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Just saw your PS after I posted. I think we ought to nail the myth that there could have been a Labour-Lib Dem coalition in May. The arithmetic just didn't stack up, added to which there was the whole issue of the Labour leadership: keeping Brown in office even as a caretaker PM would simply not have been credible.Tim Farron, a senior Lib Dem who is no Tory-lover explained the dilemma rather well in an interview last week. He said they could have either entered a coalition with the Tories or let Cameron form a minority Govt. The outcome of the latter would certainly have been another election this year and a likely Tory majority Govt. It is easy to criticise the Lib Dems, but they really were between a rock and a hard place, because their \"other option\" (a coalition with Labour) just wasn't feasible.
A few points. Clegg is on the fast track to irrelevance. His one and only appeal to the voters was that he looked like a nice honest guy on the telly. Well, the electorate soon learned their mistake on that score didn't they? As soon as the election was over, he dumped the Party's key economic policies (in the face of much opposition by Cable) and signed up to support vastly more vicious and rapid cutbacks than the Liberals had proposed. He justifies this by saying that he changed his mind in the last few days before the Election (but didn't think he'd bother telling his Party or the electorate) He's a political Dead Man Walking. Who is ever going to trust a word that he says in future? And why bother voting for a Clegg-led Liberal Party if he is simply going to endorse the wilder Tory economic policies? That us the reason that Clegg has performed a political miracle - he has managed to HALVE the Liberals' poll ratings within 4 months of a successful election. Utterly unprecedented.The obvious conclusion is that the next election will revert to type and be a straightforward Tory-Labour run-off. It's quite astonishing how quickly folk have cottoned onto this andvthe polls have, fir several months now, been showing Labour and the Tories both at around 40% with the Liberals on 12-14%. And THAT is before the extent of the Tory-proposed, Liberal-supported cuts really begin to become apparent. Just see what the polls say after the Spending Round announcement next month, when we actually see the details. The Liberals will revert to being a fringe party with a couple of dozen seats at the next election. The issue then will be whether the Tory cuts have worked or whether they have destroyed the fragile recovery and put millions of families through even more hardship. Personalities and TV performance will matter not a jot. If the Tory policies work, they will walk the next election. If they don't a sensible left-of-centre alternative will be able to say, \"See! We told you how reckless a gamble it was. There always was an alternative and we've been telling you that for 5 years\". And they will win with a landslide, whether Miliband looks like a geek or not.EDIT: Hoola, how can Clegg be a moderating influence on the Tory cuts? He's signed up for them lock, stock and barrel! He's already flipped his Party's economic policy on the hoof once in order to join the coalition (against the policy of Cable who wanted a coalition with Labour and a more measured approach to balancing cuts with growth). If he flipped again and started opposing the proposed cuts, he'd be a laughing stock. He's chucked all the Liberals' egg into one basket, marked \"Tory economic policy\". Even if that policy works, why bother voting Liberal again? If you agree with the Tory economic approach, you might as well simply vote Tory.
Hoola. There's absolutely nothing personal in what I'm about to say, but you don't half talk some b*llocks on the topic of politics. Point out one single posting from me that gives you any grounds whatsoever for claiming that I'm a Marxist, in favour of a one-party state or any of the other ridiculous ramblings that you chuck at anyone with a left of centre approach. It's purile, childish and pathetic, and you're cleverer than that.
Brown was NEVER going to be able to stay on as PM after the election result. That much was perfectly clear. With that as a starting point for discussion, the coalition I suggested was no more outlandish than the one we ended up with. Economically (and economics was always going to be the key issue) Labour, SNP and PC are far closer than the Liberals and Tories. (At least if you go by what the Liberals said in their manifesto, although I accept the flaw in my argument...)Anyway, coalitions are all about compromises aren't they? I mean, why should Salmond and say Miliband have any more trouble getting on than Cable and Pickles, who both now sit in the Cabinet but are as far apart politically as me and thee. Anyway, I'd be delighted if you could dig out some posts from me that give any indication whatsoever that I'm a loony lefty. It'd give me summat to chuckle about. If you can't find any, then perhaps you'll allow me to describe anyone with a policy slightly to the left of Enver Hoxha as being a Nazi. Then we'd both be as childish as each other.
