Results of the Gurn unscientific fun poll - 581 votes were cast.
Liz MacDonald 133 22.89%
Ashley Broadbent 94 16.8%
Michael Green 85 14.63%
Ritchie Cunningham 80 13.77%
Colin MacAulay 68 11.7%
Graham Marsden 60 10.33%
Rossie MacRae 33 5.68%
Laurie Fraser 28 4.82%
Good morning Gurnshire and welcome to our
eve of poll analysis. We have made two predictions based on the information in
the unscientific Gurn fun poll which closed earlier this morning. Liz will top
the poll and
the Scottish Conservatives and Unionists will be bottom. We stick
to the second prediction despite a late mini-surge for the Tory candidate
yesterday which leaves Laurie at the bottom of our fun poll
.
In between the top and the bottom the
situation is remarkably fascinating and will be even more so as the 2nd,
3rd, 4th and other preferences get shared out on Friday
by the electronic counting machines. Colin MacAulay should have a massive 2nd
vote, the SNP voters in Nairn have been with the party for a long time and remained faithful across several elections. In this constituency Fergus received 51% of the vote
at the Holyrood election and this observer would suggest that, once the 1st
place votes of Liz and Colin are added up, the tally will be close to that. The
SNP have a remarkable organisation capable of getting that vote out too and this
will swing into action again for this election.
Colin will be working hard all the way to
the finishing line however because not everyone that will be voting for Liz
will be an SNP supporter. Her appeal goes way beyond the party lines. On Sunday
I was talking to a solid unionist who reiterated his belief that the UK should
not be broken up. He will be voting for Liz because of the way she was
treated when she was sacked as Provost by Laurie, Sandy and Graham. This
gentleman, red white and blue to the core, was sanguine enough to realise that
Liz was the people’s choice for Provost and he was disgusted with the way that
she was treated. He will be going to the ballot box to attempt to put something
right. I imagine his second vote will not be going to the SNP. For him, the
sacking of Liz was an affront to Nairnshire and will be his prime political
consideration when he faces the ballot box tomorrow.
Like the SNP,Michael Green seems to have an infrastructure behind him too and
his supporters are offering lifts to the polls. Michael could be the
independent that takes the vacant spot this time round. He has made much of his “local” credentials
and this will take him to parts perhaps the other candidates cannot reach. Personally, I think he’ll be there when the dust settles and four of them are left standing, but it will be tight in there for the three runner-up prizes and every vote
matters this time round. Hopefully, Nairnshire will turn out in large numbers
tomorrow and show their support for the democratic process and those that have
bothered to stand.
Ritchie Cunningham has raised his profile
somewhat during this campaign and his name will not have escaped readers of the
Nairnshire Telegraph as he and Colin MacAulay engaged in an robust
correspondence over the past few weeks. Political letters to the Nairnshire
have their faithful readers but anther body of opinion can be equally turned
off by them and rush briskly by to the next page. Whether it increases a
candidate’s vote or not, it is good for democracy for the issues to be
dissected in this way and perhaps we need more of this rather than less.
Ritchie has pitched nakedly for the Unionist vote. The question is, whether it
is there in Nairnshire in the massive numbers he might expect it to be and will
the Unionists be content to vote on for the other (more low key Unionist
candidates), that is to say the LibDem and Labour Candidates? And ironically, in
his drive to attract such votes, is he in fact damaging the party that has for
so long been the most strongly associated with preserving the UK – the
Tories? Ritchie is the high profile Unionist candidate that some Tories might
have wished for. Again, the counting machines will reveal all on Friday.
Ashley Broadbent had a low profile on the
local political scene up until this election. He’s fought a campaign like a
serious contender would but is there enough support in Nairnshire for him to
make it into the final four? Again it is hard to say, if the LibDem vote falls
away again in Nairn could some of it go his way? How will second and third
preferences stack up against his pile of votes? At the back of all this though
what does the modern Labour party stand for in Scotland ?
Do many hard core socialists even consider it to be a left-wing party any more?
Will local hearts and minds warm to Ashley or will people remember Tony Blair
taking us to war with Iraq and the hundreds of thousands of corpses that piled up during and
after that conflict? Those that stand for a political party sometimes have to
take that karma that goes with that party’s previous actions.
Laurie is bottom of our unscientific poll
but he probably enjoys a lot of support among those members of the population that who do not use the Internet. By that I would mean the like of some of those
older members of the community that frequent events like the charity ceilidhs at the Legion
and who receive him with genuine warmth. He has performed the duties of the
office of Provost diligently but, unfortunately, everyone knows how he got that
role. It is a terrible shame really because if Liz had been allowed to serve
her full term then Laurie may have been the natural choice for next time
round. Laurie has been a councillor for a long time though. Could he really be
on his way out? As the Geordie mannie on Big Brother states: “You decide.”
Oor Graham stands accused by some of simply
being a LibDem and guilty by implication of his party’s role in giving us all a
Tory government in Westminster . I’ve come across people extremely upset that they voted for Danny
Alexander and got David Cameron instead. To many, Graham’s second crime is to
have been involved in sacking Liz. It hasn’t been forgotten but there are
positive points to be considered on his account. He is considered a hard
working councillor by some, whatever you think of the fruit of his endeavours. His
experience at the local CAB has given him an insight into some of the awful
problems facing people in our community. He has stayed faithful to his party
colours while others have deserted. Remember Ritchie, at the hustings, admitted
to once being a member of the LibDems. So could this be the end of Graham’s
career or will it be a case of the devil you know rather than the one you don’t?
What happens to Graham is another interesting element to the eventual result of
the local electorate’s choices. Fascinating, fateful, Friday is coming.
Last, but by all means least, is the Tory
wifie. It would have been nice to have seen a leaflet or a webpage or to have
received some other information. We did ask the Tory office in Inverness . If you are a Scottish
Conservative and Unionist voter and nothing else hits the spot for you however,
then you know where to put your cross tomorrow.
All will be revealed over the next few days. Have fun Gurnites. Vote early and vote often!
PS: For an alternative view on our local
elections Gurnites might want to read Green Dad’s (now resident in Edinburgh ) wee
snapshot of things in Nairnshire. Green Dad might have been our Green candidate
it seems but such is life.
Is someone taking the pisch?
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time for writing such a scientific analysis of a very unscientific poll.
ReplyDeletePolitical pundits are always writing fiction and are often proved wrong by the end result, but somehow I might have spotted the Tory position in the poll before starting.
Liz at the top is the only near certainty; thanks as always to the Grun for the thoroughly entertaining blog entry
You do not have to use all your preferences you can simply just vote for one person if you wish to.
ReplyDeleteDont forget Gurnites to vote for The Monster Raving Loony Club tommorrow a vote not wasted.
ReplyDelete