Weststander
Well-known member
I would tend to agree in more normal times, as were the times when the SDP was born, but the big difference this time around is Brexit of course. If there were enough serious MPs considering a break-away broadly centrist, pro-EU, progressive party that could become a serious challenge, gaining enough support from the growing moderate 'dispossessed' electorate, then that is a very different proposition to the position in the 1980s. It would be a huge gamble but one that would have a better chance of eventually getting into power or holding the balance of power than the SDP experiment.
I wish that would happen, but really don’t think it will. Umanna, Starma, Cooper, etc won’t have the courage. It would split the Labour vote in constituencies, so one way or another it would be very hard for them to win at a GE. Alas.
If only. With moderate Tory MP’s (yes, there are many, but they don’t hold the headlines), parliament could have a very sensible, centrist compositon.
Instead, like most democracies, our politics has been polarising.