Snap General Election called
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Re: Snap General Election called
I really thought I had seen it all, but promoting a "debate" over this is absolutely incredible to me. Why do you want to fuck your sister when, from the look of you, she forced your head down the toilet every day?
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Re: Snap General Election called
Looks like Starmer will be powering on to the right in order to continue his successful leadership of the country.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... 0-shake-up
The Tony Blair institute will have even more influence over government policy in future. Splendid news, onwards and upwards.However, the moves have led to the departures of Carys Roberts and Muneera Lula, whom allies describe as two of the more leftwing members of the policy unit. Though both were offered jobs in the overhauled unit, friends say they felt their expertise would not be as highly valued after the changes.
Recent appointments to that unit include Axel Heitmueller, a former senior associate at the Tony Blair Institute, while Harvey Redgrave, another TBI alumnus, has been put in day-to-day charge of the team. Toby Lloyd, a former adviser to Theresa May, is understood to be joining to advise on housing and infrastructure policy.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... 0-shake-up
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Re: Snap General Election called
Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Fri Oct 10, 2025 12:23 pm Looks like Starmer will be powering on to the right in order to continue his successful leadership of the country.
The Tony Blair institute will have even more influence over government policy in future. Splendid news, onwards and upwards.However, the moves have led to the departures of Carys Roberts and Muneera Lula, whom allies describe as two of the more leftwing members of the policy unit. Though both were offered jobs in the overhauled unit, friends say they felt their expertise would not be as highly valued after the changes.
Recent appointments to that unit include Axel Heitmueller, a former senior associate at the Tony Blair Institute, while Harvey Redgrave, another TBI alumnus, has been put in day-to-day charge of the team. Toby Lloyd, a former adviser to Theresa May, is understood to be joining to advise on housing and infrastructure policy.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... 0-shake-up
"Progressive ideals" to this government now officially means "not agreeing with Farage on some issues". Cool cool cool, good to hear that actually said out loud.Allies of the prime minister say he has not abandoned his progressive ideals, pointing to his recent conference speech, during which he forcefully rebutted the arguments of Nigel Farage and Reform UK.
Puja
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Re: Snap General Election called
The Tories are Reform, Labour are the Tories, the Greens and Corbyn's Socialist Utopia are Labour.Puja wrote: ↑Fri Oct 10, 2025 12:27 pmSon of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Fri Oct 10, 2025 12:23 pm Looks like Starmer will be powering on to the right in order to continue his successful leadership of the country.
The Tony Blair institute will have even more influence over government policy in future. Splendid news, onwards and upwards.However, the moves have led to the departures of Carys Roberts and Muneera Lula, whom allies describe as two of the more leftwing members of the policy unit. Though both were offered jobs in the overhauled unit, friends say they felt their expertise would not be as highly valued after the changes.
Recent appointments to that unit include Axel Heitmueller, a former senior associate at the Tony Blair Institute, while Harvey Redgrave, another TBI alumnus, has been put in day-to-day charge of the team. Toby Lloyd, a former adviser to Theresa May, is understood to be joining to advise on housing and infrastructure policy.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... 0-shake-up"Progressive ideals" to this government now officially means "not agreeing with Farage on some issues". Cool cool cool, good to hear that actually said out loud.Allies of the prime minister say he has not abandoned his progressive ideals, pointing to his recent conference speech, during which he forcefully rebutted the arguments of Nigel Farage and Reform UK.
Puja
LibDems are still LibDems, just to the left of the Tories (ie Labour).
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Re: Snap General Election called
If the Green Party are the new Labour, then it’s early 1980s vintage.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Meanwhile, the latest opinion polls have the Greens at 15%, with Labour at 17%
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Re: Snap General Election called
There was a time before Thatcher, you know. Now everyone except the Greens and Corbyn/Sultana are thatcherites but didn't use to be that way.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 12:04 pm If the Green Party are the new Labour, then it’s early 1980s vintage.
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Re: Snap General Election called
This graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Protest bounce. Over three years to the next election. Plenty of time for people to consider what they feel is important.
You should be more worried that the apparent popularity for the Greens new approach on the left fuels support for Farage from voters who feel their choice is a binary one.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Really? Wow, never realised this country existed before the 1970s!!!Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:24 pmThere was a time before Thatcher, you know. Now everyone except the Greens and Corbyn/Sultana are thatcherites but didn't use to be that way.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 12:04 pm If the Green Party are the new Labour, then it’s early 1980s vintage.
