If the general elections of last year were consumed and everywhere, this year’s local elections are Neith.
That is not to denigrate for a moment how much they are in the places where they are happening, or to the extent that the mood of national politics will be disturbed in its consequences.
But the reality is that there are not many competitions this year, especially since some have postponed due to an imminent shaking in local government structures in some places.
So there is a very good possibility that he is reading this in a part of the country without competitions.
And there is also a good opportunity, giving what I hear from the political parties, that their heart might not be clicking on ecstasy, even if the community center in the future is becoming a voting station tomorrow.
I detect a curious paradox at this time: anger faces an expectation of generalized indifference.
Participation in local elections that do not coincide with a general election almost always wrinkle.
But what I collect anecdotally, I just spent the last days in Lincolnshire, informing about the race to be the first mayor chosen directly from the county, coincides with what the most common research group has collected in focus groups.
The group’s director in the United Kingdom, Luke Tryl, diagnoses a “dejection or misery for the state of Great Britain that does not feel sustainable.”
Put that feeling, a reduced participation and a splinter of party support in all types of directives in the mixer and what you end is a very unpredictable policy in which the margins between victory and defeat could be very narrow.
Or to put it further around: if not many votes in total, in many different directions, two things are likely: the gap between the winner and the runner -up could be quite limited, and the necessary part to win could be.
And win a small part of the vote poses immediate questions about his mandate.
The election analyst Sir John Curtice argues at the Telegraph that “the mainstream is dead”, five games have the opportunity to make real incursions in these competitions and what stands out now is that both work and conservatives are in the convention. Below.
The conservatives have spent week talking about how they feel about these elections.
And high -level Labor people are also increasing the gloom in the conversations I have with them.
What leaves us with the United Kingdom, the liberal Democrats, the Green Party and an Ortense element overlooked local English democracy, the independents.
This is a great moment for reform.
One of the outstanding trends in British politics since last year’s general elections has been the growing support of the party in opinion polls.
What will prove on Thursday is the extent that it translates into real votes in real elections.
The party’s talk is big: they say they win the next general elections. The next few days will give us an idea of how or yes, although up to four years of choosing the next government, it is a plausible statement.
When you wake up on Friday morning. If, unlike political nerds, he has a real leg to bed, the headlines that will greet him will be on the reform.
This is because there are many of the competitions in which there is an expectation that they can win are counted during the night.
There is parliamentary parliamentary election in Runcorn and Helsby near Liverpool and the race to be the first mayor of Lincolnshire, to begin with.
Later on Friday, the emphasis will change to Soomewat, as local authorities in a part, but not exclusive, in southern England, their counting, and the liberal democrats will seek to make the extensive profits collect or we the Asservatives of the Asservatives of the Asservatives of the Asservatives of the Asservatives of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees of the attendees Of the attendees of the councilors of Gret Grotty and Wefass have grow again.
It is only for Friday tea time that we have a rounded image of how the thesis elections of the matches and the independents that challenge have gone.
And then the debate about what everything means.