sussex_guy2k2
Well-known member
- Jun 6, 2014
- 4,078
Its unfortunate that many around that age and many more who are generally uninformed will vote based on rhetoric, slogans or party propaganda, or based on personality over substance, they will believe empty promises and vote accordingly.
There are many on here who may have a different more hard left political view to me, but thats a perfectly acceptable and principled position for those that argue for their position and understand it.
I wonder what % of any voters truly know the history of various parties, what they actually stand for or whether they can deliver what they actually promise.
I'm guessing nearly every individual would in life believe in Labour type social justice policies but those on the left disregard or ignore the fact the country simply cannot afford them, high debt and deficit means pain at some point and interest payments (which are higher than the education budget) is a road to nowhere. I also guess most people actually manage their own lives more like a fiscal conservative. Whilst some will struggle with maxed out credit cards and loans, most if they earn 1000-2000 per month live within those means and if they use the credit card a bit have a plan to pay it back, they dont buy everything they wish for, stacking up huge problems in the future that will require painful sacrifices or bankruptcy. Running down your finances today as in running down the economy may bring temporary highs but it is not any platform for sustained purchasing of anything.
If only the Lib Dems weren't so pro Europe, they have an excellent balance of social justice and fiscal competence. Wheras Labour have social justice and fiscal incompetence, and the Tories fiscal competence and lack true social justice. Unfortunately the economy, which affects everyone and everything must always come first. If it doesnt everyone pays with cuts. Everyone should understand this, nothing is for free.
I think many around that age vote based on ideals as they're generally unaffected by life's many concerns. Really, many of them vote for what they believe to be the best future, unabashed by societies many faults. I envy them that ignorant bliss and wish I could vote with such hope.
FYI, an excellent post. I've voted Tory for most of my life for essentially the reasons you've explained, even if I've lived my life by leftie principles outside of my economic preferences. Although, disgusted by the development of this election and by the two main parties, I actually voted Lib Dem for the first time because of what they stood for and because of their pro-Europe stance.