Sky News appear to be cracking up

Apparently, these presenters are presenting neutral views of the election, with no bias towards the Conservatives, Labour or the Liberal Democrats.

Adam Boulton insisting that the Conservatives won the election:

Kay Burley insisting that protesters should “go home and watch it on Sky News”:

(and failing to be able to discern between 65% of the turn out, and 65% of the electorate)

Which inspired a response which sums it up really, both for Kay and whichever “Rupert” she might be referring to at the end:

Coalitions, and the mandate.

There’s talk in the opinion pages about the possibilities of coalitions between parties in Parliament, some of which are quite disturbing. A key example is Benedict Brogan’s in the Telegraph here. The quote I’d really like to draw your attention to, and which I think does not work in the context of a coalitions is this:

What we should all focus on is the message emerging from Brown Central, that a deal between the two big losers – Labour and Lib Dems – is possible, and could even include a new Labour leader to make it ‘acceptable’. The idea that we would be governed by a coalition of losers led by someone who was not among the three leaders who paraded themselves on telly should have us reaching for our pitchforks.

Here’s the point –  a coalition government is where parties who are broadly aligned work together. A coalition of two smaller parties working together has an absolutely legitimate mandate when the coalition is larger than a largest single party.

In this case, if the Liberal Democrats are the party who can bridge the gap to a majority, then the seat count becomes less important when it comes to determining weight within a coalition. Look at the shares of the popular vote which each party received (from the BBC here):

  • Conservatives – 10,681,417 – 36.1%
  • Labour – 8,601,441 – 29.1%
  • Liberal Democrats – 6,805,665 – 23%

These are the numbers of people who backed each party, rather than the number of seats they won. A ConLib coalition would have 17,487,082 voters backing them, 59.1% of the turnout, dwarfing Labour. A LabLib coalition would have 15,407,106 voters backing them, 52.1% of the turnout, and that would dwarf the Conservatives.

If the Tories cannot work in a coalition with the Liberal Democrats, but Labour can, then the Tories do not have the mandate to govern.