Big questions for Milliband tonight. Will he still be leader by next May? I see him as millstone around Labour's neck and they would be better off junking him now and hoping for a boost. He has 'loser' written all over him, I'm afraid.
It is quite intriguing just being a year away from the general election, just who is going to win a majority? (or even whom has the most seats). It really is unclear. If Labour is going to win a majority you would think they would be doing really well last night, but they clearly are not...and I would think as the economy gets better the Tories will pick up votes over the next 12 months. UKIP are a wildcard in all this, just how many votes (and more importantly seats) are they going to get in the big one and how decisive is this going to be. I can only really forsee catastrophe for the LibDems (60+ seats to below 20 IMO). Lets hope Norman Baker gets what he deserves and is shown the red card too
Going back to Labour, Milliband appears so low profile don't you think, Farage has been everywhere on the box in the last 4 weeks, Cameron pops up every now and then as does Clegg, but Milliband is the invisible man. Alex Salmond is on our box more than him at the moment. I saw a party political broadcast by Labour a couple of weeks ago and I don't think I have ever seen one so pitiful, just slagging off Clegg in particular and reverting back to tired and boring old Tory rich man cliches, it was like something from a 14 year old kid, or from a miniscule left leaning party just slinging mud and tired prejudices (SWP for eg) that had no chance of ever gaining power. No attempt to address the issues the country faces....I mean what is Labour's policy/position on housing? the economy? Russia/Ukraine? It is just a void of emptiness. The only thing you ever seem to hear from Milliband when you see him (and his team) is his woeful "The cost of living crisis" mantra/catchphrase.
As an example Europe (which the national poll was all about) these are the positions as I see it UKIP (referendum tomorrow in/out) Tories (renegotiation of UK's position after 2015, followed by referendum in/out 2017) Lib Dem (status quo, possible/probable further integration) Labour ? just what is their postion/policy?
Right now mid term, if they are to win the general election, Labour (as they are not in power) should be walking something like this and they are not, because the disenchanted should be voting for them and they aren't (they are predominately voting UKIP).