Did the quiz, came out as a left social moderate though I believe I'm more inclined to hold a liberal attitude to issues.
My family were all socialist and staunch labour voters.My grandad was Canadian, labour and pro unionist. So much so, I remember him putting a £20 note into a collection for the minors strike down boundary road portslade (which was big money then)
I voted labour and celebrated when Tony Blair won, but became very disillusioned and now I distrust most politicians, whatever party.
These days I struggle to find a truely genuine politician of any party
For those who're interested in where the UK political parties lie, the site politicalcompass.org uses a similar chart (Beware! Theirs is flipped so that Libertarian is at the bottom and Authoritarian at the top, so don't just map it onto the one that BadFish posted in this thread.) and produced this interpretation of the party manifestos for the 2010 election (follow the link for explanation/commentary):
View attachment 52005
Obviously, what the parties have said and done since 2010 (particularly those in office, particulary the Lib-Dems) may differ from what was in their manifestos. An updated chart might look quite different. But there's another chart at the bottom of that page that shows that the major parties have been converging on the same space in the right/authoritarian quadrant for a while, so I doubt they've suddenly abandoned it.
Louis Blanc originally. I'd call it Socialism, if it needs to be called anything. Don't see how it fits with "Authoritarian" on the chart, though.
Having voted for New Labour I think that now we are suffering from a vacuum in their traditional left Libertarian area which is denying many people a genuine choice to oppose the neo Liberals in the top right hand corner.
So most people here are liberal; but the main political parties in this country are (currently) very authoritarian. Hmmmmm.
I did the quiz and, who'd have thought it, I'm "far-left moderate social libertarian"
Doesn't everybody vote for the best candidate?
Surprisingly enough, politics still comes down to three basic premises, 1,I want to be able to make as much money as I can,Tory. 2, I want a society where people can make money but there is an understanding to support the less well off. Lib-Dem. 3, You can make money but the weakest members of society should be supported, Labour.
It all depends on your conscience really.
. You can vote Tory* because you believe in personal freedom, personal responsibility and that a relatively free market economy is the best system for a stable and prosperous democracy. Utter bollocks
*Traditional One Nation Conservatism anyway, not the buffoons in power at the moment
Here's my results:
Surprisingly enough, politics still comes down to three basic premises, 1,I want to be able to make as much money as I can,Tory. 2, I want a society where people can make money but there is an understanding to support the less well off. Lib-Dem. 3, You can make money but the weakest members of society should be supported, Labour.
It all depends on your conscience really.