We ALL lost this election. Tory voters are just not aware of it yet. They will be.
Not true, I won a small fortune betting on the tory victory and labour getting under 266 seats. I'm over the moon with the pro-work victory.
We ALL lost this election. Tory voters are just not aware of it yet. They will be.
I quite agree, but looking how their different campaign messages impacted the polls. It was the late and last message, about the fear of SNP calling the shots in westminster that made the difference.
The fact that you refer to all left wingers as whingers confirms my assumptions about white Australians.
It's far more logical than your idea. The polls aren't usually that inaccurate.
I don't care about being in an ideological minority. I care about the country being ruled by a party that was voted for by just over 35% of voters and who ran a very negative campaign.
Secondly, as I've said elsewhere, even up to Thursday the polls were consistent in their level pegging of Tory and Labour. There was no indication of a trend towards the Tories in the last few days. It was all the same throughout.
Probably because that is what the campaign became.
Here's an article that predicted it (24/04) from the independent:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...k-is-shameless-but-it-will-work-10202185.html
Not true, I won a small fortune betting on the tory victory and labour getting under 266 seats. I'm over the moon with the pro-work victory.
Xenophobic.
Labour's fear tactics on the NHS, however.....
you won't be when you turn up at a hospital and its closed due to lack of doctors and nurses
I am struggling to think of a more bitter set of people. They are making Fergie, Mourinho and Nigel Adkins look gracious.
don't talk about PR as the most important issue, unless you mean part of a complete root and branch overhaul of the electoral system. PR is just a counting method, if you don't change what you are counting then its going to end up just as flawed.
I think Buzzer has explained that that's not the case. It didn't suddenly swing to the Tories in the last day or two, it swung when people got to the polling booth:I quite agree, but looking how their different campaign messages impacted the polls. It was the late and last message, about the fear of SNP calling the shots in westminster that made the difference.
I think it far more likely from the start that the opinion polls were fundamentally wrong with some aspect of the algorithm that they use. I don't recall massive swings away from Labour to the Tories from them in the very last days before the election. If the fear factor had crept in, in he last few weeks there should have been a trend. There wasn't.
I don't really understand your point of view. If Labour got 270 seats, they could have formed a minority government, getting their queen's speech in with support from the SNP, and then when it came to individual policies they wanted to pass, the SNP would have supported them in exchange for a better deal for Scotland. Now of course that wouldn't have meant scrapping Trident, and it wouldn't have meant another Scottish referendum in 5 years, but there would have been some concessions. Even with a Tory majority we're a bit concerned about what we're going to offer the noisy, selfish SNP, we'd have undoubtedly offered them more if Labour needed them.It seems to me that the SNP wouldn't of had the power that many think, as they would have been shooting themselves in the foot weakening labours position. The SNP need a labour government to get anywhere. It seems clear who would of had the power in that relationship. However admittedly this is just conjecture and opinion.
I disagree and for 2 reasons:
Firstly, the SNP were threatening to derail the Tories from very early on in the campaign, the SNP prediction of seats was well-known early on. If people were scared of Lab/SNP then they would have started switching at that point. The polls didn't indicate that.
Secondly, as I've said elsewhere, even up to Thursday the polls were consistent in their level pegging of Tory and Labour. There was no indication of a trend towards the Tories in the last few days. It was all the same throughout.
It confirms you know very little. The fact you use a term like "white australian" indicates a bigot with very little idea of what they are talking about.
It confirms you know very little. The fact you use a term like "white australian" indicates a bigot with very little idea of what they are talking about.
this thread is about British politics
why would anyone care about whats happening the other side of the world unless it concerns them directly
I think Buzzer has explained that that's not the case. It didn't suddenly swing to the Tories in the last day or two, it swung when people got to the polling booth:
I don't really understand your point of view. If Labour got 270 seats, they could have formed a minority government, getting their queen's speech in with support from the SNP, and then when it came to individual policies they wanted to pass, the SNP would have supported them in exchange for a better deal for Scotland. Now of course that wouldn't have meant scrapping Trident, and it wouldn't have meant another Scottish referendum in 5 years, but there would have been some concessions. Even with a Tory majority we're a bit concerned about what we're going to offer the noisy, selfish SNP, we'd have undoubtedly offered them more if Labour needed them.
I've just never met a white Australian that I liked except for the barmaid with the big wobblers who gave me a blowy by the bins behind the bins at the back of The Kings Arms in Dorking on her tea break. And I didn't like her much.
Yes, I did. Read the post. It is far more likely that the fear of Labour/SNP coalition pushed them to change their mind last minute. Much more likely than your very unlikely idea that Tory voters feel ashamed in polls where they won't be identified.
PR isn't just a counting system, as the electorial boundaries would need to be redrawn and the magnitude (number of MP's per area) would need to be determined. For the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly, the additional member system is used, similar to Germany's MMP system. In Ireland, they use STV, but (according to wikipedia - for what it's worth) they had problems by setting the magnitude too low at 3. They have now changed that to 4 and "seems to be working much better". My point is that root and branch overhaul is a natural part of reforming FPTP to PR.