Tuesday, 10 May 2011
Northern Ireland Local Elections : Day 2
Ulster Unionists 98 councillors (-15) winning 0 councils
Democratic Unionists 175 councillors (-6) winning 0 councils
Progressive Unionists 2 councillors (n/c) winning 0 councils
Traditional Unionist Voice 6 councillors (+6) winning 0 councils
Unionist Bloc: 281 councillors (-18)
Alliance 44 councillors (+14)
Independents 27 councillors (+6)
Greens 3 (n/c)
United Kingdom Independence Party 1 (+1)
Non Aligned Bloc: 75 councillors (+20)
Social Democratic and Labour Party 87 councillors (-14) winning 0 councils
Sinn Fein 133 councillors (+7) winning 1 council (+1)
Nationalist Bloc: 220 councillors (-7)
Northern Ireland's councils use STV for their elections and as such it is virtually impossible for a party to control a council (as is the case in Scotland), however in 2005 the Democratic Unionists controlled both Castlereagh and Ballymena councils. This year they lost control of those councils and every single council in Northern Ireland would have been NOC, if Sinn Fein had not GAINED Magherafelt from NOC. I have yet to confirm this, but I believe this is the first time that Sinn Fein have ever controlled a Northern Irish council.
Monday, 9 May 2011
Northern Ireland Local Elections : Day 1
Antrim: DUP 5 (-1) UUP 5 (n/c) SF 4 (+1) SDLP 3 (n/c) All 2 (n/c) NOC (n/c)
Moyle: Ind 4 (+1) UUP 3 (n/c) SF 3 (-1) DUP 2 (n/c) SDLP 2 (-1) TUV 1 (+1) NOC (n/c)
Totals: UUP 8 (n/c) DUP 7 (-1) TUV 1 (+1) All 2 (n/c) Ind 4 (+1) SDLP 5 (-1) SF 7 (n/c)
Over the course of tomorrow, the remaining 26 councils should formally declare, but already there is a pattern emerging of both the UUP and the SDLP doing much worse than would have been expected (and just like Iain Gray, Tavish Scott and Annabel Goldie) it appears that the knives are out for both Tom Elliott (leader of the UUP) and Margaret Richie MP (leader of the SDLP).
Sunday, 20 March 2011
Just a quick note
Sunday, 13 March 2011
Northern Ireland Votes: Upper Bann
The last of Northern Ireland’s eighteen seats is Upper Bann. Upper Bann covers the area directly South of Lough Neagh the large freshwater lake just east of the middle of Northern Ireland (the largest lake in the British Isles). The seat is named after the River Bann, the longest in Northern Ireland, which flows through the seat. The seat covers Craigavon Urban Area, a series of towns which were intended to merge together into a city (which never happened) but which represents Northern Ireland’s third biggest urban area. Lurgan and Portadown are the biggest settlements in this area. It also covers Banbridge, a fairly moderately sized town. It is thus an urban area of medium sized towns. Upper Bann is one of the most sectarian areas of Northern Ireland. While the seat is mixed overall (55% Protestant to 43% Catholic) it is extremely segregated. For example in Lurgan the Northern half is almost entirely Catholic whereas the Southern half is almost entirely Protestant. A good example of the tensions in the area is the Drumcree conflict which used to flare up in this seat most years. At Westminster the seat is best known as the former seat of David Trimble, the UUP leader who led it into and through the Belfast Agreement, becoming the first First Minister. Trimble lost his seat when he was unseated by the DUP’s David Simpson in 2005. When the result was announced it was thought that maybe the UUP had been wiped out at Westminster, until it was revealed that Sylvia Hermon had held North Down. The UUP still do well here however.
