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Sandy Lane wrote:Quote why wasn't Brown given the first chance to talk to the Liberals as is stated d/t the fact he is the sitting PM? It sounds like Cameron is taking the first crack at it.I think that Brown took a gamble when he made his statement from Downing street, he knew that the Lib Dems had constantly stated throughout the campaign that they thought that the party with the most seats should have the first opportunity to form a government, Brown was also pretty sure that the Conservatives would not bow to electoral reform, a probable major condition of the Lib Dems for forming any kind of alliance. So Brown says ok speak to the Conservatives first, taking the moral high ground and hoping that the Lib Dems don`t throw their principles away, but at the same time Brown is also saying Labour will go for electoral reform so when your talks with the conservatives fail, Labour is still here ready to talk to youI hope that makes sense, if it does n`t, I know what i`m on about if no one else does
why wasn't Brown given the first chance to talk to the Liberals as is stated d/t the fact he is the sitting PM? It sounds like Cameron is taking the first crack at it.
Welcome to real politics Mr Clegg.You have two choices.1) Support the Tory party in what will undoubtedly be extremely unpopular measures over the next couple of years. Accept policies that are diametrically opposed to the ones that you had in your manifesto, and be open to the accusation that you are untrustworthy and without principles. Don't get Proportional Representation. Deeply alienate your core support, most of whom are slightly Left of Centre. Ensure that no-one who has left-leaning tendencies ever votes for you again.2) Support a deeply unpopular Labour minority Government. Get PR but be open to the accusation that you put your Party's best interests before those of the country. Have a shotgun put to your head by the Plaid Cymru/SNP MP's whose votes you'd need to pass legislation. Ensure that no-one who has right-leaning tendencies ever votes for you again.Either way, you are in for a kicking from your supporters and/or the electorate.I suspect that young Nick is in the process of realising that he's in a bit of a pickle. He's probably beginning to understand that real politics is a fcuk sight harder than looking straight at a camera on a TV show, remembering questioners' first names and making glib one-liners. It's about tough, hard, unpalatable decisions that will be used to smash you down in the future.Come the next election, he might understand why Brown looks so knackered.PS: There's one bright spot in all of this. Since Cameron and Clegg are flouting the conventions of our constitutional arrangements by ignoring the current PM in their discussions, they are technically guilty of treason. The Queesn must be livid. I'm waiting for them both to be dragged off to the Tower by the Beefeaters and beheaded.PPS: The editor of The Sun should follow them to the gallows. This stupid shite they are putting on their front page about how Brown shouldn;t be allowed to \"squat\" in No.10. Utter, infantile crap. Brown has NO OPTION but to stay as PM until things are sorted out. Where would we be if he did what The Sun suggests and says, \"Ah fcuk it. I've had enough. I'll leave the keys under the bin for you lot when you are ready.\"? It doesn't work like that. He has a DUTY to stay on as PM until there is a viable Government to replace him. Yet another example of Murdoch's rags pursuing their own interests by keeping the general population in ignorance. They COULD have used this situation as a way of helping to educate people about how our political processes work. Some fcuking chance of that eh?
I was just being a bit daft with the unconstitutional comments. But there is a very important issue here, and it highlights Clegg's lack of substance as a serious politician. According to convention (we don't actually have a constitution of course, just a set of commonly agreed ways of doing things according to precedent) the sitting PM has the first chance to try to create a workable majority in the House. Brown COULD do that with support from the Liberals, Plaid Cymru and the SNP. Not ideal by a long stretch, but it's more ideologically coherent than an alliance between Tories and Liberals.Clegg has blown this option out if the water and flouted convention by a thoughtless, off the cuff remark during the election campaign. Had he NOT made that remark, he could have kept his options open now. As it is, he has painted himself into a corner and made it pretty much inevitable that he will have an arrangement with the Tories. As I say, he's going through a painful transition from being an amateur politician whose comments don't mean much, to being someone who is not able to make a single slip without it coming back to bite him (and the country) in the arse. Anybody really think he's up to it?
Which raises the interesting prospect of bankrupting one or more of the political parties. State funding for parties next chaps?!One of my pet hobby horses actually that is. I'm all in favour. It would, 'at a stroke' remove the corruption of vested interests funding parties of their choice and subsequently wielding unhealthy influence in government. 'Donations' would, for me, then be a criminal offence. And while we're on the subject, I'd pay every MP a quarter of a million a year or so and abolish the equally contemptible practice that lots of them indulge in of accepting shed loads of directorships and advisor posts in return for yet more shed loads of money - and selling of influence. That's just about the most corrupt practice of all.BobG