Neil Kinnock has said he is âconvincedâ that Labour will win the next election, although the former party leader said the race could not be compared to 1992 or 1997.
Kinnock has previously blamed a moment of apparent complacency ahead of the 1992 general election, when he was Labour leader, for costing the party victory over John Majorâs Conservatives, who won an unexpected 21-seat majority.
Taking to the stage at a huge rally in Sheffield a week before the election, Kinnock appeared to respond to the crowd by shouting: âWeâre all right!â three times â although he subsequently said the yell had actually been: âWell, all right!â, to acknowledge the applause.
Asked whether the next election was shaping up to be more like 1992 or 1997, Kinnock told Skyâs Sunday with Trevor Philips programme it would be âneither 92 or 97, or 45 or 83 â itâs going to be 24, because every single election is different.â
He went on: âEven when we had two elections in one year in 1974, between 28 February and the October election, there were two different elections and the same factors were at play, but the way in which it evolved, the way in which it turned out, was different.
âSo I donât think people can examine the archaeology of 97 and 92, and 87 and whatever else. But then there are parallels.â
Asked if he was confident about Labourâs chances, Kinnock replied: âIâm convinced now that weâre not going to lose.â
Pressed on this, he said: âI will go no further than that.â He cited the way the first past the post electoral system could expand small differences in vote shares into very different numbers of MPs, saying that the difference between a Conservative and Labour majority was 1,240 votes, which was the total of the 11 smallest Tory majorities.
âIn a first past the post system youâre going to get the narrowest of shifts â bus loads of people, car loads of people determining whoâs going to be the member of parliament,â he said.
âSo I a long time ago gave up trying to guess by how much anybody could win or lose.â
However caveated his views, Kinnockâs confidence in a Labour win is likely to prompt some unease among Keir Starmerâs team because of wider worries within the party about possible complacency.
This concern has heightened after Labour easily won byelections last week in two previously safe Conservative seats, Wellingborough and Kingswood, with the former seeing the largest drop in vote share by the Tories in a byelection since 1945.