Hampster Gull
Well-known member
- Dec 22, 2010
- 13,465
Scotland won't vote for independence, fact.
Scotland will be an independent nation in your lifetime. As much "fact" as your statement but far more likely
Scotland won't vote for independence, fact.
Nobody prophesised economic ''meltdown'' , but that is certainly what faces Scotland with Brent at $49 a barrel, they couldnt make the numbers work at $119 a barrel.Luckily we have no recent examples in British history of people voting on a nationalistic agenda despite the weight of economic opinion warning of economic meltdown
Oh
You're right, and they won't make that mistake again. What they could do though is try and position Scotland as the 'Gateway to (rump) Britain'. Tell companies to set up bases in Scotland and that way they'll get the best of both worlds: not only an EU base but a base in the EU nation that has the best trading relationship with RumpUK. Depends of course on the divorce settlement that they negotiate with us - but if unpicking forty five years of European integration is going to be tricky then unpicking centuries of Anglo-Scottish links to the extent where Scotland becomes 'just another EU nation' is going to be nigh-on impossible.Nobody prophesised economic ''meltdown'' , but that is certainly what faces Scotland with Brent at $49 a barrel, they couldnt make the numbers work at $119 a barrel.
Lib Dems are terminally tainted now IMHO. Better to cherry pick Lib Dem talent and get them to defect from that sunk ship.
Labour under Corbyn are the only real alternative for me. I would love the left wing parts of the party to merge with the Greens. Corbyn and Caroline Lucas would be great for the UK .
I could never see a centre ground Labour Party winning anything as they will always get "can't be trusted on the economy" associated with them .
I really hope Corbyn stays and will be voting for him in any leadership election
Last Thursday changed everything. It is going to be quite difficult for the Conservative party to suggest that any other party 'can't be trusted on the economy' when they have shown clearly that they are more concerned with their own internal arguments than with the economic and political stability of the UK. A Labour Party with responsible looking leadership in coalition with the SNP...
With the Unions backing Corbyn's Old Labour.... how would a breakaway party of the semi-electable centre-left fund itself?
Tony Blair could fund it with some of the millions he has made since leaving office, Chilcot report excepting of course as he may have other problems to deal with !
There was something similar 30-odd years ago - the infamous 'Gang of Four' (Shirley Williams, William Rodgers, David Owen and Roy Jenkins). They called it the Social Democratic Party, and elected David Owen as the first leader. They eventually merged with The Liberal Party to form The Liberal Democrats, and had David Owen and David Steele as joint leaders.
Spitting Image had a field day.
Mid 80s sometime.1983 General Election - " Go back to your constituencies and prepare for government! ". Ouch!
P.S. Or was it the 1987 one?
Labour under Corbyn are the only real alternative for me. I would love the left wing parts of the party to merge with the Greens. Corbyn and Caroline Lucas would be great for the UK .
I could never see a centre ground Labour Party winning anything as they will always get "can't be trusted on the economy" associated with them .
I really hope Corbyn stays and will be voting for him in any leadership election
Labour under Corbyn are the only real alternative for me. I would love the left wing parts of the party to merge with the Greens. Corbyn and Caroline Lucas would be great for the UK .
I could never see a centre ground Labour Party winning anything as they will always get "can't be trusted on the economy" associated with them .
I really hope Corbyn stays and will be voting for him in any leadership election
Something I'm hoping for - a new centre party. Will I vote for them - no idea - but it really is time for a new voice.
Couldn't bring myself ever to vote for New Labour which will probably surprise a few on here who have been subject to nappy terrorism.
Why ? mmm difficult but can be described as urban smugness - really winds me up. I voted remain but I gritted my teeth when faced with their hipster fake cool Britannia ad mans wet dream.
That really why I genuinely struggle to generally vote.
Tories - nasty.
Lib Dems - Falmer - nuff said.
New Labour - Bugger off back to Islington and cook your Gnocchi.
Old Labour - Waiting For The Great Leap Forward - but what's that musty smell ? (obviously attractive to students, it's like finding a shit ironic pub that sells cheap beer)
UKIP - F@@@@ off !
What I need is something shiny and new that I can irrationally hate slightly less than the rest.
Yeah, I often hear it bandied about that some sort of Labour/Green alliance would be 'great' as if the two parties were natural bedfellows. Well in metropolitan areas such as Brighton that is possibly true, but in 'heartland' Labour, the Greens are viewed with the same level of contempt as the Tories. For example: now we're out of the EU we can bin all their environmental controls surrounding energy production. This means our steel industry can survive (as the cost of energy was one of the major factors) and also ordinary working people can get cheap energy. Preserving jobs and cheap energy. For Heartland Labour that is a great policy; for Metropolitan Labour it's a dreadful retrograde step.Labour under Corbyn are the only real alternative for me. I would love the left wing parts of the party to merge with the Greens. Corbyn and Caroline Lucas would be great for the UK .
I could never see a centre ground Labour Party winning anything as they will always get "can't be trusted on the economy" associated with them .
I really hope Corbyn stays and will be voting for him in any leadership election
Brand new Labour/Green fusion party would be just GRAND. New rules, all historical ties swept away, Caroline Lucas installed as leader. Time for a new politics.
Yeah, I often hear it bandied about that some sort of Labour/Green alliance would be 'great' as if the two parties were natural bedfellows. Well in metropolitan areas such as Brighton that is possibly true, but in 'heartland' Labour, the Greens are viewed with the same level of contempt as the Tories. For example: now we're out of the EU we can bin all their environmental controls surrounding energy production. This means our steel industry can survive (as the cost of energy was one of the major factors) and also ordinary working people can get cheap energy. Preserving jobs and cheap energy. For Heartland Labour that is a great policy; for Metropolitan Labour it's a dreadful retrograde step.
I'm not sure how these two views can now be accommodated in the same party.