So the Richmond Park by-election - in which I voted - results are currently being counted. For those unaware of what's going on, the Conservative MP, Zac Goldsmith (who unsuccessfully ran for London Mayor a few months back, with his main platform being that Sadiq Khan, who won, probably loves terrorism because, you know, Muslim), stood down from the seat (where he enjoyed an enormous 23,000 majority) because he had made a promise years ago to do so if his party backed the expansion of Heathrow airport (which is nearby).
A promise which, by the way, he admitted he regretted making while he was campaigning for Mayor. Once he quit, he immediately announced he would run for the vacant seat as an independent. The Conservatives decided to field no official candidate and basically openly backed Goldsmith, so he was running again as the Tory candidate in all but name. He was also endorsed by UKIP, who also haven't fielded a candidate. On the other side, the Greens decided not to stand and endorsed the Liberal Democrat candidate.
Why was he endorsed by UKIP? Why was the Lib Dem candidate endorsed by the Green Party? Well, this is where Brexit comes in. Goldsmith is a prominent pro-Brexit supporter. The catch is, his constituency is most definitely not (Richmond voted 70% remain). So the question became, would this by-election reflect local concerns about Heathrow, or local concerns about Brexit and Goldsmith's stance on it?
The Lib Dems have been campaigning with all their might in Richmond (this used to be a Lib Dem seat until 2010), urging residents to elect someone who will be fully representative of their concerns (all the candidates are anti-Heathrow expansion) and, oh yeah, not run hate-filled, divisive campaigns.
So there's been a lot of nudging toward tactical voting from the various parties, and yes, I did tactically vote Lib Dem even though I'm a Labour supporter (they have no chance of winning in Richmond). Still, a 23,000 majority is a lot to make up, so the best I hoped for was reducing Goldsmith's margin to the low thousands.
But...it's just been announced, the Lib Dems have won!!! By around 2,000 votes.
For me personally, this wasn't so much about Brexit or Heathrow. Richmond is very atypical, clearly, in terms of the Brexit referendum votes. So the result here does not by any means indicate some massive turnaround in opinion. Instead, for me this was purely about getting rid of at least one Tory MP.
And who knows eh, maybe this is the way to go - stand a single progressive candidate in every Tory-held seat***
***Yes, Labour did have a candidate in Richmond, but they may as well have not bothered.