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The Red and the Green: Patterns of Partisan Choice in Wales
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2009
Extract
The distinguishing features of recent electoral politics in Wales have been the continued predominance of the Labour party and the failure of the nationalist party, Plaid Cymru. Since 1945 Labour has taken between twenty-one and thirty-two of the thirty-six seats at each general election and not less than 47 per cent of the vote. There has been some weakening of Labour's position since the high point of 60·6 per cent in 1966, but the party still secured 46·9 per cent of the vote in 1979, and rode out the Conservative victory in Britain as a whole with the loss of only two seats in Wales. Some variation in the Labour vote can be explained in terms of general shifts in British politics. However the enduring weight of Labour support in Wales in unpropitious times requires further explanation.
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References
1 The principal sources adopting a ‘British’ perspective include: Butler, David and Stokes, Donald, Political Change in Britain (London: Macmillan, 1974)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Blondel, J., Voters, Parties and Leaders (London: Penguin, 1974)Google Scholar; Pulzer, Peter, Political Representation and Elections in Britain (London: Allen and Unwin, 1975)Google Scholar; Kellas, J. G., The Scottish Political System (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975)Google Scholar; Miller, W. L., ‘Social Class and Party Choice: A New Analysis’, British Journal of Political Science, VIII (1978), 257–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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3 The Welsh Election Study (SSRC project HR4732/1) commissioned Social Surveys (Gallup Poll) Ltd to conduct a two-stage random sample survey of the Welsh electorate as of 3 May 1979. Between May and September 1979 858 interviews were successfully completed, which represented a response rate of 70 per cent.
4 Crewe, Ivor, Särlvik, Bo and Alt, James, ‘Partisan Dealignment in Britain, 1964–1974’, British Journal of Political Science, VII (1977), 129–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Also see Rose, Richard, Class Does Not Equal Party: the Decline of a Model of British Voting (Glasgow: Studies in Public Policy, No. 74, University of Strathclyde, 1980).Google ScholarPubMed
5 Data relating to Britain as a whole has kindly been made available by I. Crewe, B. Särlvik and D. Robertson, Directors of the British Election Study at the University of Essex. The 1979 WES survey was planned and executed in close collaboration with the 1979 BES survey.
6 See Fitton, Martin, ‘Neighbourhood and Voting: a Sociometric Examination’, British Journal of Political Science, III (1973), 445–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Garrahan, Philip, ‘Housing, the Class Milieu and Middle-Class Conservatism’, British Journal of Political Science, VII (1977), 126–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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8 The percentage difference between Labour and Liberal/Plaid Cymru support for each group of attenders declines by a factor of five (55 to 11 per cent). For this purpose the classification of chapel attendance used by Butler and Stokes was adopted. See Butler, and Stokes, , Political Change in Britain, p. 158.Google Scholar
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10 Each item in the scale was coded as a dummy variable: value 1 for possession of the attribute, value o in its absence.
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13 The regions are made up of the following Parliamentary constituencies: North East and Mid Wales: Flint East, Flint West, Denbigh, Wrexham, Montgomery, Brecon and Radnor; North West and West Wales: Anglesey, Caernarvon, Conway, Merioneth, Cardigan, Pembroke, Carmarthen, Llanelli; Upper South Wales: Gower, Neath, Rhondda, Aberdare, Merthyr Tydfil, Caerphilly, Bedwellty, Ebbw Vale, Abertillery, Pontypool; Lower South Wales: Swansea West, Swansea East, Aberavon, Ogmore, Pontypridd, Barry, Cardiff West, Cardiff South East, Cardiff North West, Cardiff North, Newport, Monmouth.
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15 The methodological dangers of inferring cohort data from a cross-sectional synchronic study are acknowledged.
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18 The coding frame used adopted the conventions employed by the British Election Study. It should be noted however that a large proportion of the sample did not respond to the Plaid Cymru like/dislike questions.
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23 The weakly attached were twice as likely as the strongly attached middle-class respondents in our sample to have had a working-class background.
24 Osmond, , Creative Conflict, p. 94.Google Scholar
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