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The 8 big questions emerging from the fallout of a shock general election result

Will anyone ever trust a poll again?

Jon Stone
Friday 08 May 2015 02:20 EDT
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Conservative supporters and a man dressed as Elmo watch TV as General Election results come in at the Windrush Leisure Centre in Witney.
Conservative supporters and a man dressed as Elmo watch TV as General Election results come in at the Windrush Leisure Centre in Witney. (PA)

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For anyone who has been following the polls for the past few months, the results of the general election may come as a big shock. These are the key questions that will be answered in the coming days:

1) Who will replace Ed Miliband?

If Miliband is PM, it is expected that Cameron will stand down as party leader quickly
If Miliband is PM, it is expected that Cameron will stand down as party leader quickly (PA)

The Labour Party managed to avoid all-out civil war after its defeat in 2010. One of Ed Miliband’s greatest successes as leader has been to hold the organization together.

The experience of Mr Miliband himself could loom large in the upcoming leadership campaign: will members shy away from less stage-managed personalities?

2) Will Nick Clegg step down and who will replace him?

(Getty Images)

Nick Clegg said he’d make a statement about his position later on – suggesting he might be about to resign. He’s presided over the destruction of decades of party building for the Liberal Democrats and did a lot worse than he was expecting.

3) How will the Tories govern?

(Getty)

At the time of writing, 5.30am, it’s not clear whether the Tories will have sneaked a majority or not, or how many numbers they’ll have to make up. The Liberal Democrats do not seem in a position to legitimately support anyone, considering the scale of their destruction. The DUP may be able to make up numbers to bring the Tories just over the line or shore up a majority.

But even the 2010 Coalition’s comfortable majority hasn’t been able to pass a lot of things in its programme like House of Lords reform or a boundary review. Gay marriage passed with Labour support. Even the DUP are not Tories to the bone they would come under pressure to block things like benefit cuts – at least for their own voters.

4) Will we see further devolution?

One thing there is definitely a majority in the Commons for is extra devolution to Scotland – the Conservatives proposed it before and the SNP will likely take it. Could the Tories move to lock Labour out of UK power forever by ending Scottish influence over England and Wales legislation?

5) Will there be another election?

(Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

If we end up with a Tory minority government or tiny majority and they can’t pass anything except Scottish devolution, will they declare another election? They have deeper pockets than Labour, for whom money can be a problem, and might be in a better position to fight it.

6) Will Jim Murphy be forced out?

(REUTERS/Graham Stuart)

The Scottish Labour leader has lost his seat near-total losses across his section of the party were largely responsible for Labour failing to win a majority. He's said he'll stay on, but will his colleagues let him?

One factor that has to be considered is that Labour now only has 1 MP in Scotland. In Labour's old leadership election electoral college MPs' votes counted for a lot (though not under new rules). With MPs' preferences diverging hugely from Labour members and union affiliates, any leadership contest could be very different.

7) Will we finally see electoral reform?

If results so far are anything to go by Ukip and the Greens will likely be fairly pleased with their performances, but neither will get anywhere near a proportionate number of seats to the votes cast for them. A significant proportion of the electorate voted for parties that will be no where to be seen.

The SNP support proportional representation – the Tories are dead-set against it, however. Some in Labour might yet become converts when they end up with one seats in Scotland on 20%+ of the vote.

The current system is surely untenable in terms of fairness, but it’s not clear how vested interests could be politically overcome to replace it.

8) How will the pollsters explain this mess?

(AP)

Tonight has been a disaster for the polling industry. Practically every poll conducted in recent weeks was wrong it could reasonably be argued that the entire industry’s output over the last few years has been completely worthless.

The Liberal Democrats in particular believed that their private polling would see them through in a number of seats they have lost by significant margins. Lord Ashcroft spent a lot of money on polls.

The extent to which polling has dominated political reporting in this parliament raises a lot of questions for both pollsters and journalists alike.

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