On 15 August, the attempt to build an effective remain force will begin when the Liberal Democrats, Greens and Plaid Cymru agree a non-aggression pact in 30 constituencies.
They will back one candidate in each seat who will stand as X Liberal Democrat (Unite to Remain) or Y Green (Unite to Remain) and so on.
The “Unite to Remain” title has already been agreed with the Electoral Commission so the problems found in running unity candidates in the European elections shouldn’t trouble us next time.
My understanding is that the easy decisions are close to being taken. There’s agreement that sitting MPs should be given a free run, and on the names of candidates for obvious target seats.
The Greens were far ahead of the Liberal Democrats in the Isle of Wight in the 2017 election, for example, and will provide the sole remain candidate in the constituency next time.
A second tranche of 30 or so constituencies will be settled on 22 August. As the parties move down the list of target seats, the task becomes harder. In each constituency they are asking activists to step aside for a rival, a hard concession for many to make.There's a lot to digest here.
For now - and remembering the Liberal/SDP years - I can say with some authority that it is not enough to form an alliance: you need something exciting to say too.
3 comments:
What is that 'something exciting to say' going to be?
Standing down in Ceredigion is going to be a bitter pill, we only recently lost it to PC and are currently a very close second!
Cohen suggests thee will not be a single Remain candidate there for the reason you give and because there is little prospect of the Conservatives winning,
Besides, the consensus seems to be that Cohen has jumped the gun and the details are by no means certain to be as he gives them.
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