Xenophon PCDGS
Veteran Member
No energy price cap in the Queen's Speech.
Was there anything else about energy mentioned, as I missed the programme.
No energy price cap in the Queen's Speech.
Was there anything else about energy mentioned, as I missed the programme.
I'm not so certain the Tories under Cameron were as centrist as people seem to think. Socially yeah (I'll give him that, I can't have seen many other Tory PM's getting same sex marriage passed the commons for example), but economically? Using the global crash as an excuse for ideologically based austerity doesn't sound very centre ground to me. But as others have said there has also certainly been a lurch to the right in social policy since the referendum too.
Her demise comes ever nearer and hopefully with it the Tories will come back to the centre ground.
Unless Ken Clarke or Anna Soubry become leader I can't see that happening. With the Conservatives losing a lot of marginals to Labour at the recent election, they also lost a number of their more centralist MPs.
I can. Tories took a big swing to the right under May and got a battering for it. Many people who were traditional Labour supporters voted Tory simply because they believe in hard Brexit (even though they are likely to be worst affected by the repercussions of Brexit). Without that Brexit vote share from Labour the Tories would have been have probably lost being the biggest party. If they fail to come back towards the centre ground I can foresee a pretty big loss come 2022. We probably won't have another election before Brexit actually happens so the Tories can kiss goodbye to the traditional Labour vote they captured via Brexit stance. The Tories either come back to the centre ground or face an even bigger battering come 2022.
2022 is a very long time in the future politics-wise and much can happen in the interim period till then. You only need to see how Labour were perceived after the 2015 General Election which was a low point for the party and compare it to their current high ratings as an example for that.
So why are we so different from so much of the rest of Europe?The majority of voters are not in the centre ground, its just you can pick up a tiny handful of the other major party's voters and retain most of your base.
Why is it that our politics has to be defined by two groups sitting just far enough apart not to be able to harm those opposite with their swords?
The last 20 years has taught us one lesson: the centre ground is always death in the end.
The party might pick up some floating voters but it's base starts to crumble.
The majority of voters are not in the centre ground, its just you can pick up a tiny handful of the other major party's voters and retain most of your base.
Especially since the "centre ground" now appears to be laissez-faire capitalism where the state is evil and the meerkat must be worshipped.
I am not so sure.
The whole idea of party loyalty seems to have collapsed.
We have unprecedent numbers of floating voters.
Especially since the "centre ground" now appears to be laissez-faire capitalism where the state is evil and the meerkat must be worshipped.
So, here we are - the day after the Queen's speech and Mrs. May still doesn't actually have a confidence and supply deal in place.There is a "very good" chance the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and Conservatives will agree a parliamentary deal by next week, a DUP MP has said.
Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said that it was a case of "the sooner, the better".
Theresa May is seeking the support of the DUP's 10 MPs after losing her majority in the general election.
Both sides have been talking, but have not confirmed a deal to support a Conservative minority government.
Sir Jeffrey said that the prime minister had been "moving this process forward" and was "engaged".
He added: "I'll say this about Ulster men and Ulster women, we're no pushover."
The last 20 years has taught us one lesson: the centre ground is always death in the end.
I completely disagree. I think it teaches us the importance of the centre ground.
It was only FPTP that kept Labour from being destroyed in 1983, the SDP came to within 750,000 votes of Labour but that 750,000 vote difference translated into almost 180 seats. They gradually moved back towards the centre in 87 and 92, and with it came closer to being elected.
Meanwhile the Tories lurched to the right 92-97 because the centrist John Major couldn't control his whackjob back benchers, and were almost wiped out in 97. Not learning their lesson, they repeated the same mistake in 2001 and, to a lesser extent, in 2005.
The Tories only got closer to power when they moved towards the centre, and even then couldn't win a majority in 2010 and only just scraped a majority in 2015 on the back of a LibDem collapse and fearmongering about the SNP.
FPTP means you have to appeal to a narrow demographic in a small band of seats to win an election. If you swing too far in either direction then you won't appeal to this narrow demographic.
It was only FPTP that kept Labour from being destroyed in 1983, the SDP came to within 750,000 votes of Labour but that 750,000 vote difference translated into almost 180 seats. They gradually moved back towards the centre in 87 and 92, and with it came closer to being elected.
I can understand people voting Labour because they aren't the Conservatives, but what I really can't understand is anyone having sheer enthusiasm for Corbyn and his bunch. To me he comes over as a not-particularly-bright smug self-righteous schoolteacher type who is not living in the real world.
According to the BBC (can't quote it at the moment), if 50 people had voted differently, the Tories would have an effective majority.
So, here we are - the day after the Queen's speech and Mrs. May still doesn't actually have a confidence and supply deal in place.
When the vote due on the Queens Speech?
I had read that they expected five days of debate, so if that's working days then next Wednesday.Next week - someone may know the actual day.
But not because they moved close to the centre, but because they moved loser to the views of their base.I completely disagree. I think it teaches us the importance of the centre ground.
It was only FPTP that kept Labour from being destroyed in 1983, the SDP came to within 750,000 votes of Labour but that 750,000 vote difference translated into almost 180 seats. They gradually moved back towards the centre in 87 and 92, and with it came closer to being elected.
And then they went full-on liberal in 2010 and failed to achieve a majority. Before shifting right again in 2015 and obtaining that majority.Meanwhile the Tories lurched to the right 92-97 because the centrist John Major couldn't control his whackjob back benchers, and were almost wiped out in 97. Not learning their lesson, they repeated the same mistake in 2001 and, to a lesser extent, in 2005.
I would argue they moved away from centre in 2015 and won as a result.The Tories only got closer to power when they moved towards the centre, and even then couldn't win a majority in 2010 and only just scraped a majority in 2015 on the back of a LibDem collapse and fearmongering about the SNP.
But not because they moved close to the centre, but because they moved loser to the views of their base.
Party Activists and Party Voters are not and I don't think have ever been the same thing.The 1983 manifesto was written by party activists, and that's why it bombed. The same applied to the Tory manifesto in 2001.
You don't win elections by appealing to your core voters. You win elections by appealing to the swing voters in marginal constituencies. And you don't appeal to those people with radical ideas. This has been proven countless times.
BBC News said:The Conservative Party has denied claims it broke electoral law by using a Neath call centre to canvass voters during the general election campaign.
An investigation by Channel 4 claimed the UK Tories contracted Blue Telecoms to conduct marketing campaigns ahead of the vote on 8 June.
The Information Commissioners Officer confirmed it would be asking the Tories about the calls.
A Conservative spokesman said all the calls were compliant with the law.
Blue Telecoms has been contacted for a comment.
An undercover investigation by C4 News, broadcast on Thursday, claimed the workers may have been carrying out paid canvassing, banned under electoral law, as they promoted key Conservative messages to undecided voters in the weeks before the election.
The investigation claimed that calls were made to voters in key marginal seats, including Bridgend, Gower, Clwyd South and Wrexham.
At the start of the election campaign, the information commissioner, Elizabeth Denham, contacted all parties to remind them of the law around direct marketing.
A Conservative party spokesman denied the allegations, saying: "Political parties of all colours pay for market research and direct marketing calls.
"All the scripts supplied by the party for these calls are compliant with data protection and information law".
A spokesman for the Information Commissioner's Office said it would take action against any party which had not "followed the law".
"We will be asking the Conservative Party about the marketing campaigns conducted from this call centre," he said.