But seriously, the Green sound like Corbyn, or indeed Foot, and that will play well with the disenfranchised and perpetual student union political types. It will scare the shit out of many voters in the general election.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Badenoch has had a decent week or two. She’s safe until May. Her economic announcements forces Farage to tow back from unfunded promises and the Conservatives are trusted more on the economy than Reform. The likely alternative is Jenrick. Might as well merge with reform in that case and accept their fate.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:35 pmThis graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
The push to replace Starmer has been relentless and the bloke isn’t a talented politician. But do we really want to remove a PM so soon? Sends a great message that Britain is ungovernable. And Labour can kiss goodbye to being a major power at the next election.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Well, you sounded like you had forgotten that even the Tories built social housing and ran nationalised industries before Thatcher.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:15 amReally? Wow, never realised this country existed before the 1970s!!!Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:24 pmThere was a time before Thatcher, you know. Now everyone except the Greens and Corbyn/Sultana are thatcherites but didn't use to be that way.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 12:04 pm If the Green Party are the new Labour, then it’s early 1980s vintage.
But seriously, the Green sound like Corbyn, or indeed Foot, and that will play well with the disenfranchised and perpetual student union political types. It will scare the shit out of many voters in the general election.
If it plays well with the disenfranchised then it should get a lot of votes in today's Britain. Reform scare the shit out of many voters too but that doesn't seem to disqualify them from government, god help us.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Brave words.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:18 amBadenoch has had a decent week or two. She’s safe until May. Her economic announcements forces Farage to tow back from unfunded promises and the Conservatives are trusted more on the economy than Reform. The likely alternative is Jenrick. Might as well merge with reform in that case and accept their fate.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:35 pmThis graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
The push to replace Starmer has been relentless and the bloke isn’t a talented politician. But do we really want to remove a PM so soon? Sends a great message that Britain is ungovernable. And Labour can kiss goodbye to being a major power at the next election.
Re Starmer: yes, 15 months is time enough to show if he has any skills, and sorry, all he knows is steering right (often far right) and losing popularity.
Getting rid of him now (well, it will be more like 2 years because he's bound to survive till May-June) would send all sorts of messages eg we want a competent PM, Labour wants a leader who can win votes, continuing to run the country in the same way as the Tories despite promising change might have been a bad idea.
If Labour continue as they are they can kiss goodbye to being a major power at the next general election.
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Re: Snap General Election called
I think you might be overestimating just how terrifying the British electorate finds ideas like, "Nationalise water companies," "tax billionaires and massive corporations", and "fund public services properly". Regardless on whether you agree with the efficacy of them in practice, those are some pretty populist campaign promises - I'm not worried about voters being driven into the arms of the fascists by "let's give money to the NHS".Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:13 amProtest bounce. Over three years to the next election. Plenty of time for people to consider what they feel is important.
You should be more worried that the apparent popularity for the Greens new approach on the left fuels support for Farage from voters who feel their choice is a binary one.
I'd actually say three years to the next election makes thst poll more likely to occur in practice. You are correct that, right now, it's a protest bounce and, were there an election tomorrow, a lot of those polling Green would hold their nose and vote Labour. However, Polanski now has that most valuable of commodities in modern politics - attention. At the last election, the Greens couldn't buy a spot on Question Time, while Farage et al got on every other week - the Greens might've won 4 MPs, but that was by concerted local effort (and Starmer doing his absolute best to drive the left away, while also being on course for a landslide so people felt safe voting elsewhere), rather than because the populace at large knew or cared who they were.
If Polanski can keep this spurt of attention up and become a regularly talked about and quoted public figure, like Farage did, then he could very easily convert 'attention' into 'credibility as a genuine option for your vote'. If he can do that, then all bets are off.
Won't happen quickly, but it might have by 3 years' time.
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Re: Snap General Election called
More people voted for Corbyn than voted for Starmer. More people voted for Corbyn than voted for Cameron or even for Blair twice.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:15 amReally? Wow, never realised this country existed before the 1970s!!!Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:24 pmThere was a time before Thatcher, you know. Now everyone except the Greens and Corbyn/Sultana are thatcherites but didn't use to be that way.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 12:04 pm If the Green Party are the new Labour, then it’s early 1980s vintage.
But seriously, the Green sound like Corbyn, or indeed Foot, and that will play well with the disenfranchised and perpetual student union political types. It will scare the shit out of many voters in the general election.
Corbyn's policies were not a problem in and of themselves. Corbyn the man was. Polanski is a bit different from Jeremy. He's a lot brighter, for one.
"Left wing" policies. Or as I like to call them, normal policies, consistently poll extremely well in isolation. The problem is that the right wing Thatcherist press consistently drive the conversation by basing it on "fiscal responsibility" and "social issues". Fiscal responsibility has led to the crisis young people find themselves in today.
