Do you want to discuss boring politics? (31 Viewers)

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Labour have hardly a greater share of the vote than last time - when they suffered a heavy defeat. Hardly a ringing endorsement of their policies, is it. They will have to play their cards very carefully despite having a huge majority, many of their gains would easily be reversed.
No doubt the seats won vs votes won flatters Labour to deceive. I think the turnout tells a story on its own too though. Down about 7.5%. You also have to consider Reforms performance against previous Ferage fronted parties performances historically. He had a loyal following at the polls long before Reform was a thing.

The way I see it Labour have 5 years to earn this result otherwise I don’t doubt that the next GE will be a different story, probably a hung parliament.
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
Imagine how it would have felt waking up to another 4 or 5 years of Tory rule. Eugh.

But those fuckers have been turfed out. The quarter finals start today with two cracking games.

Happy Feel Good GIF by Bombay Softwares
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
What a ridiculous post.

You can't call everyone that disagrees with your opinion a racist or that they 'didn't know what they were voting for'. It's extremely arrogant sneering.

I'm not cheerleader for anyone either. Is there a single person that doesn't want a left leaning party to win on here? It's an echo chamber rather than a genuine politics thread, and it seems odd to me that a party that were invented 5 minutes ago, of whom many people would have voted for as a protest has caused so many on here to get rattled. Maybe instead of rubbishing it, some of the thoughts of those people can be used to make the country a better place. Ironically, the dismissal of those people was one of the largest factors in the brexit vote.

It's not an echo chamber.
There are more left leaning posters definitely, but there are a fair few right leaning, (yourself, Malc, Mucca, Grendel, Sir Ernie).
And several on the left haven't voted Labour while several on the right haven't voted tory.
Thats not an echo chamber.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
If the Tories want to get back in they either have to make him go away or unite with him. Either way, Starmer only got 35% of the vote in England. I could genuinely see it being a one term government
It isn’t an election for England. Starmer has 33.8% of the UK vote on a 60% turnout. The support of just over 20% of the electorate is hardly a resounding endorsement.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
No doubt the seats won vs votes won flatters Labour to deceive. I think the turnout tells a story on its own too though. Down about 7.5%. You also have to consider Reforms performance against previous Ferage fronted parties performances historically. He had a loyal following at the polls long before Reform was a thing.

The way I see it Labour have 5 years to earn this result otherwise I don’t doubt that the next GE will be a different story, probably a hung parliament.
It's strange but yeah, Labour massive majority yet it's on a knife edge.
 

Evo1883

Well-Known Member
What a ridiculous post.

You can't call everyone that disagrees with your opinion a racist or that they 'didn't know what they were voting for'. It's extremely arrogant sneering.

I'm not cheerleader for anyone either. Is there a single person that doesn't want a left leaning party to win on here? It's an echo chamber rather than a genuine politics thread, and it seems odd to me that a party that were invented 5 minutes ago, of whom many people would have voted for as a protest has caused so many on here to get rattled. Maybe instead of rubbishing it, some of the thoughts of those people can be used to make the country a better place. Ironically, the dismissal of those people was one of the largest factors in the brexit vote.

Why wouldn't people sneer ? Coventry is a Labour city and the wanky right wing have ruled Britain for 14 years .

25% of this forum had the intention of voting right wing parties , as per the election poll

Fuck reform and fuck the tories mate tbh
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
It isn’t an election for England. Starmer has 33.8% of the UK vote on a 60% turnout. The support of just over 20% of the electorate is hardly a resounding endorsement.
Imagine what might have been with some charisma and something more of a vision. The Greens gained ridiculous numbers off Labour in Bristol just by arguing for what Labour should have been in the first place.
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
It really depends on how mad they go. Unifying the parties would be a long shot but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him ending up as leader, which I think is his long game.

He would have to be fiscally far more shrewd than he's currently demonstrating. Though I'm fairly sure he'd abandon his current principles at the drop of a hat!
 

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
It's not an echo chamber.
There are more left leaning posters definitely, but there are a fair few right leaning, (yourself, Malc, Mucca, Grendel, Sir Ernie).
And several on the left haven't voted Labour while several on the right haven't voted tory.
Thats not an echo chamber.
Why wouldn't people sneer ? Coventry is a Labour city and the wanky right wing have ruled Britain for 14 years .

