The Lib Dems have their eyes on lots of Labour seats in the South East and they did very well removing Labour from the South West in 2005.
To be honest though, while I’ve no reason not to trust the figures, it just doesn’t seem believable. Previous elections have never shown differential swings of this degree, we simply don’t get swings of 5% in one type of seat and 14% in another.
That bit is entirely wrong, the 1997 General Election showed that. In North West London, seats had swings to Labour of almost 20% because of the Edgware hospital fiasco.
2005 saw all kinds of strange results in part because Blair while hated was not exactly Count Dracula. Blair v Portaloo or even Hague in 2005 would have produced a very different result to Blair v Dracula.
I would expect similar such swings against incumbents because of the expenses scandal. True blue and deep red seats that may switch despite the national trend.
Complicating the London results are the elections in all 32 boroughs, which means in 2010 the Lib Dems are the Party to watch in terms of whether Cameron can pull off a majority and may just make the beating Brown is likely to get appear much much worse.
I can see some surprises. I think they will pick up the merged Brent South and East seat, Brent Central, despite ward make up showing otherwise. Their organisation is simply better and they went on from the 2005 General Election to further decimate the Tories and Labour to go from being a rump party to a near majority party on the Council. I would not be surprised if both Brent North and Brent central fall to the Liberal Democrats. Both Labour and Conservative HQs are to blame for the organisational mess in Brent. Neither are prepared to intervene in internal battles that have spread to many a neigbouring Constituency.
No one back in 1992 would have expected the Liberal Democrats to have picked up Hornsey and Wood Green and now Lynne Featherstone looks to be firmly in situ.
Islington is another battle that could be helped by the Council Elections. Emily Thornberry looks to be on very weak ground in an area that historically no one would have expected the Liberal Democrats to have got anyway near.
The possible outcomes in Barking just terrify me.
Some of the Liverpool and Birmingham seats hold promise for the Lib Dems not reflected in the wider polls and although there are no other elections in Scotland, it is likely to be a huge mess for them there.
None of this is enough to turn the Liberal Democrats in to the second Party, but even if they maintain 19% and continue to pick up seats based on local issues they will again on already good results in 2005. If they maintain the 25% they have been polling on the ground in actual elections Labour is in for a tougher time than the talking heads are projecting.