The world, not just the UK, needs a massive break from neo-capitalism. It needs a wealth tax. It needs to take back services and assets into governmental control, so that the country actually has wealth to use, because otherwise it will just end up bankrupt, no matter what. Because, get this...a country is not a home. You cannot run its economy like you would the home of a petite boulanger.
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Re: Snap General Election called
A radical lefty will scare voters more than Farage. As per a previous post, Corbyn has come the closest at any point n the history of the Labour left. Despite being up against a terrible PM and campaigner who shot herself in the foot and all his Momentum, he failed. And that’s with the legion of Labour safe seats, resources and local resources.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:45 amWell, you sounded like you had forgotten that even the Tories built social housing and ran nationalised industries before Thatcher.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:15 amReally? Wow, never realised this country existed before the 1970s!!!Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:24 pm
There was a time before Thatcher, you know. Now everyone except the Greens and Corbyn/Sultana are thatcherites but didn't use to be that way.
But seriously, the Green sound like Corbyn, or indeed Foot, and that will play well with the disenfranchised and perpetual student union political types. It will scare the shit out of many voters in the general election.
If it plays well with the disenfranchised then it should get a lot of votes in today's Britain. Reform scare the shit out of many voters too but that doesn't seem to disqualify them from government, god help us.
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Re: Snap General Election called
The Greens have debated leaving NATO. All other parties will highlight they are dangerous in the current environment. I agree that Corbyn isn’t that bright but the Greens are focusing on a narrow constituency.Puja wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 9:14 amI think you might be overestimating just how terrifying the British electorate finds ideas like, "Nationalise water companies," "tax billionaires and massive corporations", and "fund public services properly". Regardless on whether you agree with the efficacy of them in practice, those are some pretty populist campaign promises - I'm not worried about voters being driven into the arms of the fascists by "let's give money to the NHS".Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:13 amProtest bounce. Over three years to the next election. Plenty of time for people to consider what they feel is important.
You should be more worried that the apparent popularity for the Greens new approach on the left fuels support for Farage from voters who feel their choice is a binary one.
I'd actually say three years to the next election makes thst poll more likely to occur in practice. You are correct that, right now, it's a protest bounce and, were there an election tomorrow, a lot of those polling Green would hold their nose and vote Labour. However, Polanski now has that most valuable of commodities in modern politics - attention. At the last election, the Greens couldn't buy a spot on Question Time, while Farage et al got on every other week - the Greens might've won 4 MPs, but that was by concerted local effort (and Starmer doing his absolute best to drive the left away, while also being on course for a landslide so people felt safe voting elsewhere), rather than because the populace at large knew or cared who they were.
If Polanski can keep this spurt of attention up and become a regularly talked about and quoted public figure, like Farage did, then he could very easily convert 'attention' into 'credibility as a genuine option for your vote'. If he can do that, then all bets are off.
Won't happen quickly, but it might have by 3 years' time.
Puja
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Re: Snap General Election called
Most of that is your opinion, which I disagree with (see earlier posts).Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 6:51 pmA radical lefty will scare voters more than Farage. As per a previous post, Corbyn has come the closest at any point n the history of the Labour left. Despite being up against a terrible PM and campaigner who shot herself in the foot and all his Momentum, he failed. And that’s with the legion of Labour safe seats, resources and local resources.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:45 amWell, you sounded like you had forgotten that even the Tories built social housing and ran nationalised industries before Thatcher.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 8:15 am
Really? Wow, never realised this country existed before the 1970s!!!
But seriously, the Green sound like Corbyn, or indeed Foot, and that will play well with the disenfranchised and perpetual student union political types. It will scare the shit out of many voters in the general election.
If it plays well with the disenfranchised then it should get a lot of votes in today's Britain. Reform scare the shit out of many voters too but that doesn't seem to disqualify them from government, god help us.
As for this, it's only true if history starts in 1979 or if you pretend that prior to that Labour wasn't 'left'.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Not sure if you saw this first time around.Puja wrote: ↑Sun Oct 05, 2025 6:28 pmSurely student union politics would be something like looking at a headline and forming an opinion on a subject without actually understanding any of the detail, because the headline and initial impression matches your pre-existing bias.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sun Oct 05, 2025 9:09 am The Greens appear to be backing the idea of leaving Nato. Student union politics.
Polanski is in favour of leaving NATO, yes, on the basis that the US aren't a reliable partner and haven't been for a long time, so having our entire defence plan be based around an alliance that relies on them is foolishness. If you listen to what he actually says, it's not "let's leave NATO tomorrow; I'm sure it'll be fine, wheeee!" but instead "Let's form alternate regional defensive alliances and pacts to replace NATO, because it is getting steadily less fit for purpose."