One notable feature of Upper Bann is that, for a while, it had the biggest differential between Catholics in the census and actual Nationalist votes, which is especially surprising considering the segregation. The best explanations I have heard for this phenomenon is firstly that Catholics tactically voted for David Trimble for a long time and still continued voting UUP after (which would explain the strong UUP showings in this constituency) and the presence of a large number of Catholic policemen in Banbridge (when the state is paying your wages you typically become a bit more predisposed towards it).
| Candidate | Party | Vote | Change |
| David Simpson | DUP | 33.8% | -3.7% |
| Harry Hamilton | UUP/Con | 25.7% | +0.1% |
| John O'Dowd | Sinn Fein | 24.7% | +3.8% |
| Dolores Kelly | SDLP | 12.7% | -0.2% |
| Brendan Heading | Alliance | 3.0% | +0.8% |
A slight fall in the DUP vote and a rise in the Sinn Fein vote may indicate either demographic shifts or an unwinding of tactical voting patterns (assuming that a fall in tactical voters from the UUP was accompanied by a swing in the Unionist community from DUP to UUP). Nonetheless the UCUNF alliance failed to make the progress they had hoped for in one of their targets, even with noted Freddie Mercury impersonator Harry Hamilton on the ballot. Since 2010 Hamilton has defected to the Alliance, like several other prominent UCUNF candidates in 2010.
| MLA | Party | First Pref | Round Elected |
| John O'Dowd | Sinn Fein | 18.0% | 1 |
| David Simpson | DUP | 15.9% | 1 |
| Sam Gardiner | UUP | 12.0% | 9 |
| Dolores Kelly | SDLP | 10.9% | 8 |
| Stephen Moutray | DUP | 8.5% | 11 |
|
| UUP | 5.1% | 12 |
| Sydney Anderson | DUP | N/A | N/A |
| Best Losers | Party | First Pref | Round Eliminated |
| Dessie Ward | Sinn Fein | 7.3% | 12 |
| John McCrum | DUP | 6.9% | 10 |
| Arnold Hatch | UUP | 4.2% | 8 |
| David Calvert | Independent | 3.1% | 7 |
| Helen Corry | Green Party | 2.7% | 7 |
| Sheila McQuaid | Alliance | 1.9% | 5 |
| Patrick McAleenan | SDLP | 1.8% | 4 |
Overall Summary
| Party | Vote | Seats |
| DUP | 31.4% | 2 |
| Sinn Fein | 25.3% | 1 |
| UUP | 21.3% | 2 |
| SDLP | 12.7% | 1 |
| Green Party | 2.7% | 0 |
| Alliance | 1.9% | 0 |
Two seats in a row where parties lose out on seats through poor STV tactics with, this time, bad ‘balancing’ being at fault. In STV it is important to maintain as much equality between candidates as possible, and to make sure voters preference all your candidates. If you have large differentials between candidates one may be eliminated early on, or you may have a situation where votes do not transfer right. Of John O’Dowd’s massive 1,606 vote surplus, for example, 22.7% did not go to his running mate, Dessie Ward. In fact I find this result rather odd as Sinn Fein generally demonstrates superior vote management and balancing when compared to other parties. Nonetheless, the long and short of the result is that the UUP hold 2 seats whereas Sinn Fein only hold one despite Sinn Fein getting 4% more first preference votes. It is results like these which lead some to argue that STV is not a proportional system (I prefer to call it a quasi-proportional system). What’s more the DUP should have really taken the seat over the UUP as well. UUP MLA George Savage actually came eighth in terms of popular vote.
The win cannot be put down fully to balancing issues however, as the Unionist community in the seat is larger than the Nationalist community anyway, and so votes flowed from DUP to UUP but there could have been a third DUP seat here if they’d balanced better too.
Besides poor balancing it is also notable that the nationalist (and particularly the Sinn Fein vote) is much stronger here than in Westminster elections which is likely a function of tactical voting in Westminster elections (as there is much less reason and possibility to tactically vote under STV).
The Incumbents
John O’Dowd (Sinn Fein) is, due to balancing issues, this seat’s sole Sinn Fein MLA. He has previously been a leader of the Sinn Fein assembly team and is a member of the party executive. O’Dowd gained plaudits in 2009 for referring to the dissident Republicans of the Continuity IRA, who killed a police constable, as ‘murderers’, a solid demonstration of just how far Sinn Fein has come. I suspect O’Dowd’s vote will fall this year as Sinn Fein attempts to balance better in hope of getting a second Assembly MLA elected, but he should still be safe.
David Simpson (DUP) has resigned from Stormont in order to concentrate on being this seat’s MP and has been replaced with Sydney Anderson. Anderson is a councillor in Craigavon (specifically in Portadown) and a former Mayor and Deputy Mayor on the council. The DUP is running a tight two candidate strategy here and based on recent performance they should be able to secure both seats. Anderson should be fine.
