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And how many will simply follow the Party line from which ever party they support? The education should start well before any thought of a referendum otherwise it would be meaningless and too late.Lets face it when I lived in Doncaster up to the mid 70's Labour could have put a red ribbon around a pigs neck and it would have been voted into power, have things changed?
They HAVE to allow the ECB to have the power to underwrite the debt.
I think thats a recipe for disaster.I mean, the ECB cant even pick a cricket team to beat the Indians
Labour now HAS the centre-left, courtesy of Clegg's naïveté. The Tories cannot and will not win by going right-wards. But it may be the only thing Cameron can do to keep his position and delay the incipient schism.
But the economy is booming, there is no recession, all the dead wood companies have gone and we are going to have massive interest rate rises and deflation next week - I know because you have been posting it for the past year. And its all Labours fault anyway. And Labour are going to keep us in Europe which is the only thing people care about. So why are they ahead in the polls?
The good news however is that the Tory's are clinical when it comes to disposing of bad leaders, even dear old Maggie got the knife in the back when they felt she had lost her touch. Labour on the other hand will give a poor leader 10 years before even dreaming of getting rid. The country (at present) don't want Cameron or Miliband as the PM in 2015, but one or the other will be in No.10, and for that reason I don't see the next election giving us a different government, unfortunately. The Lib Dems will lose between 5-13 seats (including gains) Labour will get a gain of about 10-15 but the Tories will probably hold on to most seats. I still think between the Tories and the Lib Dems that they will have enough to continue this coalition because as much as Labour are ahead in the polls I can't see the country believing in Ed Miliband, he just isn't ready to be Leader and he should be head and shoulders above Cameron in the polls if truth be told.
If I were Cameron I'd actively encourage Scottish independence as that would really damage Labour.
And how long do you think he'd last as the leader of the Conservative and Unionist Party after he did?
QuoteAnd how long do you think he'd last as the leader of the Conservative and Unionist Party after he did?A lot longer than if he didn't do it. Labour would lose 41 MPs and the Tories would only lose 1. It's a no-brainer. I'm amazed he can't work that one out. He also needs to pull us out of Europe.If he did these two things he would cement his leadership of the party and go down in history as our greatest ever peace time leader. Labour would be finished (thank God).
Quote from: Mr1Croft on January 28, 2013, 12:10:06 amThe good news however is that the Tory's are clinical when it comes to disposing of bad leaders, even dear old Maggie got the knife in the back when they felt she had lost her touch. Labour on the other hand will give a poor leader 10 years before even dreaming of getting rid. The country (at present) don't want Cameron or Miliband as the PM in 2015, but one or the other will be in No.10, and for that reason I don't see the next election giving us a different government, unfortunately. The Lib Dems will lose between 5-13 seats (including gains) Labour will get a gain of about 10-15 but the Tories will probably hold on to most seats. I still think between the Tories and the Lib Dems that they will have enough to continue this coalition because as much as Labour are ahead in the polls I can't see the country believing in Ed Miliband, he just isn't ready to be Leader and he should be head and shoulders above Cameron in the polls if truth be told.A couple of historical thoughts from a grizzled old head Crofty.Back in the mid 1970s, a Labour Govt was wallowing in interminable economic problems. They weren't entirely to blame for this - they'd inherited a pretty awful situation. But their policies did little to make things better. We seemed stuck in a long-term slump.Labour's leader, Jim Callaghan was a consumate performer. He had an air of confidence, even arrogance about him. He LOOKED like a Prime Minister. By contrast, the Tories were floundering. They had got rid of a bluff, uncomfortable and un-telegenic leader in Heath. But the person they had replaced him with was struggling to be seen as Prime Ministerial material. Maggie Thatcher looked weird. She had a strange habit of sucking her bottom lip in as she spoke, as though she was trying to stop herself gobbing. She sounded weird. Her voice was grating, unpleasant and hectoric.In an option poll in November 1978, the Tories were behind Labour. They had been ahead of Labour for a brief period in 1976 after Labour had the embarrassment of having to go to the IMF for a loan to bay our bills. But even then, the Tories rarely had the sort of leads that labour currently has over this Govt. In that 1978 poll most Tory supporters said that they would prefer Ted Heath as leader, rather than Thatcher. And a huge majority of voters said that they preferred Callaghan to Thatcher as PM, and that Thatcher simply didn't come across as Prime Minister material.And yet, within 6 months, Thatcher won a General Election and stayed in power for 11 years.Funny int it? Anyone who says that Labour cannot win in 2015 because they have a weird looking leader, or because they are not sufficiently far ahead in the polls simply doesn't know their recent history.