Emily Thornberry, as leader of the Labour Party, would keep them out of power for a generation.Viduka Hits The Mark wrote:I had just put the phone down after leaving a heartfelt message to Caroline Flint's office (i hope she gets it) explaining that i believe people such as Kier Starmer and Emily Thornberry had effectively thrown Some Northern & Midlands Labour mp's under the bus after she has lost her seat, to suit their Remain cause, then i hear Lord Falconer on the BBC talking those two candidates up for the next Labour leadership Contest. Good luck with that.
Difficult to know where Labour move next, i don't think it is as straight forward as some people think about Northern & Midlands & Wales voters borrowing the Conservatives their vote. I think the progressive policies of the left in general are currently not striking a cord with most of the country. And that's without their complete wipe out in hardcore Nationalist Scotland.
General Election 2019
Re: General Election 2019
I once played against Don Revie.
Re: General Election 2019
Relax people, you could have our continuing problem of the two biggest parties being total prats.
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When Santa Got Stuck Up The Chimney
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Re: General Election 2019
mapperleywhite wrote:Surely the answer to that is simple. Anyone of the 52% who voted leave as they (and the Brexit party) are the only ones definitely promising Brexit.rigger wrote:To me, I can't see why anyone would vote Tory.
- mapperleywhite
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Re: General Election 2019
For those of you in despair about the election result I'm afraid to say it's down to the self-indulgent hard lefties of north London. They failed to provide decent opposition in parliament during the debates and votes on Brexit, then ran an election campaign based on untenable economic programmes combined with fence-sitting on Brexit.
If you want a measure of their continued complacency Corbyn has not resigned - that's unfathomable given the scale of his defeat.
The result means the road is now clear for us to leave the EU (sadly in my view), and that will restore business confidence to make longer term plans to create jobs and, hopefully, improve productivity - the real bugbear in the UK's economy.
Equally once less government resource is devoted to Brexit it means they can focus on the issues that have languished for three years - food banks, north-south divide, ageing population, HS2/infrastructure, social care etc. In theory.
PS: last time I do any election predictions: the 23 year old labour candidate gained Nottingham East from the previous long-standing incumbent Chris Leslie who had a majority of over 19,000 in 2017
If you want a measure of their continued complacency Corbyn has not resigned - that's unfathomable given the scale of his defeat.
The result means the road is now clear for us to leave the EU (sadly in my view), and that will restore business confidence to make longer term plans to create jobs and, hopefully, improve productivity - the real bugbear in the UK's economy.
Equally once less government resource is devoted to Brexit it means they can focus on the issues that have languished for three years - food banks, north-south divide, ageing population, HS2/infrastructure, social care etc. In theory.
PS: last time I do any election predictions: the 23 year old labour candidate gained Nottingham East from the previous long-standing incumbent Chris Leslie who had a majority of over 19,000 in 2017
Might have to take an interest in the Premier League now....
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Re: General Election 2019
What was the percentage of people who voted in this election and the ones that didn't/couldn't be bothered?
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Re: General Election 2019
I think the turnout was around the 67% mark.Mr Russell wrote:What was the percentage of people who voted in this election and the ones that didn't/couldn't be bothered?
When you retire, you switch bosses - from the one that hired you, to the one that married you.
Re: General Election 2019
67.26%Mr Russell wrote:What was the percentage of people who voted in this election and the ones that didn't/couldn't be bothered?
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Re: General Election 2019
Thanks guys!
So pretty much two-thirds of the country.
Do you think they will ever bring in compulsory voting to the UK?
Its here in Oz and if you don't vote you get a $55 fine.
So pretty much two-thirds of the country.
Do you think they will ever bring in compulsory voting to the UK?
Its here in Oz and if you don't vote you get a $55 fine.
Owners come and go but Leeds United will be there forever, for the fans - keep Marching on Together.
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Re: General Election 2019
If you're disabled/sick etc you vote on line/by post?Mr Russell wrote:Thanks guys!
So pretty much two-thirds of the country.
Do you think they will ever bring in compulsory voting to the UK?
Its here in Oz and if you don't vote you get a $55 fine.
Might have to take an interest in the Premier League now....
Re: General Election 2019
Mr Russell wrote:Thanks guys!
So pretty much two-thirds of the country.
Do you think they will ever bring in compulsory voting to the UK?
Its here in Oz and if you don't vote you get a $55 fine.
So does that make the system better? (I have no idea - I am just asking)