Those were just some of the predictions for 2013 made by
members of the public in a recent poll on what we expect to see happening in
the year ahead.
But so much for the sport and showbiz; what of the
politics? Well, in last week’s column looking
back at 2012 I suggested that the next 12 months may well see the Con-Lib Coalition
that has governed the country since May 2010 finally splitting asunder.
It seems I am not alone in this view: the prospect of Messrs Cameron and Clegg
going their separate ways was also mentioned in the aforesaid poll, along with
a rise in interest rates, a strike by NHS workers and the prosecution of a
major bank for fraud.
So what’s causing the present bout of Coalition-busting speculation? Well, anyone who heard Nick Clegg’s speech at
the Royal Commonwealth Society shortly before Christmas will not be surprised
that talk of divorce is in the air.
The speech was less about Lib Dem achievements in government
as about what Mr Clegg’s party had prevented the Tories from doing.
It was all a far cry from the government’s early days when
the Lib Dem leader had been determined that his party should jointly ‘own’ all
of the Coalition’s policies - not just those which it had specifically
advocated.
But that strategy was only destined to work so long as the
Coalition was popular. Once it started
to be unpopular – as has happened in 2012 – it was inevitable that Mr Clegg
would begin to embark on a strategy of differentiation.
It has been my view from the outset that the Lib Dems would somehow
have to find a way of getting out of the Coalition alive in order to stand any
chance of maintaining a significant parliamentary presence at the next election,
and I expect this process to be accelerated in the coming year.
The internal politics of the two parties will play a big
part. If Mr Clegg does not, by the time
of his party’s annual conference, set out some kind of exit strategy, he will
almost certainly face a leadership challenge before the election.
At the same time, those Tory backbench voices which loathe
the Lib Dems and all their works will grow louder, as they seek to press David
Cameron into the more orthodox Conservative position that they believe –
mistakenly in my view – will secure them an outright majority next time round.
I would expect the upshot to be that the Lib Dems will leave
the government within the next 12-15 months, with the Tories moving to a
“confidence and supply” arrangement for the remainder of the five-year
Parliament.
But while the Coalition may struggle to maintain the
semblance of unity, Labour leader Ed Miliband will also struggle to present
himself as the Prime Minister-in-waiting that Mr Cameron and Tony Blair so
obviously were in their opposition days.
Mr Miliband has had his successes, but the full rashness of
Labour’s decision to choose him over his brother David will become clear over
the next 12 months.
Overtures will be made to the South Shields MP to return the
frontline as Shadow Chancellor in place of Ed Balls, whose closeness to Gordon
Brown and the errors of the New Labour years will ultimately prove a fatal
barrier to the party’s attempts to regain economic credibility.
But a likelier outcome is a comeback for the respected former
Chancellor, Alistair Darling, who has successfully managed to distance himself
from Mr Brown’s mistakes.
Mr Balls may not be the only major economic player to be
shown the door in 2013. If the economy
continues to stagnate, Mr Cameron may also be forced to find a new role for George
Osborne as the election draws nearer.
And with Mr Osborne out of the Tory succession picture, attempts
will be made to build up Education Secretary Michael Gove as the alternative
contender from within the Cabinet to counter the continuing threat of Boris
Johnson.
Unlike poor old Mr Mancini, I don’t expect we will see any
of the three main party leaders actually losing their jobs in 2013.
What we will see, though, is each of them having to take
fairly drastic action in order to save them.