have happened to the old stations, we have started to see the emergence of new stations, often manned by people involved with the old stations, which are broadcasting using digital smart-speakers, apps and online instead of FM or DAB. New stations such as Rombalds Radio (Ilkley, Keighley & Skipton), Stray Online (Harrogate & District) and This is the Yorkshire Coast (Bridlington, Filey, Scarborough & Whitby) will also hopefully broadcast on the new small-scale DAB (SSDAB) when it is licensed by Ofcom in their areas.

As Conservatives, we have produced legislation on broadcasting that firstly enabled commercial radio to start-up in the 1970s, thus breaking the BBC monopoly in radio, and we have been supporters of extending listener choice through the setting up of DAB in 1995 that has led to most people being able to hear over 60 stations compared to just three BBC stations and off-shore commercial radio in the mid-1960s. 

When the Conservative Party produces our next piece of broadcasting legislation we must include the commitment that all local commercial radio must increase in the amount of local and regional news in their hourly bulletins to at least 3 minutes of purely local and regional news plus some national stories during their peak hours (07:00-10:00 & 16:00-19:00). 

If we do not make such a firm commitment in legislation we could well see that across great swathes of our country the information about local members of parliament and the work of local councils as well as other local stories could easily disappear from local commercial radio leaving local news to be only supplied by BBC local radio.

So, it will be up to us as local listeners and our elected representatives to hold both Bauer and Global to their existing commitments on local news and community involvement as well as encouraging the new local digital broadcasters and existing community radio stations to provide more local news and programmes from within their local communities provided by people who know and live within their local area rather than from someone sitting in a studio in London, Liverpool or Manchester.

Peter is a retired Broadcasting Regulation Consultant, one of the founders of Harrogate’s Stray FM, and a member of Bright Blue. Views expressed in this article are those of the author, not necessarily those of Bright Blue.