The Tories should have thanked him! 50% honest is a pretty good performance in politics.Richard W wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 1:56 am No, the Conservative party. The Beast of Bolsover famously actually declared that 50% of the Tory MPs were honest, after being reprimanded for saying that 50% of them were dishonest. Mind you, this was before the 2019 election, so the quality has probably gone down since then.
British Politics Guide
Re: British Politics Guide
Re: British Politics Guide
OK, to get really pedantic, Wikiquote says he didn't actually say that https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Dennis_SkinnerAres Land wrote: ↑Wed Jul 03, 2024 2:08 amThe Tories should have thanked him! 50% honest is a pretty good performance in politics.Richard W wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 1:56 am No, the Conservative party. The Beast of Bolsover famously actually declared that 50% of the Tory MPs were honest, after being reprimanded for saying that 50% of them were dishonest. Mind you, this was before the 2019 election, so the quality has probably gone down since then.
Re: British Politics Guide
If only Salmoneus were still here; he'd enlighten you much better than I could. Until then, RationalWiki's page about the election is a good place to start.malloc wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 5:36 pm Out of curiosity, what would you say distinguishes Labour and the Liberal Democrats in terms of policies and position on the political landscape? I had the impression that Labour began as socialists or social democrats but ultimately drifted into centrism. Yet the Liberal Democrats are also centrist from what I understand. So what distinguishes them in practice?
Self-referential signatures are for people too boring to come up with more interesting alternatives.
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Re: British Politics Guide
That is pretty amusing for a wiki!alice wrote: ↑Wed Jul 03, 2024 2:58 pm Until then, RationalWiki's page about the election is a good place to start.
Historically, the LibDems derive from the 19th century Liberals, who were a viable grown-up party that alternated with the Conservatives. They plummeted in popularity when Labour started winning elections, but refused to exit the stage.
In the US, periodically some poor souls convince themselves that, in a first-past-the-post system, there is a need for a new centrist party. This never goes anywhere. But in the UK it does: they join the LibDems. In fact that's where the Dem part comes from— the Social Democratic Party, a splinter from Labour. (Oh, and the RationalWiki article mentions this, but it's a little obscure: the LibDems allied with the Conservatives in 2010, a bold move which took the party from 57 seats to 8.)
Re: British Politics Guide
And this happened, interestingly enough, after a period of a few years when they had managed it to successfully convince a lot of people that they were more to the left than the Blair/Brown era Labour Party.
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Be more explicit about whcih parties you are referring to.Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 5:44 pm Having seem the depressed political posts posted lately, I suppose I should post my woes. I have a thee-way choice:
1) Vote for the party who changed my daughters citizenship from permanent to conditional and made my wife's getting citizenship too hard;
2) Vote for the 50% honest party that wants to restrict our human rights and civil liberties;
3) Vote for the party that is highly unlikely to win the seat.
Re: British Politics Guide
This is literally the reason I and my then girlfriend (eventually wife, now ex) voted Lib-Dem back in 2010 in Sheffield (not Clegg's constituency, I think our seat ended up going to Labour). Most of the way through my time at university, and then in the run up to that election just before I graduated, a lot of us were largely of the feeling that the Lib-Dems were a sort of "more socially progressive" version of Labour, against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and in favour of electoral reform, but otherwise the same. We didn't really look much at all into their economic policies, which from what I can remember turned out to be to the right of Labour, but to the left of the Conservatives, standing for things like reduced government intervention in things like the free market, with the exception of favouring things like the welfare state and various social justice efforts. I think, if we'd even vaguely looked at at the time, would have made their eventual support of the Conservative Party in the formation of a coalition government slightly less surprising
It's the only time I've ever voted Lib-Dem, and even though our seat ended up going to Labour, it's still somewhat of a "regret", and I can definitely see why they lost so many votes in the next GE
Re: British Politics Guide
Specifically, of course, because the LibDems promised not to increate tuition fees, then once in government voted in favour of it. They're only now beginning to recover.
Self-referential signatures are for people too boring to come up with more interesting alternatives.
Re: British Politics Guide
Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat.MacAnDàil wrote: ↑Thu Jul 04, 2024 5:48 amBe more explicit about whcih parties you are referring to.Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 5:44 pm Having seem the depressed political posts posted lately, I suppose I should post my woes. I have a thee-way choice:
1) Vote for the party who changed my daughters citizenship from permanent to conditional and made my wife's getting citizenship too hard;
2) Vote for the 50% honest party that wants to restrict our human rights and civil liberties;
3) Vote for the party that is highly unlikely to win the seat.
Re: British Politics Guide
Well, exit polls are up on the BBC website:
Labour: 410 (+209)
Conservative: 131 (-241)
Liberal Democrats: 61 (+53)
Reform UK: 13 (+13)
Scottish National Party: 10 (-38)
Plaid Cymru: 4 (+1)
Green: 2 (+1)
Others: 19
(I think that's compared to the 2019 election result, though, not the actual state of the HoC when the election was called. Like Labour had already gained 4 MPs since 2019, and the Conservatives had lost )
Seems like, if those are accurate, it's about what people were expecting: massive Labour gain, massive Conservative loss (apparently their lowest result in almost two centuries), relatively big LD gain and SNP loss, and oh look here comes Reform as an actual parliamentary party
Labour: 410 (+209)
Conservative: 131 (-241)
Liberal Democrats: 61 (+53)
Reform UK: 13 (+13)
Scottish National Party: 10 (-38)
Plaid Cymru: 4 (+1)
Green: 2 (+1)
Others: 19
(I think that's compared to the 2019 election result, though, not the actual state of the HoC when the election was called. Like Labour had already gained 4 MPs since 2019, and the Conservatives had lost )
Seems like, if those are accurate, it's about what people were expecting: massive Labour gain, massive Conservative loss (apparently their lowest result in almost two centuries), relatively big LD gain and SNP loss, and oh look here comes Reform as an actual parliamentary party
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So I'm watching the BBC coverage with my flatmate, and I get a bit of a hiccup while they're interviewing Jacob Rees-Mogg, and my flatmate says, "You've got a hiccup? Should I scare you so that you get rid of it?" And I say, "If the sight of Jacob Rees-Mogg isn't enough to scare me out of this hiccup..."
Re: British Politics Guide
Anyway, the main story in terms of actual votes seems to be Conservative voters moving to Reform.
Re: British Politics Guide
I'm generally no fan of first-past-the-post at all, but that said, British constituency declarations are the best election night drama I can think of.
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Uh sure, lady, that's the problem.BBC wrote:Andrea Leadsom, who was a minister in the Department of Health and Social Care under Rishi Sunak but stood down at this election, says the strong showing of Reform UK so far suggests "perhaps it's that we've not been conservative enough".
Re: British Politics Guide
Unfortunately, given the way the Conservatives are hemmorhaging votes to Reform - in several of the constituencies that were declared for Labour so far, Reform was far ahead of the Conservatives in second place - she might have a point.zompist wrote: ↑Thu Jul 04, 2024 6:54 pmUh sure, lady, that's the problem.BBC wrote:Andrea Leadsom, who was a minister in the Department of Health and Social Care under Rishi Sunak but stood down at this election, says the strong showing of Reform UK so far suggests "perhaps it's that we've not been conservative enough".
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How did Lyne get on top of Ashton?
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So Farage becomes an MP.
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Why do returning officers keep referring to "the Conservative Party candidate" while leaving out the word "candidate" when talking about other parties' candidates?