Some corking political debate again on here, and some more of the short sighted Tory tripe from the usual suspects. When will they ever learn?Back to the original topic. Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful. Potentially, this could be fantastic for my local area, according to a councillor I spoke to recently. If, nay when Labour get back in power, it could open the door to massive investment for Doncaster North, which can only be a good thing. But one interesting thing I have heard from a very high ranking official from my union is that Labour will be forced to change by the union, it will simply have no choice, and Ed Miliband will be leant on from within the party by Unite sponsored MP's to make sure it happens. Lets be right here, New Labour is dead. It lost 5 million voters in 13 years and is no longer representative of its historical electorate in my opinion. Its a tragedy that the harshest anti trade union laws in Europe still remain on the statute book after 13 years of Labour rule. These have to be relaxed, if not removed all together when Labour regain control and my union plan on pushing this all the way. The union will also campaign for a \"living wage\", possible £1-2 an hour more than the minimum wage is now. Either Labour looks after its historical electorate or there is a big chance Labour will lose its funding from Unite (and possibly a few more unions), which was worth £13 million last year. And without that sort of funding Labour is practically finished. And considering John Prescott admitted Labour hasn't got a penny to scratch its arse with, there could be interesting times ahead for the party.
Extremely enjoyable debate, however I was very interested to read Filo's account of democracy in action here goes............''Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful.'' Jeez there was no wonder he won , incidentally could anybody tell me the amount of votes cast individually i.e. none Union block votes ?It was interesting to read that Longbridge (a Liberal) now considered his party to be left of Labour, perhaps you can find a place for Billy in your squad. lolFinally are we all trying to put a square Clegg in a round hole and will Billy eventually tell me what he would have done if he had been Clegg following that election result ? What would he, in his shoes, have looked for in terms of 'real' Coalitions and what would have been his terms ? It is irrelevant whether or not you like/dislike the fella. Academic now I realise but nevertheless interesting to the debate.
PS Hoola, as with so many issues in this thread, you are living in the past on the block vote issue. The union votes were votes cast by individual union members. If 100,000 union members voted in total, and of those, say 50,000 voted for a given candidate, then that candidate received one half of the total union vote. Since the total union vote was one third of the entire vote, that would equate to a total of 16.66% of the total college vote. The block vote does not exist in this election. But there you go. Why let facts get in the way when you can just recycle 30 year out if date prejudices?
BillyStubbsTears wrote:QuotePS Hoola, as with so many issues in this thread, you are living in the past on the block vote issue. The union votes were votes cast by individual union members. If 100,000 union members voted in total, and of those, say 50,000 voted for a given candidate, then that candidate received one half of the total union vote. Since the total union vote was one third of the entire vote, that would equate to a total of 16.66% of the total college vote. The block vote does not exist in this election. But there you go. Why let facts get in the way when you can just recycle 30 year out if date prejudices?I wasn't asking about the 'block vote' merely trying to exclude it when asking exactly how many members (i.e Party members/MP/MEP's), it was merely a question and not an inference.Btw , as an aside, the Union vote was very relevant and entirely understandable as they do sponsor MP's but NOT part of my question.Incidentally you have turned a mere question into a supposed 'out of date prejudice'.An interesting fella and obviously very intelligent too but condescending in the extreme......thanks for the debate. To summarise during this debate/lecture I have now been labelled as 'childish', 'out of date', 'prejudiced' and 'ill-informed'. :cry: :byebye
jonrover wrote:QuoteSome corking political debate again on here, and some more of the short sighted Tory tripe from the usual suspects. When will they ever learn?Back to the original topic. Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful. Potentially, this could be fantastic for my local area, according to a councillor I spoke to recently. If, nay when Labour get back in power, it could open the door to massive investment for Doncaster North, which can only be a good thing. But one interesting thing I have heard from a very high ranking official from my union is that Labour will be forced to change by the union, it will simply have no choice, and Ed Miliband will be leant on from within the party by Unite sponsored MP's to make sure it happens. Lets be right here, New Labour is dead. It lost 5 million voters in 13 years and is no longer representative of its historical electorate in my opinion. Its a tragedy that the harshest anti trade union laws in Europe still remain on the statute book after 13 years of Labour rule. These have to be relaxed, if not removed all together when Labour regain control and my union plan on pushing this all the way. The union will also campaign for a \"living wage\", possible £1-2 an hour more than the minimum wage is now. Either Labour looks after its historical electorate or there is a big chance Labour will lose its funding from Unite (and possibly a few more unions), which was worth £13 million last year. And without that sort of funding Labour is practically finished. And considering John Prescott admitted Labour hasn't got a penny to scratch its arse with, there could be interesting times ahead for the party.As a former GMB shop steward, I`m with you comrade jonrover
Extremely enjoyable debate, however I was very interested to read Johnrover's account of democracy in action here goes............''Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful.'' Jeez there was no wonder he won , incidentally could anybody tell me the amount of votes cast individually i.e. none Union block votes ?It was interesting to read that Longbridge (a Liberal) now considered his party to be left of Labour, perhaps you can find a place for Billy in your squad. lolFinally are we all trying to put a square Clegg in a round hole and will Billy eventually tell me what he would have done if he had been Clegg following that election result ? What would he, in his shoes, have looked for in terms of 'real' Coalitions and what would have been his terms ? It is irrelevant whether or not you like/dislike the fella. Academic now I realise but nevertheless interesting to the debate.
