ChatterBank1 min ago
How Will You Vote At The Next General Election?
75 Answers
We have read in past posts that Cameron is finished, the Tories are finished, the Tory/LibDem coalition is finished, the LibDems are finished and UKIP haven't a cat in hells chance of winning the next election.
With all this in mind and the experiences of the disastrous 13 years of Blair's and Browns New Labour, how will you vote at the next General Election and why?
For those who give a positive "I'll vote labour" then by doing so will you expect Labour to reverse everything the Coalition has implemented during their term of office, so that things will go back to how they were during the Blair/Brown days?
With all this in mind and the experiences of the disastrous 13 years of Blair's and Browns New Labour, how will you vote at the next General Election and why?
For those who give a positive "I'll vote labour" then by doing so will you expect Labour to reverse everything the Coalition has implemented during their term of office, so that things will go back to how they were during the Blair/Brown days?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Before we part company on such a bad note let's just go back in time to my comment that first brought the insult from you.
/// A Tory will admit that they have been let down, but a Labour supporter will go on and on voting for Labour no matter what they throw at them, simply because "they are working class" and their grand parents voted for them and their parents also voted for them. ///
I fail to see any arrogance there, I was merely stating common knowledge, how many times have you recently heard Tories saying how disillusioned they are with both Cameron and the present government?
Also ask most Labour supporters and they will say the same, ie the Labour Party looks after the 'working man' but the Tories only look after the 'Toffs', notice also that I put, "they are working class" in inverted commas
/// For some strange reason they will carry on voting for them in the belief that Labour is the working man's party, but just as their union bosses they couldn't care a toss for them, it's look after
No 1 once they are voted in. ///
And all this was a criticism against Labour who are the same as most political parties and Unions alike they are mainly all in it for what they can get out themselves.
The old 'dedicated to his or her own constituents' are few and far between.
So why your aggressive insult?
/// What an arrogant man you are AOG. ///
/// A Tory will admit that they have been let down, but a Labour supporter will go on and on voting for Labour no matter what they throw at them, simply because "they are working class" and their grand parents voted for them and their parents also voted for them. ///
I fail to see any arrogance there, I was merely stating common knowledge, how many times have you recently heard Tories saying how disillusioned they are with both Cameron and the present government?
Also ask most Labour supporters and they will say the same, ie the Labour Party looks after the 'working man' but the Tories only look after the 'Toffs', notice also that I put, "they are working class" in inverted commas
/// For some strange reason they will carry on voting for them in the belief that Labour is the working man's party, but just as their union bosses they couldn't care a toss for them, it's look after
No 1 once they are voted in. ///
And all this was a criticism against Labour who are the same as most political parties and Unions alike they are mainly all in it for what they can get out themselves.
The old 'dedicated to his or her own constituents' are few and far between.
So why your aggressive insult?
/// What an arrogant man you are AOG. ///
If the right wing of the Conservative Party broke away to form an alliance with UKIP, I could certainly see myself considering voting for the Tories (although I couldn't say whether I'd follow through).
I think that Cameron has a certain degree of personal integrity that I have never seen in a Tory party leader before. His stance on marriage equality has been impressive, because it's the first time that I can remember for a very long time that a politician has stuck his neck out for something he believes in rather than something that is simply 'politically expedient' or a vote-catcher.
I think that Cameron has a certain degree of personal integrity that I have never seen in a Tory party leader before. His stance on marriage equality has been impressive, because it's the first time that I can remember for a very long time that a politician has stuck his neck out for something he believes in rather than something that is simply 'politically expedient' or a vote-catcher.
sp1814
/// I think that Cameron has a certain degree of personal integrity that I have never seen in a Tory party leader before. His stance on marriage equality has been impressive, because it's the first time that I can remember for a very long time that a politician has stuck his neck out for something he believes in rather than something that is simply 'politically expedient' or a
vote-catcher. ///
I think Peter Hitchens has just about got it right, makes for some very interesting reading.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/d ebate/a rticle- 2276323 /This-g ay-affa ir-sex- marriag es-just -excuse -Tory-d ivorce. html#ax zz2KPXE 0d8X
/// I think that Cameron has a certain degree of personal integrity that I have never seen in a Tory party leader before. His stance on marriage equality has been impressive, because it's the first time that I can remember for a very long time that a politician has stuck his neck out for something he believes in rather than something that is simply 'politically expedient' or a
vote-catcher. ///
I think Peter Hitchens has just about got it right, makes for some very interesting reading.
http://
I only hope that Peter Hitchens is right.
Ideally, UKIP would become a 'mid-Right' party, with the BNP taking up the far right, leaving the Conservatives to become a centralist party with 'right-leaning policies'.
Cameron is an urban liberal with a very gay-friendly wife. It's those liberal (small 'L') tendencies that will help his score with the Guardianistas and Islington mafia.
But first, he will have to sort out the right wing Tory dinosaurs
Ideally, UKIP would become a 'mid-Right' party, with the BNP taking up the far right, leaving the Conservatives to become a centralist party with 'right-leaning policies'.
Cameron is an urban liberal with a very gay-friendly wife. It's those liberal (small 'L') tendencies that will help his score with the Guardianistas and Islington mafia.
But first, he will have to sort out the right wing Tory dinosaurs
Accidentally hit 'Submit'.
But first, he will have to sort out the right wing Tory dinosaurs, in the same way that Tony Blair sorted out the left wing dinosaurs in the early 90s.
It would be fantastic if we have more colour and contrast in politics. If we had a Far Right (BNP), Mid-Right (UKIP), Centre Right (Conservative) and Centre-Left (Labour) group of parties, politics would become interesting again.
How many of those who didn't vote at the last General Election did so, because they thought "all parties are the same?"
But first, he will have to sort out the right wing Tory dinosaurs, in the same way that Tony Blair sorted out the left wing dinosaurs in the early 90s.
It would be fantastic if we have more colour and contrast in politics. If we had a Far Right (BNP), Mid-Right (UKIP), Centre Right (Conservative) and Centre-Left (Labour) group of parties, politics would become interesting again.
How many of those who didn't vote at the last General Election did so, because they thought "all parties are the same?"
// will you expect Labour to reverse everything the Coalition has implemented during their term of office //
It seems the Coalition do that themselves. They introduce a policy, say scrapping GCSEs, then they reverse the policy a few weeks later. I am honestly struggling to think of anything they have achieved so I cannot say Labour should reverse it.
It seems the Coalition do that themselves. They introduce a policy, say scrapping GCSEs, then they reverse the policy a few weeks later. I am honestly struggling to think of anything they have achieved so I cannot say Labour should reverse it.
The interesting thing is that Tory MPs and even Peter Hitchens, may be right but they are out of touch with the public at large, as were a great number of the Labour Party in Blair's day (even though of course in that instance they WERE right :-) ! Cameron has surely grasped (unlike many of his MPs) that single sex marriage is not a vote loser whereas not appearing euro-sceptic enough might lose the party enough votes at the next election to be serious.
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