Sam Gardiner (UUP) is a local figure of substantial standing. He was elected to what was then Lurgan borough council in 1968, at the age of 23, becoming Ulster’s youngest mayor in 1968. He then served as mayor on Craigavon council (which replaced Lurgan) three times. He did substantial voluntary work at the Maze Prison, for which he was awarded a MBE, is a former High Sheriff of County Armagh, Chairman of the Board of Governors of a local school, Past President of a local cricket club, a former Chairman of the Lurgan based Glenavon FC as well as a member of a variety of other organisations. He also apparently keeps koi carp in his spare time! He is a former UUP chief whip and a former spokesperson on the environment. He was elected to the Assembly in 2003. Despite the fact that he will be 71 at the time of the Assembly election Gardiner has seemingly decided to keep giving this politician lark a go, and has been selected to fight this constituency once again. I find it difficult to imagine such an involved local figure not winning re-election.
Dolores Kelly (SDLP) was elected on Craigavon Council in 1993, and served as the council’s first Nationalist Mayor in 1999. At a Northern Ireland level she mostly appears to be a low profile politician, but the SDLP vote here is almost enough to reach a single quota on their own, so assuming the party doesn’t do something silly like nominate too many candidates she should be able to hold her seat, assuming she runs again.
Stephen Moutray (DUP) has been a councillor in Lurgan since 2001, and a MLA since 2003. Moutray is a businessman who has lived in Lurgan all his life. He is the current local Mayor and sits on all the major council committees. With a solid political base in Lurgan and a decent DUP vote in this seat Moutray can be fairly confident of re-election.
George Savage (UUP) has a history of interesting Assembly campaigns. He got 1.3% of the vote in 1998 but then received 1,712 votes when David Trimble was elected and another 2,565 votes when Sam Gardiner was eliminated to win victory. He was then beaten out by Gardener in 2003, losing his seat. He was re-elected in 2007 after Trimble had stood down, this time from 8th in the popular vote on just 5.1% of the vote, by a combination of poor balancing from Sinn Fein and the DUP (as I covered above) and preferences from his eliminated running mate Arnold Hatch. His re-election prospects would have been nail-biting but seemingly he has decided to stand down.
The Challengers
There is really one seat in danger: George Savage’s open UUP seat. The UUP is standing three candidates in the seat; Sam Gardiner, Colin McCusker and Jo-Anne Dobson.
McCusker is the son of Harold McCusker, a UUP MP who was the party’s deputy leader. Harold was the MP for this seat and its predecessor, Armagh, from 1974 until 1990, when he sadly passed away. His son appears to be the mould of a traditional UUP politician having been a ‘dedicated’ member of the Loyal Orders for 20 years now. Dobson on the other hand is an up and coming young woman whose history is in PR. She was the Assistant Campaign Director for the MEP Jim Nicholson’s election campaign and a member of the Party Executive. Far be it for this blog to appear superficial but she is also not exactly an unattractive woman and thus I suspect maybe her campaign leaflets might attract more attention than would normally be the case. Dobson stood in a local by-election last year and won with 64% of the vote, though notably the DUP did not stand a candidate and there was only a 24% turnout. Dobson also seems to more au fait with Web 2.0, using facebook for her by-election campaign and using the blog available to all UUP candidates with some frequency. In Dobson and McCusker the UUP has two strong candidates, but who will appeal to different parts of the Unionist community – McCusker to older, more traditionalist UUP voters who remember his father with fondness, and Dobson to younger, more progressive, particularly female middle class voters.
I have no idea which of these is more likely to hold the seat, either could, and the party has selected capable candidates who will appeal to very different sorts of voters. They will benefit from the fact that the DUP is running only two candidates, and the larger size of the Unionist vote in general. In 2010 Unionists received 59.5% to 37.4% for Nationalists, whereas in 2007 they received 56% to 38.9%. We must remember that Northern Irish elections are not just between parties but also between communities and on these figures the Unionists are still closer to a fourth quota than the Nationalists, though it is by no means assured. The Nationalist vote has been growing in the constituency, but it will have to grow by a fair amount for the Nationalists to be assured of a third quota here, though it may end in a Unionist/Nationalist fight out for the last seat.