There's quite a lot of assumptions in there, not least that Labour will put themselves forward as a \"sensible left of centre alternative\" when the next General Election comes around. They didn't do that in the early 80s, after all. QuoteSomething I posted the other day. Reading some of the contributions on here I can see there's a strong appetite for Labour to \"reclaim its roots.\" Which is fine so long as the party doesn't make itself unelectable in the process. The rhetoric spouted by the likes of Bob Crow, Paul Kenney, Derek Simpson et al might strike a chord with Labour activists, but it will not win back the voters who have abandoned Labour.There's a common misconception that political parties have to be \"more themselves\" in order to appeal to the voters. The Tories suffered from it after 1997 and chose their leaders (especially Iain Duncan-Smith) accordingly. What good did it do them? I now see Labour doing the same.
Something I posted the other day. Reading some of the contributions on here I can see there's a strong appetite for Labour to \"reclaim its roots.\" Which is fine so long as the party doesn't make itself unelectable in the process. The rhetoric spouted by the likes of Bob Crow, Paul Kenney, Derek Simpson et al might strike a chord with Labour activists, but it will not win back the voters who have abandoned Labour.There's a common misconception that political parties have to be \"more themselves\" in order to appeal to the voters. The Tories suffered from it after 1997 and chose their leaders (especially Iain Duncan-Smith) accordingly. What good did it do them? I now see Labour doing the same.
hoolahoop wrote:QuoteExtremely enjoyable debate, however I was very interested to read Johnrover's account of democracy in action here goes............''Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful.'' Jeez there was no wonder he won , incidentally could anybody tell me the amount of votes cast individually i.e. none Union block votes ?It was interesting to read that Longbridge (a Liberal) now considered his party to be left of Labour, perhaps you can find a place for Billy in your squad. lolFinally are we all trying to put a square Clegg in a round hole and will Billy eventually tell me what he would have done if he had been Clegg following that election result ? What would he, in his shoes, have looked for in terms of 'real' Coalitions and what would have been his terms ? It is irrelevant whether or not you like/dislike the fella. Academic now I realise but nevertheless interesting to the debate.I'm not quite sure what the problem is? I legitimately get two votes, and got permission to vote on behalf of the other three because they couldn't be arsed, which to be honest really gets on my goat. Why people throw away their chance to have their say in something, which must be important to them since they pay the political levy is beyond me. As it happens, Ed Miliband was their first choice anyway, the only difference being I made sure Dave was their last preference! As for a union block vote. Its b*llocks, utter b*llocks. All union votes were cast individually. End of story. You want to stop reading Murdoch's trash and try the beano instead.
jonrover wrote:Quotehoolahoop wrote:QuoteExtremely enjoyable debate, however I was very interested to read Johnrover's account of democracy in action here goes............''Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful.'' Jeez there was no wonder he won , incidentally could anybody tell me the amount of votes cast individually i.e. none Union block votes ?It was interesting to read that Longbridge (a Liberal) now considered his party to be left of Labour, perhaps you can find a place for Billy in your squad. lolFinally are we all trying to put a square Clegg in a round hole and will Billy eventually tell me what he would have done if he had been Clegg following that election result ? What would he, in his shoes, have looked for in terms of 'real' Coalitions and what would have been his terms ? It is irrelevant whether or not you like/dislike the fella. Academic now I realise but nevertheless interesting to the debate.I'm not quite sure what the problem is? I legitimately get two votes, and got permission to vote on behalf of the other three because they couldn't be arsed, which to be honest really gets on my goat. Why people throw away their chance to have their say in something, which must be important to them since they pay the political levy is beyond me. As it happens, Ed Miliband was their first choice anyway, the only difference being I made sure Dave was their last preference! As for a union block vote. Its b*llocks, utter b*llocks. All union votes were cast individually. End of story. You want to stop reading Murdoch's trash and try the beano instead.Are you serious jonrover, is it right just to toss your votes over to others to vote on your behalf......try doing that at a proper election ! This is the sort of thing that happens in 3rd. World countries and the very reason why votes are vetted!In the leadership election, David Milliband won in 588 of the 650 seats; an overwhelming 'thrashing' of the eventual winner Ed Milliband and received only 8% of the total donations registered. This was undoubtedly a complete 'stitch up'by the Unions to achieve a result for what can only be described as 'their man' and still folk say their is no such thing as a block vote ? OK I agree it's not a 'block vote' in the traditional sense but not far away from it.Union sources said and I quote....''the bosses of the 4 big Unions held a secret summit to agree a STOP DAVID MILLIBAND candidate shortly after the General Election''. The bosses of the GMB, Unison, CWU, and Unison must be beaming from ear to ear today.As for reading the Beano, I must admit that it has always been my comic of choice.Imo the Labour Party has got the wrong man, nay the weakest man even, to stand their corner on behalf of the 'working man'in the face of the Coalition and all it is preparing to do.Prepare yourselves for another ''winter of discontent' and disruption. When you have to go down difficult economic avenues , the last thing you need is a reactionary Trade Union movement! Bear in mind the difficulties that are being faced in Greece by their current Govt.in the face of civil disobedience and disruption!!Surely this is a time for level heads not.......off with their heads.