25% of this forum had the intention of voting right wing parties , as per the election poll

Fuck reform and fuck the tories mate tbh

How many non-left wing people are engaging in the debate in comparison? It is an echo chamber rather than a balanced debate. Comments like this don't really help either.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Imagine what might have been with some charisma and something more of a vision. The Greens gained ridiculous numbers off Labour in Bristol just by arguing for what Labour should have been in the first place.
I voted Labour / Blair in 1997, so yes some charisma and a vision would have made a huge difference.
 

jimmyhillsfanclub

Well-Known Member
Undeniably it's a huge victory but no one can pretend there's much enthusiasm across the UK for this Labour Govt.
Just 9.9m votes in total, 21% of the total electorate.
Much more a punishment and rightly so, of the Conservatives.
Was about to post the same.... kier the nowhere man has managed to increase labour's share of the vote by a huge 1.6% since their worst showing in 2019....
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
How many non-left wing people are engaging in the debate in comparison? It is an echo chamber rather than a balanced debate. Comments like this don't really help either.

There's a difference between being an echo chamber and not engaging in debate properly.
And I'm sure we can find posts which are,shall we say, less than constructive, from all sides of the debate, including me and you!
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Was about to post the same.... kier the nowhere man has managed to increase labour's share of the vote by a huge 1.6% since their worst showing in 2019.... Time for full scale electoral reform
It won’t be full scale reform though. It will be turning elections in to child’s play.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
It isn’t an election for England. Starmer has 33.8% of the UK vote on a 60% turnout. The support of just over 20% of the electorate is hardly a resounding endorsement.
That’s democracy
Including people having the right not to vote and not to sign up to vote
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
So what other key note policies will Reform be championing over the next 5 years other than ‘blame the foreigners’
Lowering taxation - that was their main pitch to voters.

If you think it’s just about immigration, you underestimate their threat. Reform ran Labour close on many northern seats so Starmer can’t rest easy thinking he’ll have 2 terms guaranteed.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
Interesting election

Low turnout
Very small margins/percentages* swinging large numbers of seats
Rise of the small, single (ish) issue parties - reform and some independents (Palestine) which could be resolved by next election

Should be some better times ahead in the short term at least. Inflation hopefully under control, BoE should start cutting rates in the next month or two and there should be at least a small growth/investment boost. All of these should give starmer/reeves some wriggle room to be a bit bolder. Just some competence, vision and stability would be nice though

*apart from -20% drop in Tory vote obviously
 

SIR ERNIE

Well-Known Member
Labour 35% share of vote.
Conservative + Reform 38%.
This against the backdrop of a shockingly awful Conservative Govt.

The figures behind the landslide victory suggest that Starmer will struggle to get more than one term.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Lowering taxation - that was their main pitch to voters.

If you think it’s just about immigration, you underestimate their threat. Reform ran Labour close on many northern seats so Starmer can’t rest easy thinking he’ll have 2 terms guaranteed.
It really wasn’t their main pitch. Farage repeated countless times the idea that immigrants are the reason people are worse off.
 

jimmyhillsfanclub

Well-Known Member
Somethings got to change.
40% of the electorate totally disenfranchised despite the desperate years we've recently endured.
Power distribution in the commons is nowhere near calibrated to the voice of the people....which will lead to further disillusion....
...we're in a ever decreasing circle of real representation
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
I voted Labour / Blair in 1997, so yes some charisma and a vision would have made a huge difference.
I think after Johnson people wanted more than perceived charisma. Johnson was an empty vessel. Starmer isn't the most dynamic, but the country needs stability after the shitshow of the last few years.
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
Lowering taxation - that was their main pitch to voters.

If you think it’s just about immigration, you underestimate their threat. Reform ran Labour close on many northern seats so Starmer can’t rest easy thinking he’ll have 2 terms guaranteed.

None of their tax pledges stand up to any scrutiny and certainly not the sort of scrutiny a major party would get. Like the greens, they can get away with it given their current status but as they grow they'll be put more and more in 5he spotlight.
It's trussenomics and we saw how that ended.
 

Evo1883

Well-Known Member
Lowering taxation - that was their main pitch to voters.

If you think it’s just about immigration, you underestimate their threat. Reform ran Labour close on many northern seats so Starmer can’t rest easy thinking he’ll have 2 terms guaranteed.
Reform offered alot that they can't deliver knowing they'd be nowhere near power .. easy to promise when you know you will never have to back those promises up
 

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