But it is probably easier to just not think and assume he's an imbecile because you've already made up your mind that Greens are "student union politics".
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Re: Snap General Election called
Not quite sure where else to put this:
On the case of London's murders
The city's knife crime and murder rates are plunging
One of the most potent myths in British public life is that crime is spiralling out of control. Knife attacks, gangs, TikTok brawls: the imagery is vivid, the anecdotes endless. I’ve written before about how NHS data on patients treated for violent crime and knife attacks shows a multi-year low for the UK. But there is a monthly dataset that tells an extraordinary story: London murders. As the below chart shows, they now stand at the lowest since monthly data started being published in 2003. But if you look at how much higher it was back then suggests something extraordinary: London may now be experiencing the lowest number of murders in at least thirty, perhaps forty years. Perhaps longer. But how to prove it?
...
ARTICLE CONTINUES
On the case of London's murders
The city's knife crime and murder rates are plunging
One of the most potent myths in British public life is that crime is spiralling out of control. Knife attacks, gangs, TikTok brawls: the imagery is vivid, the anecdotes endless. I’ve written before about how NHS data on patients treated for violent crime and knife attacks shows a multi-year low for the UK. But there is a monthly dataset that tells an extraordinary story: London murders. As the below chart shows, they now stand at the lowest since monthly data started being published in 2003. But if you look at how much higher it was back then suggests something extraordinary: London may now be experiencing the lowest number of murders in at least thirty, perhaps forty years. Perhaps longer. But how to prove it?
...
ARTICLE CONTINUES
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Re: Snap General Election called
And today there has been a poll showing Labour dropping below the Tories! Reform 32%, Conservatives 17%, Labour 15%, Greens 15%, Lib Dems 12%Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:35 pmThis graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
It is only one poll and likely an outlier, but it is, frankly, incredible. Starmer might've lasted longer than the lettuce and not been anywhere near as disastrous for the economy, but his collapse of public support is surely unequalled in British political history.
Mind, given the way our political system works, his majority still gives him nigh unchecked power to do as he likes for the next 3 years. I wonder if he might soften his stance on electoral reform (small r) if the polls are still showing the same in a year's time - he's been resisting the very firmly expressed will of the party membership for that to be official policy, solely because the current system suits him very well, but I wonder if that might change if we're staring down the barrel of a Reform landslide under FPtP when PR could see a Lib/Lab/Green (poss Lib/Lab/Green/SNP) coalition.
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Re: Snap General Election called
The way things stand PR wouldn't save Starmer anyway - the Tories would prop Farage up with a combined 49%, no doubt the DUP would help if required. And his paymasters wouldn't want it - PR makes it more expensive to bribe the government - FPTP means they just pay whoever's been gifted the majority by the system.Puja wrote: ↑Thu Oct 16, 2025 1:32 pmAnd today there has been a poll showing Labour dropping below the Tories! Reform 32%, Conservatives 17%, Labour 15%, Greens 15%, Lib Dems 12%Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:35 pmThis graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
It is only one poll and likely an outlier, but it is, frankly, incredible. Starmer might've lasted longer than the lettuce and not been anywhere near as disastrous for the economy, but his collapse of public support is surely unequalled in British political history.
Mind, given the way our political system works, his majority still gives him nigh unchecked power to do as he likes for the next 3 years. I wonder if he might soften his stance on electoral reform (small r) if the polls are still showing the same in a year's time - he's been resisting the very firmly expressed will of the party membership for that to be official policy, solely because the current system suits him very well, but I wonder if that might change if we're staring down the barrel of a Reform landslide under FPtP when PR could see a Lib/Lab/Green (poss Lib/Lab/Green/SNP) coalition.
Puja
It is staggering how Starmer drained the country of hope and enthusiasm from the moment he won the election. The graph in that Wikipedia page is incredible . . . and still he is utterly incapable of changing things. Eventually he will hit some kind of rock bottom, core, die-hard Labour voters, maybe that is 15%, maybe lower? Who knows when you piss everyone off and simp after the far right? It's like, Christ we'd better keep the bond markets happy , sprinkle a little xenophobia on top and fuck everyone else.
