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Some odd thinking going on here lads.The Farageists won 40% of the seats. That's a PLURALITY not a MAJORITY. The only other parties who would even consider being close to Farage's party are the Tories and DUP, who won five seats between them. Add those and those three right wing parties won 46.6% of the seats.On the other side, ALL the other parties who won seats (LD, Lab, Green, PC, SNP, SF and Alliance) are implacably opposed to Farage's politics. They won 53.7% of the seats.The points at football analogy is ashore one for all sorts of reasons. There's a far simpler one.If a group of parties who were prepared to work together won 46.6% of the seats at Westminster, would you say they had won that election?
Aye, thank God he lost. Must have been because of all the now dead old bas**rd Leavers being replaced by all the young debutant Remainers.
You're right for once! I do like being told I've won. I guess I'm just a bad loser and will say anything to deny it. We can't be doing with that in grown-up politics, can we?
I don't really care too much about this vote as it doesn't really lead to any voice or influence or impact in Europe at all.But.......... Who did win then? Is it first past the post? e.g.the one that wins the most or something else.It's confusing as everyone claims they won
Credit to Nigel Farage for the graceful way he handled defeat after hearing last night's results. It's such a pity that the winning Remain side wasn't equally as courteous in victory.
Some odd thinking going on here lads.The Farageists won 40% of the seats. That's a PLURALITY not a MAJORITY. The only other parties who would even consider being close to Farage's party are the Tories and DUP, who won five seats between them. Add those and those three right wing parties won 46.6% of the seats.On the other side, ALL the other parties who won seats (LD, Lab, Green, PC, SNP, SF and Alliance) are implacably opposed to Farage's politics. They won 53.7% of the seats.The points at football analogy is a shite one for all sorts of reasons. There's a far simpler one.If a group of parties who were prepared to work together won 46.6% of the seats at Westminster, would you say they had won that election?What Farage has done brilliantly is to be the key focus on the Hard Brexit side. Whilst on the Remain side, support is fragmented between several parties.But the clear fact is that roughly 6m voted for unequivocally Hard Brexit parties last week and roughly 7m voted for unequivocally Remain supporting parties, with about 4m others voting for parties whose policy is some sort of deal-based Brexit with or without a second referendum.It seems a bit odd for Farageists to be dancing in the street and claiming they've won hands down, based on those numbers.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 27, 2019, 06:19:46 pmSome odd thinking going on here lads.The Farageists won 40% of the seats. That's a PLURALITY not a MAJORITY. The only other parties who would even consider being close to Farage's party are the Tories and DUP, who won five seats between them. Add those and those three right wing parties won 46.6% of the seats.On the other side, ALL the other parties who won seats (LD, Lab, Green, PC, SNP, SF and Alliance) are implacably opposed to Farage's politics. They won 53.7% of the seats.The points at football analogy is a shite one for all sorts of reasons. There's a far simpler one.If a group of parties who were prepared to work together won 46.6% of the seats at Westminster, would you say they had won that election?What Farage has done brilliantly is to be the key focus on the Hard Brexit side. Whilst on the Remain side, support is fragmented between several parties.But the clear fact is that roughly 6m voted for unequivocally Hard Brexit parties last week and roughly 7m voted for unequivocally Remain supporting parties, with about 4m others voting for parties whose policy is some sort of deal-based Brexit with or without a second referendum.It seems a bit odd for Farageists to be dancing in the street and claiming they've won hands down, based on those numbers.Nice stats BST, But looking at this another way.....The remains are made up of maybe 7 independent parties with differing views , so expecting them all to agree on anything is going to be messy The Brexits all agree on one thing....leave means leave..The rest is just politics...lol