hoolahoop wrote:Quotejonrover wrote:Quotehoolahoop wrote:QuoteExtremely enjoyable debate, however I was very interested to read Johnrover's account of democracy in action here goes............''Personally, I voted for Ed five times, (as a Labour party member, Unite political levy payer, and for 3 of my relatives who consigned their vote to the green recycling box) and am delighted he was successful.'' Jeez there was no wonder he won , incidentally could anybody tell me the amount of votes cast individually i.e. none Union block votes ?It was interesting to read that Longbridge (a Liberal) now considered his party to be left of Labour, perhaps you can find a place for Billy in your squad. lolFinally are we all trying to put a square Clegg in a round hole and will Billy eventually tell me what he would have done if he had been Clegg following that election result ? What would he, in his shoes, have looked for in terms of 'real' Coalitions and what would have been his terms ? It is irrelevant whether or not you like/dislike the fella. Academic now I realise but nevertheless interesting to the debate.I'm not quite sure what the problem is? I legitimately get two votes, and got permission to vote on behalf of the other three because they couldn't be arsed, which to be honest really gets on my goat. Why people throw away their chance to have their say in something, which must be important to them since they pay the political levy is beyond me. As it happens, Ed Miliband was their first choice anyway, the only difference being I made sure Dave was their last preference! As for a union block vote. Its b*llocks, utter b*llocks. All union votes were cast individually. End of story. You want to stop reading Murdoch's trash and try the beano instead.Are you serious jonrover, is it right just to toss your votes over to others to vote on your behalf......try doing that at a proper election ! This is the sort of thing that happens in 3rd. World countries and the very reason why votes are vetted!In the leadership election, David Milliband won in 588 of the 650 seats; an overwhelming 'thrashing' of the eventual winner Ed Milliband and received only 8% of the total donations registered. This was undoubtedly a complete 'stitch up'by the Unions to achieve a result for what can only be described as 'their man' and still folk say their is no such thing as a block vote ? OK I agree it's not a 'block vote' in the traditional sense but not far away from it.Union sources said and I quote....''the bosses of the 4 big Unions held a secret summit to agree a STOP DAVID MILLIBAND candidate shortly after the General Election''. The bosses of the GMB, Unison, CWU, and Unison must be beaming from ear to ear today.As for reading the Beano, I must admit that it has always been my comic of choice.Imo the Labour Party has got the wrong man, nay the weakest man even, to stand their corner on behalf of the 'working man'in the face of the Coalition and all it is preparing to do.Prepare yourselves for another ''winter of discontent' and disruption. When you have to go down difficult economic avenues , the last thing you need is a reactionary Trade Union movement! Bear in mind the difficulties that are being faced in Greece by their current Govt.in the face of civil disobedience and disruption!!Surely this is a time for level heads not.......off with their heads.With regard to the vote, I still can't see your problem. They all supported Ed, I made sure they voted accordingly! Get over it! And if Labour have chosen the weakest man then why are you making such an issue of it, along with all the right wing media? And I am completely sick and tired of people saying there HASto be cuts. The deficit as a measure of GDP, without checking, is around 50-60% After the second world war the welfare state, NHS, comprehensive education and decent council housing were all build on the back of a deficit of well over 100% of GDP. The cuts agenda is a complete myth, and simple Tory ideology to finish off what Thatcher started. There are justifiable alternatives. Tax evasion and avoidance costs the economy £120 Billion a year, scrap trident, saving another £80 billion, let America sort out Afghanistan, saving another £30 Billion, and make the fcukers who caused this mess pay back what they owe, plus interest. There is also an idea that every millionaire in the country should pay a one off levy on death of 20%, with the interest on that 20% paid until they kick the bucket. And believe it or not a survey of those eligible for this were mostly supportive of it!http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/aug/15/deficit-crisis-tax-the-richBut the Con-Dem plans just do not add up to me. They will destroy any growth we have in the economy. Growth will reduce the debt as a measure of GDP. Sticking possibly a million people on the dole will not grow us out of debt. It will lower tax revenues and increase benefit payments, and will affect the private sector as businesses go to the wall because no one is spending. I don't give a shite what crap the IMF spout, unless the Con-Dems drastically water down their plans we are heading for a recession like we have not seen for 70 years. If you don't believe me, look across the Irish sea.http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-cameron-needs-to-learn-from-ireland-2038887.html