Nonetheless, Sinn Fein would be fools not to go for a second seat in the constituency and so that is precisely what they are doing. They are running Johnny McGibbon as their second candidate. McGibbon is a prominent Sinn Fein activist who became Northern Ireland’s youngest councillor when he was co-opted onto Craigavon council in 2007. A talented young politician McGibbon is definitely one to watch.
Sinn Fein is sure to attempt to balance its vote better than in 2007, and in McGibbon they have a decent candidate. Also in the party’s favour is that the UUP has arguably overnominated. Seeking to broaden the party base they have selected three very different candidates who will appeal to different bases, but there is only really enough UUP votes here to justify two candidates. It is likely that two or three hundred votes will be lost to the UUP by poor preferencing.
Another issue is it remains to be seen who else will be nominated. The Alliance has a potential troublemaker in Harry Hamilton. If they nominate Hamilton, who was the UCUNF candidate here last year, they may be able to drag a large number of votes from the UUP’s more progressive wing. Hamilton would be a high-profile candidate who would hold great appeal for progressive-leaning Ulster Unionist voters, especially those upset at the current party leadership. The TUV have also not selected their candidate here but have a decent potential candidate in David Calvert, who ran here as an Independent Unionist in 2007, getting 3.1% of the vote. Calvert was a founding member of the DUP, and once deputy chairman. He left the party in 1993 but has remained prominent as a perennial independent candidate. He ran in 2010 for the TUV in the same by-election Jo-Anne Dobson ran in, coming second on 19.3% of the vote (though I underline that this is a council by-election, that the DUP did not stand and that there was a low turnout). Besides this one by-election TUV support has not yet been tested in this constituency and he may be able to pull off a surprise. I doubt it, but if both he and Hamilton run then the Protestant vote in the constituency will be divided, and thus much more likely to leak preferences.
If it is divided in this way then the comparably small number of nationalist candidates (likely to be just 3-5) will make vote management and candidate balancing much easier and allow for far superior vote transferring. If all this comes to pass McGibbon will be well placed to win a seat.
This is the last of the Northern Irish constituency previews. The plan is to concentrate on some other projects for a week or so, both personal and blog related, before coming back to start looking into the seats for the Scottish Parliamentary election. In the last week or so before the campaign I will come back to these seat previews and update them to reflect newer information (especially as, when I started this, only the UUP had released a full candidate list, and the DUP and Sinn Fein had released none at all).
Saturday, 12 March 2011
Northern Ireland Votes: West Tyrone
West Tyrone is the penultimate Northern Irish seat. It consists of the majority of County Tyrone, lying in the West of the Province, fairly central in North-South terms, which makes it the positional opposite of Strangford. The seat is largely rural, with two moderately sized towns – Strabane, and the county town, Omagh, site of the Omagh bombing by the ‘Real IRA’ the worst single attack in Northern Ireland, killing 29 people, and injuring 220. The fact that this came in 1998, four months after the Belfast Agreement, spurred the Peace Process on. Strabane has a reputation for poverty and unemployment, often making it into the top 10 UK’s ‘crap towns’ list. The constituency also features Northern Ireland’s biggest concentration of rural poverty by far. Omagh is more prosperous, but nonetheless the constituency is still very deprived. In common with most of the South and West the constituency is also Catholic dominated. Indeed only Foyle and West Belfast are more so, around 2/3rds of the population are Catholic, and the deprivation combines to make this seat Sinn Fein leaning. When the seat was originally created in 1997 it was won by the UUP on 34.6%% as the DUP didn’t run a candidate and the Nationalist vote split fairly evenly between the SDLP (32.1%) and Sinn Fein (30.9% - incidentally stories like these always make me wonder about the effect of moving to AV in Northern Ireland). Sinn Fein was able to effectively homogenise the nationalist vote around it in 2001, and Pat Doherty has been MP for the seat ever since.
