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Still, that whole affair lead to one of the funniest bits on HIGNFY, with Trevor McDonald as host (https://www.dailymotion.com/video/xrl9rx the Oaten bit is from 12 minutes onwards, but the whole section leading up to it just gold). |
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There were rumours around Westminster before the story broke that Oaten enjoyed a Cleveland Steamer, but I don’t recall anyone ever knowing the source of that - I was amazed the detail appeared in the story. He certainly didn’t deserve to lose his frontbench role for the LDs over it, and being on the right of the LDs he might have had a role in the Coalition government, had he not withdrawn from politics as a result. |
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*suddenly panics and looks around nervously* I ... just... heard that it was called that, whatever that is....:duck: |
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I've mostly voted LibDem, because for most of my adult life they were the only actually left-wing party. Last election was a definite Labour vote, though, because it seemed very, very important to do whatever was the most likely to not allow the Tories to get in. Not that it made any difference, in this very safe Tory seat, but every little helps as the old woman said when she pissed in the sea.
But it is worth pointing out that there's another reason why many don't vote for the LibDems in recent years - their time in power. More specifically university fees. Part of that whole thing is the Tories somehow magically managing to make the LibDems' tempering of their worst excesses be, in the public eye, the LibDems being responsible for all the Tories worst excesses. But they had campaigned extensively on tuition fees, so to turn around on it in such a huge way was seen by many as a massive betrayal. I imagine that there's a whole generation of people who were young at the time who then and there decided that they would never vote for the LibDems as long as they lived. On the plus side, the current generation of young people have lived through the A-levels debacle, and were either forced back in to schools with no help from the government or are now being told that they'll likely have to stay at university over Christmas because it's unsafe for them to go home. So I imagine that's a generation of people who will never vote Tory as long as they shall live. |
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* I actually had a conversation with Nick Clegg's father where I said this and predicted they'd get no credit for it, but all the blame for everything the Torys had done. |
UK govt. set to invade the media
Charles Moore (ex Daily Telegraph editor) touted as their favourite to head the BBC.
Paul Dacre (ex Daily Mail editor), touted as their favourite to head OFCOM, the media watchdog. link And, in case you wandered in here not too familiar with the UK media, The Torygraph and The Daily Fail are about as right wing as Brit papers get. Oh **** :mad: |
The Telegraph isn't known as "The Torygraph" for nothing, still looks like all those years of paying Johnson £1/4mil a year for 200 words a week have paid off for Moore. And the Daily Mail has such a fine reputation for impartiality, truth and accuracy I'm surprised they get their cover price right so an ideal choice for the media watchdog...
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In the end, however, I suspect it came more down to Clegg not really liking Brown, and the idea of (arguably) propping up a government that had just taken a bit of a battering at the polls. |
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And they fitted in rather well with their friends in the Tories in that coalition. As they do in Scotland where they parrot the same old Unionist tropes shoulder to shoulder with their Tory mates. ETA: It would be a strange claim to suggest that PR means that you have to support the policies of the party that gets the most votes anyway. That's not how PR works. Stranger still to claim that the principles of PR have any relevance to a FPTP election. |
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I've always seen LD as being the non-gammon wing of the Tory Party. They've always had a few progressive policies and generally been pro-Europe and pro-immigration but to say they are left-wing is odd. Although it also reflects how much of a basket case of ideology Labour has been where you can certainly find policies where the LD have been to the left of them. |
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However, IMO that's comparing apples with oranges to a certain degree. New Labour had to deal with the realpolitik whereas the LibDems could promote policies which likely had little or no chance of becoming law. IMO the coalition government of 2010 shows what happens when LibDem policy runs slap-bang into the reality of British politics :( |
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Which is a good part of why Clegg and Co jumped at coalition with the Tories and would never have countenanced jooining with Labour...It also explains why they all voted in favour of Lansley's 2012 bill and much of what else they did in coalition. As a retired NHS worker, who had voted LD a couple of times, including 2010, I am never doing so again until there is a full apology from the party for what they did in government. (There was ceretainly an element of deception from Clegg - at the time I cast my postal vote, 'cos were were on hols for election day, there was not hint that they would join the Tories. If there had been...) And then they elected weasel word Farron as leader...And didn't publicly execute Norman Lying Get Lamb... |
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I don't agree on your first paragraph but remember how this began - with the idea that the LDs can't be blamed for the Tories. They put them in power. They carry the can. |
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Dave |
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An example. Party A gets 40% of the votes (and in a decent PR system 40% of the seats) Party B gets 35% of the votes (and in a decent PR system 35% of the seats) Party C gets 20% of the votes (and in a decent PR system 20% of the seats) What is the problem with parties C and B forming a governing coalition? |
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But hey, like with the proposed national unity government in 2019 when the Lib Dems eff up, it's all Labour's fault in the media. |
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Are you trying to tell me that in PRistan in the case of the following result 1. Kill all Greens Party 31% 2. Be nice to Greens Party 30% 3. The Green Party 20% That the Green Party is morally obligated to form a government with the Kill All Greens Party because they got the most votes? Not only that but we aren't in a PR system. The LDs had no obligation to make a pact with ANYONE! |
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Tory 36% Labour 29% LD 23% A Labour/LD coalition would have represented 52% of voters. Stick the SNP and Plaid in there and you are at 55ish. |
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1. A Lib/Lab/SNP/Plaid coalition would have been so weak that it would hardly have been able to govern. 2. The assumption had always been that the Lib Dems would side with Labour, so why not just vote for Labour? If they'd formed a coalition with Labour they would have confirmed this view. |
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2. I'm confused by this logic. Labour and Lib Dem policy was not the same at that point and I still don't see how you get from there to 'so we need to make a coalition with the Tories' The LDs didn't prop up May's minority government so obviously they know that they don't HAVE to. It was Clegg's choice to get into bed with Cameron because, at the end of the day, they were basically the same. |
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The was pretty much the reasoning. I mean, look at how strong and stable May's government was, and that only required the 10 members of the DUP. |
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As it is, I've explained my position three times now, and you keep addressing something else, so I'm not really convinced that anything productive will come out of reiterating it a fourth time. |
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