General Election 2015: The 60 seats that could decide the outcome

Sharp rises and falls in the popularity of the smaller parties mean that there are many other battles that could play an important role in shaping the outcome

John Curtice
Friday 27 March 2015 19:58 GMT
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In this election it is less straightforward to identify the constituencies that were likely to determine the outcome of a general election
In this election it is less straightforward to identify the constituencies that were likely to determine the outcome of a general election

Traditionally, it has been relatively straightforward to identify the constituencies that were likely to determine the outcome of a general election. Everything more or less turned on a collection of marginal seats that were closely fought by Conservative and Labour. Whoever won the bulk of those seats could expect to form the next government, irrespective of what happened elsewhere.

True, there were also a few key contests involving the Liberal Democrats where the outcome could make a difference at the margin to the overall balance of power at Westminster, but this was but a sideshow.

This election is very different. Not that the key Conservative-Labour marginals have disappeared. They are still to be found, especially so in outer London, in places like Brentford and Croydon; in many a town in southern England, such as Bedford and Gloucester; across the West Midlands including in Warwick and Wolverhampton; and in the more suburban and commuting areas of the North-west and Yorkshire, such as Bury and Dewsbury.

However, even if Labour were to win all of the 70 most vulnerable Tory-held seats (and Labour needs to gain 70 seats to win a majority on 7 May) there is still no guarantee that the party would secure the 326 seats it needs for victory. Conversely, the Conservatives could conceivably win an overall majority without capturing a single Labour-held seat.

Sharp rises and falls in the popularity of the Lib Dems, the SNP, Ukip and even perhaps the Greens mean that there are many other battles that could play an important role in shaping the outcome.

The polls in Scotland suggest the Scottish National Party is on course to make sweeping gains. As a result, what have hitherto looked like very safe Labour seats, including Douglas Alexander’s Paisley and Renfrew South, where Labour was more than 40 percentage points ahead in 2010, now have to be regarded as marginal. Indeed, there is hardly a seat in Scotland that Labour can be 100 per cent sure of winning.

If Labour were to lose 20 or 30 of its Scottish seats, it could still be well short of a majority even with a barrow load of Tory marginals south of the border.

Meanwhile, the Lib Dems are apparently at risk of registering their worst performance since 1970. Although the party hopes that many of its incumbent MPs will stem the outgoing tide in their own seats, many a hitherto safe Lib Dem seat now has to be regarded as marginal.

As the party that lies second in most Lib Dem seats, the Conservatives would appear best placed to profit.

If the election does produce the finely balanced outcome currently anticipated by the polls, just how many seats the smaller parties win could also make a difference to who occupies Downing Street. Their rise has also created some new three-way marginals.

Apart from Clacton and Thanet South (where Nigel Farage is standing), Ukip’s best chances lie primarily down the east coast of England. Two of its targets, Great Yarmouth and Thurrock, now look like three-way contests.

Similarly, apart from trying to defend Caroline Lucas’s Brighton Pavilion seat against Labour, the Greens’ hopes rest on two seats held by the Lib Dems – Norwich South and Bristol West – in both of which Labour also has hopes.

Northern Ireland cannot be ignored either. The DUP and the UUP have agreed a unionist electoral pact in four seats. Top of their list is Fermanagh & South Tyrone, where in 2010 Sinn Fein scraped home by just four votes. Now that’s a marginal!

First up, the Con/Lab marginals…

Labour likely to be the largest party if it wins all of:

ASSUMING NO LOSSES

1 Warwickshire North (most marginal Con/Lab seat)

2 Hendon

3 Wolverhampton South West

4 Dewsbury

5 Bedford

6 Brighton Kemptown

7 Brentford & Isleworth

8 Enfield North

9 Watford (three-way marginal)

Labour likely to have an overall majority if it wins all of:

ASSUMING NO LOSSES

10 Halesowen & Rowley Regis

11 Gloucester

12 Bury North

13 Croydon Central

14 Keighley

15 Warwick & Leamington (7.2% Con lead is closest to the 7.3% lead Con won nationally in 2010)

16 Stevenage

17 Elmet & Rothwell

18 Dumfries, Clyde & Tweeddale (only Conservative seat in Scotland)

19 Dudley South

20 South Ribble

21 Stafford

22 Colne Valley (three-way marginal)

Conservatives likely to have an overall majority if they win all of:

ASSUMING NO LOSSES

23 Hampstead & Kilburn (most marginal Lab/Con seat)

24 Plymouth Moor View

25 Walsall South

...but don’t forget the Ukip targets…

26 Thurrock (also Con/Lab marginal)

27 Great Yarmouth (also a Con/Lab marginal)

28 Basildon South & East Thurrock

29 Thanet South

30 Rochester & Strood

31 Clacton

32 Boston & Skegness

33 Great Grimsby (Labour held)

...and then there’s Scotland…

34 Dundee East (Most marginal SNP/Lab seat)

35 Ochil & South Perthshire (Most marginal Lab/SNP seat)

36 Edinburgh East (Lab lead and Lab/SNP close to 2010 Scotland result)

37 Glasgow South (Lab on course to lose about half of its seats)

38 Paisley & Renfrew South (Lab could be left with just six seats)

39 Kirkcaldy & Cowdenbeath (Utter disaster if lost)

…and the Lib Dems’ targets to consider…

40 Camborne & Redruth (Most marginal Con/LD contest)

41 Sheffield Central (Most marginal Lab/LD contest)

…and the seats the Lib Dems could lose to the Conservatives…

42 Solihull (Most marginal Con/LD seat)

43 Eastleigh

44 Brecon & Radnor (Could get Tories to 326 even without any gains from Lab)

45 Cambridge

46 Colchester

47 Lewes

…and to Labour…

48 Burnley

49 Cardiff Central

50 Bermondsey

…and to the SNP

51 Caithness, Sutherland & Easter Ross

52 Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch & Strathspey

53 Gordon

…while Plaid Cymru will be targeting…

54 Ynys Mon (Most marginal Lab/PC contest)

55 Arfon (Most marginal PC/Lab seat)

…and the Greens have their eyes on defending…

56 Brighton Pavilion (Only current seat)

…and taking…

57 Norwich South (Also most marginal LD/Lab seat)

58 Bristol West (Also a marginal LD/Lab seat)

…not to mention…

59 Bradford West (George Galloway, Respect MP)

60 Fermanagh & South Tyrone (Smallest majority of any seat in 2010; Unionist pact to try to unseat Sinn Fein)

John Curtice is professor of politics at Strathclyde University

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