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General Election 2015: Scottish Tory voters tactically voting for Labour to stop SNP

Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy may be saved from losing his East Renfrewshire seat as a direct result

Chris Green
Friday 01 May 2015 17:46 BST
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Jim Murphy (left) may save his seat for Labour due to Tory fears over the SNP, led by Nicola Sturgeon (right)
Jim Murphy (left) may save his seat for Labour due to Tory fears over the SNP, led by Nicola Sturgeon (right) (Getty Images)

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Conservative voters in Scotland are switching their allegiances to Labour in a tactical move to stop the SNP, according to fresh polling.

Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy may be saved from losing his East Renfrewshire seat as a direct result of Tories voting tactically against the SNP, a survey by Conservative peer Lord Ashcroft suggested.

A poll last month found that Mr Murphy was set to win only 31 per cent of the vote, with the SNP on 40 per cent and the Tories on 25 per cent. But a similar survey carried out this week put him on 36 per cent – within touching distance of the SNP – helped by 5 per cent of Tory voters switching sides.


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However, a similar poll in Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale & Tweeddale – the only Tory-held constituency in Scotland – found that Labour voters are apparently unwilling to return the favour by voting for Conservative incumbent David Mundell. He is now trailing the SNP by 11 percentage points.

Anecdotal evidence has suggested that voters in Scotland’s more conservative areas are intending to vote for the candidate best placed to stop the SNP regardless of their own beliefs – but this is the first concrete example of the tactic in action.

SNP general election campaign director Angus Robertson pointed out that his party was still ahead of Mr Murphy. “These are very welcome polls,” he said. “We take absolutely nothing for granted, because polls do not win seats – only hard work does.”

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