It means someone who has no beliefs , a centrist believes in nothing
Ridiculous analogy, stick to reviewing the Cliftonville where you’re likely to find another dribbling tard to listen you....
It means someone who has no beliefs , a centrist believes in nothing
Ridiculous analogy, stick to reviewing the Cliftonville where you’re likely to find another dribbling rearward to listener you....
So what choices do the electorate have?
1. A hard-left Labour Party led by 70-year old anti-Semite Jeremy Corbyn (already one GE defeat under his belt)..
2. A hard right Brexit-supporting Tory Party led by a weak robot with no sense of rhythm.
3. A centrist party with a handful of MPs, a 75-year old leader, a whole ton of baggage and a Pro-EU agenda that has no hope of appealing to Leavers.
On that basis I'd say a broad consensus middle ground party supporting a Second Referendum on the terms of the EU Deal stands to get a sizeable vote, but only if they get big hitters from both Left, Right and (preferably) outside of politics to give it that "non-establishment" sprinkle that worked so well for Trump and Macron.
The likes of Soubry, Grieve, Umunna, David Miliband should go for it. I'd also like to see Gina Miller in the mix.
That would be a party I could get enthusiastic about.
Whilst I think there is a popular desire for a centrist party to appear, it would only work as part of a coalition government (if first-past-the-post) or alongside a complete overhaul in our government structure and electoral process. I don't think they could gain more than 1/3 of the votes.
For as long as we maintain a confrontational democracy (where the duty of the opposition is to oppose the government, always presenting an alternative view) we would never get a working majority in government that could do anything (not necessarily a bad thing!).
If the whip system were removed and all MPs voted according to their belief in the proposal being voted on then the "average" MP would be a true centrist... but for as long as the centrists are required to tow their party lines or face retribution, we are destined to lurch right then left then right again and never get an outcome which most voters would agree to be the best solution.
The likes of Soubry, Grieve, Umunna, David Miliband should go for it. I'd also like to see Gina Miller in the mix..
Just as I expect quite a few remain voters have come round to accepting Brexit.
Multi party?I agree with a lot of this and yet MPs want to spend £3.5 billion repairing our crumbling Houses of Parliament so they can continue the archaic practice of baying at each other from across the benches in some boorish Oxbridge debating chamber display. That may have suited the Whigs vs Tory 2-party system in Queen Victoria's reign but the chamber is not fit for purpose in a 21st Century multi-party democracy.
IMHO a new, modern, lighter, airier, circular building would have been preferable.
That's a bit like saying we should drop Murray for a younger faster striker who will score twenty five goals a season. Just like Labour needing a leader who'll appeal to mainstream voters, we haven't got one!
Starmer?
He wouldn't even score double figures, let alone 25 in a season!
But can he play left back?
Totally agree. His name is too toxic, unfortunately.
Blair probably the worst prime minister we've ever had in terms of what was achieved .
Gets hammered for the war though and if he ever came back a lot of people and the press would never let that go.