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Re: Snap General Election called
Yeah, but that poll isn't the be-all and end-all with the election 3 years away. Odd as it may sound, a fair chunk of the Reform voters are in play for Polanski - the 18% swing from Labour to Reform isn't because those people love fascism, but because they lent Starmer their votes on his electoral slogan of "CHANGE" and have been outraged by the fact that nothing has. Farage is preaching, "Come with me and I'll teach them a lesson - I'll really change things," and the politically homeless are willing to listen cause they're angry. They might not like everything he does, but they know they don't like the status quo.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Fri Oct 17, 2025 9:38 amThe way things stand PR wouldn't save Starmer anyway - the Tories would prop Farage up with a combined 49%, no doubt the DUP would help if required. And his paymasters wouldn't want it - PR makes it more expensive to bribe the government - FPTP means they just pay whoever's been gifted the majority by the system.Puja wrote: ↑Thu Oct 16, 2025 1:32 pmAnd today there has been a poll showing Labour dropping below the Tories! Reform 32%, Conservatives 17%, Labour 15%, Greens 15%, Lib Dems 12%Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Oct 11, 2025 9:35 pm
This graph says Starmer and Badenoch have to go.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_p ... l_election
Farage's FPTP dream: he's in the thirties all the others are in the teens.
It is only one poll and likely an outlier, but it is, frankly, incredible. Starmer might've lasted longer than the lettuce and not been anywhere near as disastrous for the economy, but his collapse of public support is surely unequalled in British political history.
Mind, given the way our political system works, his majority still gives him nigh unchecked power to do as he likes for the next 3 years. I wonder if he might soften his stance on electoral reform (small r) if the polls are still showing the same in a year's time - he's been resisting the very firmly expressed will of the party membership for that to be official policy, solely because the current system suits him very well, but I wonder if that might change if we're staring down the barrel of a Reform landslide under FPtP when PR could see a Lib/Lab/Green (poss Lib/Lab/Green/SNP) coalition.
Puja
It is staggering how Starmer drained the country of hope and enthusiasm from the moment he won the election. The graph in that Wikipedia page is incredible . . . and still he is utterly incapable of changing things. Eventually he will hit some kind of rock bottom, core, die-hard Labour voters, maybe that is 15%, maybe lower? Who knows when you piss everyone off and simp after the far right? It's like, Christ we'd better keep the bond markets happy , sprinkle a little xenophobia on top and fuck everyone else.
Now, some of those voters will get radicalised the longer they identify as Reform voters and react against the opprobrium of "the elites" telling them that they're wrong, but there'll also be a bunch who'll be interested in Polanski's version of "Come with me and I'll teach them a lesson - I'll really change things." They won't come back to Labour, no matter how hard Starmer simps for them, cause he doesn't understand that they don't actually want the racism and harsh immigration talk that he's been trying to woo them with, they want to feel like they're not getting shat on by the system and Starmer has missed his brief window to portray himself as a disruptor working for them.
The combined Conservative + UKIP/Reform vote has only once been above 36% three times in the last 30 years - 2015 with 49.4% (driven by the collapse of the Lib Dems after people voted for Change and got more of the same), 2017 with 44.1% and 2019 with 45.64% (42.3% and 43.6% for the Tories, both driven by personal animosity drummed up aganst Corbyn). You have to got back to 1959 to find an election where the right wing earns a majority of the votes and, in the same time period, 2015 is the only time where Labour + Liberals + SDP did not get a majority of the votes. The UK electorate is not inherently or naturally right-wing, but our ever more outdated electoral system, combined with the left rarely cooperating, has led to Conservative goverments the majority of the time.
I can easily see a future where Greens take 5% from Reform, Tories and Labour take 5% between them from the inevitable Reform scandal that will come, and we're left Reform 22%, Greens 20%, Conservatives 20%, Labour 17%, Lib Dems 12%, SNP 4%, and then you've got a narrow rainbow coalition available in PR.
Puja
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Re: Snap General Election called
Laughably disingenuous Israel-serving bullshit from Nandy:
This is how far Labour's head is up the arse of the far right. They really would have wanted a trail of destruction and violence across Birmingham, probably from London too as some would have arrived at airports there, and the divisive aftereffects on the country? I know why Farage and Yaxley-Lennon want this but Labour??
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/202 ... a-park-ban
So telling the police they're wrong and doing your best to reverse their decision = supporting their independence?It has a real-world impact on a community who already feel excluded and afraid. It is therefore completely legitimate to support the independence of the police to conduct that risk assessment and to question the conclusion that follows when it excludes the people at the heart of that risk.
This is how far Labour's head is up the arse of the far right. They really would have wanted a trail of destruction and violence across Birmingham, probably from London too as some would have arrived at airports there, and the divisive aftereffects on the country? I know why Farage and Yaxley-Lennon want this but Labour??
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/202 ... a-park-ban