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17 December 2010

Cameron hints that he wants a Lib Dem by-election victory

Ahead of the Oldham East by-election, Cameron says of the Lib Dems: “I wish them well.”

By George Eaton

The Conservatives have long feared that David Cameron is secretely hoping for a Lib Dem victory in the forthcoming Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election. But the Prime Minister’s comments at a Brussels press conference this afternoon mean that desire is no longer so secret.

He said:

Obviously, in a coalition, you always wish your partners well. I think the coalition has worked extremely well. All I would say is, the context of the by-election is the MP elected at the election has been found in court to have told complete untruths about his opponent.

I think that is an extremely important context. In that context, we wish our partners well. They had an extremely tough time. All the unfairnesses and untruths about their candidate – he’s now been exhonerated. So of course I wish them well.

We’ll be patrolling the same streets and fighting for the same votes. But I hope that will be done in a slightly more friendly manner than it has in the past.

Cameron’s words imply that the Lib Dems have a stronger moral claim to the seat, and his insistence at the end that the parties will be “fighting for the same votes” feels rather tokenistic.

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As I’ve said before, it’s not hard to imagine why Cameron wants the Lib Dems to win. A yellow victory would reassure the Lib Dem left (the coalition’s weakest link) and strengthen government unity. Conversely, a heavy Lib Dem defeat would alarm the party’s increasingly rebellious backbenchers and put the Prime Minister under pressure to make greater concessions.

But more significantly, Cameron’s statement that “in a coalition, you always wish your partners well” is the clearest indication yet that he’s considering an electoral pact with the Lib Dems.

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