Quizzes & Puzzles12 mins ago
Is This The Final Nail In The Coffin For The Tories.
Is this the end of Conservatism in the UK, as the youngest political party in Britain "Reform" overtakes the oldest political party in Britain "Cons".Reform have now surpassed the Cons in signed up members.This must be the beginning of the End for the Cons.After all these years .Looks like their game is up at last.
Answers
I am still not convinced that Reform are much more than a charismatic leader with little structure or organisation. Look at the problems they got into at the GE with using an external company to vet their candidates. Maybe Kemi will reform the Tories and make them electable. Or possibly they will be on their third leader, still looking for "the one".
From what I've seen since the election, it also looks like the end of the Labour Party. Virtually every Labour voter I know says they will not vote for them next time. Labour is going to fall over a precipice that it will not recover from and we could be seeing the start of a new era in British party politics.
But Labour also know that lots of us old fuddy duddies won't be here for the next election. As usual, old folk are not worth bothering about. You see, "at your age" the treatment won't work, so we'll just give you pain killers and sleeping tablets. When they stop working, it's good night Vienna.
Reform will split the right wing vote and guarantee another labour victory on a margin of voters equally small or even smaller than the one they already have. the same thing happened with the SDP/alliance and labour in the 1980s
musk is looking to pump money into reform but it's quite clear he has little understanding of uk politics.
drmorgans is also quite correct... if farage were to suffer a fatal stroke tomorrow then Reform would have nothing at all and fall apart... just look at what happened to UKIP after he left.
10:49 possibly me old china but reform is gaining support from labour too. The invasion and islamification of our country is a concern across the the traditional political spectrum. I go to a club that has a lot of trad labour voters in it and they have the same concerns as me in many areas. Labour has a very shallow majority and it wont take much to flip a lot of their seats.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.