| Candidate | Party | Vote | Change |
| Pat Doherty | Sinn Fein | 48.4% | +9.5% |
| Thomas Buchanan | DUP | 19.8% | +2.0% |
| Ross Hussey | UUP/Con | 14.2% | +7.3% |
| Joe Byrne | SDLP | 14.0% | +4.9% |
| Michael Bower | Alliance | 2.3% | +2.3% |
| Ciaran McClean | Independent | 1.4% | +1.4% |
One thing you will note is that in 2010 every single candidate increased their vote. This is because in 2005 an independent called Kieran Deeny (more on him later) took 27.4% of the vote. Without Deeny on the ballot Doherty held his seat without trouble.
| MLA | Party | First Pref | Round Elected |
| Barry McElduff | Sinn Fein | 16.8% | 1 |
| Pat Doherty | Sinn Fein | 16.2% | 1 |
|
| Sinn Fein | 11.5% | 3 |
| Thomas Buchanan | DUP | 11.2% | 6 |
| Allan Bresland | DUP | 10.2% | 7 |
| Kieran Deeny | Independent | 9.1% | 7 |
| Losers | Party | First Pref | Round Eliminated |
| Derek Hussey | UUP | 8.9% | 5 |
| Jo Deehan | SDLP | 6.5% | 7 |
| Eugene McMenamin | SDLP | 5.5% | 5 |
| Seamus Shields | SDLP | 2.5% | 4 |
| Joe O'Neill | Independent | 1.1% | 4 |
| Robert McCartney | UKUP | 0.5% | 4 |
Overall Result
| Party | Vote | Seats |
| Sinn Fein | 44.5% | 3 |
| DUP | 21.4% | 2 |
| SDLP | 14.5% | 0 |
| Kieran Deeny (Independent) | 9.1% | 1 |
| UUP | 8.9% | 0 |
A couple of notes about the result. Firstly the Alliance stood no candidate, preferring to back Kieran Deeny. The SDLP got enough votes to gain a seat, but screwed it up through silliness. Essentially in STV the more candidates a party stands, the more transfers ‘leak’. Simply put, there is a small, but notable minority, who do not, for whatever reason, preference candidates in the order a party prefers. Thus the best strategy is always to stand one more candidate than prior performance suggests, if one is feeling confident, or at what prior performance indicates, if one is not. Based on the prior vote in this constituency the SDLP, in 2007, should have stood one candidate, maybe two if it was feeling REALLY cocky. Instead the local constituency party deselected the Strabane-based then two term MLA Eugene McMenamin, in favour of two candidates, Jo Deehan and Seamus Shields from Omagh in what was reportedly a highly fractious selection meeting. To make matters worse the SDLP executive then shoved McMenamin onto the ballot, giving the SDLP perhaps the most tactically foolish slate of any major party anywhere in Northern Ireland, and that is the story of how the SDLP turned 14.5% of the vote, more than enough to reach quota, into 0 seats.
The Incumbents
Barry McElduff (Sinn Fein) has been a MLA for this seat since 1998. He is also a member of Sinn Fein’s executive, the Ard Comhairle, of the British-Irish Parliamentary group and is the party’s spokesman on All-Ireland development. McElduff is fairly prominent on twitter, and is known for a certain self-parodying anti-establishment Irish nationalist style. He should be safe.
Pat Doherty (Sinn Fein) is this seat’s MP, and was Vice-President of Sinn Fein from 1988-2009 (making him the second ranked member of the Sinn Fein internal hierarchy). He has been a MLA since 1998. He has been accused of being a member of the IRA’s army council (the executive which leads the IRA). An easy hold should be at hand.
Claire McGill (Sinn Fein) is the final Sinn Fein MLA in this seat. A local councillor, Sinn Fein claims she is one of the hardest working MLAs in the area. McGill is standing down at this election.
Thomas Buchanan (DUP) was elected as the youngest councillor in Omagh city council in 1993, and was Vice Chairman in 2004. He was elected to the Assembly in 2003, as the DUP’s first MLA for the seat. Buchanan has been a PPC here, and seems to have a strong political base in the Unionist community in Omagh. The DUP vote here is only around enough to elect one and a half MLAs judging by the 2007 and 2010 result, but Buchanan is on more solid ground than his fellow MLA Alan Bresland in my opinion, so he should be fine. Nonetheless Buchanan should not take the chance of being unseated in favour of Bresland lightly.
Allan Bresland (DUP) has a similar story to his fellow DUPer Buchanan. He was elected to Strabane council in 1993 and became a MLA in 2007. A former lorry driver he claims the lowest expenses in Northern Ireland. Analysis of Kieran Deeny’s vote transfers in 2003 shows that the independent MLA was taking more votes from the UUP than the DUP by far, as do the changes from 2005 to 2010. There are enough Unionist votes in this constituency to elect two Unionist MLAs, and so it essentially comes down to the top two out of three, and who is eliminated from those three first. In 2007 the DUP ran the two current MLAs and the UUP ran one candidate. It seems that Deeny dragged enough votes from the UUP to have their candidate eliminated, meaning the UUP votes transferred to the DUP electing Bresland. As such Bresland is in huge danger here as Deeny is standing down at this election. His best chance of re-election is to defeat his running mate Thomas Buchanan, but Bresland’s base is in Strabane, whereas Buchanan’s is in Omagh, and there are simply more Unionist votes in Omagh than in Strabane.
Kieran Deeny (Independent) is the sole ‘true’ independent elected in 2007. Deeny is a former GP who won his seat in 2003 on a single issue campaign of retaining Tyrone County Hospital which was facing closure. He shocked pretty much everyone by topping the poll, winning 14.8% of the vote. He then ran to be the MP for this seat in 2005 running against Sinn Fein abstentionism, on the one hand, and with the strong backing of both Nationalist and Unionist activists on the other (though the four major parties all ran). He won 27.4% of the vote. There was a large (30,000 people) protest at the hospital in November 2005. The nearest alternative hospital is 27 miles away. The current status of the hospital remains in doubt with health minister Michael McGimpsey wanting to build a new hospital in Omagh, but the budget may not cover this with cuts on their way. Denny is, as far as I can tell, Catholic (judging by his history of supporting and playing Gaelic Football) but sits with the Alliance and the Green Party in the ‘United Community MLAs’ group. Deeny has announced he is standing down at this election (he actually announced it 3 hours before the time of writing, which is possibly the greatest timing ever).
The Challengers
One seat is very definitely open – Kieran Deeny’s. This seat is open in the truest sense of the word as well, as, with Deeny being a single-issue independent, no party is ‘defending’ it. Additionally, I consider Allan Bresland’s DUP seat to be under serious threat.
Let’s start with Deeny’s. By far and away the best placed party to take Deeny’s seat is the SDLP, and in fact were it not for over-nomination on the part of the party they would have taken it in 2007. This time the party has gotten over its temporary attack of the stupids in 2007 and nominated just the one candidate – Joe Byrne, who was not on the ballot at all in 2007, thankfully. He does, however, have a long prominence in the seat with the SDLP. He was only 1,161 votes behind the UUP in 1997, and was thus almost the seat’s MP. He was then a MLA from 1998 until 2003, when he lost out by 700 votes to his SDLP running mate Eugene McMenamin. He was the party’s candidate for MP again in 2010. Based upon the SDLP’s recent performances in the seat he should be able to take Deeny’s with ease, especially as Denny’s biggest source of votes always seemed to be the SDLP.
Allan Bresland’s seat is at risk from the UUP (for reasons I explained earlier). The UUP are standing Ross Hussey. Hussey is a local councillor in Omagh and is the brother of former UUP MLA Derek Hussey. He was also the UCUNF candidate for this seat in 2010. Hussey bears a resemblance to Family Guy’s Peter Griffin, something he has previously used on election posters. With Deeny gone Hussey should be able to secure a rare gain for the UUP in this seat, unless the TUV dig into the UUP vote too much.
Another possibility is that one of these seats is taken by Omagh councillor McGowan, who is running as an independent in an attempt to follow in Deeny's footsteps. However all the local candidates and MLAs are lobbying on the hospital issue and Deeny has been very frustrated by the inability of an independent candidate to have much influence in the Stormont system. Deeny's fall in vote in 2007 indicates to me that the single issue hospital movement in this seat was already running out of steam; were it not for SDLP silliness they would have taken the seat. I suspect that even if Deeny was on the ballot he wouldn't take a seat (probably one of the reasons he is standing down), so my suspicion is that McGowan's odds are very long indeed. That said, it would be foolhardy to rule him out completely, to my mind, given the obvious salience of the hospital issue in the seat.