birchesgreen
Established Member
Basic competence and humanity would be a start
I would vote for Labour if they seperated from the NEC/Trade Union vote
Camborne in Cornwall is interesting. It was part of Falmouth & Camborne which voted Labour in 2001 but LibDem in 2005. In 2010 boundary changes created a new constituency Camborne & Redruth which voted Conservative.
Labour voters-How would the Conservative Party need to change to attract your vote? For me being a Conservative, I would vote for Labour if they seperated from the NEC/Trade Union vote and became more of a "non-London voice" kind of party than just ideological left-wingism.
I'll also add myself to the 'politically homeless' group.
I was an active Labour member for some years, despite becoming increasingly uneasy about the direction Corbyn was leading the party in. With hindsight, I probably should have left years ago, but only finally did so earlier this year. In the end I figured that Keir Starmer is a pretty good leader whom I can see making a good Prime Minister, but he leads a party that's stuck with Corbyn's legacy of a very toxic culture, a holier-than-thou intolerance towards other viewpoints and a totally unrealistic ideological approach to politics, and I just couldn't support that any more.
Since then, I looked at the LibDems: They ought in many ways to be a natural home for me because my instincts tend to be very pragmatic, concerned about social justice and the environment while also believing in the market economy and maximising individual freedom as much as possible. But I've spent quite a bit of time looking online at what the LibDems are saying at the moment, and I find it very unappealing. In particular, it seems to me that - far from standing up for any identifiable liberal principles, mostly the LibDems currently seem to be falling into the trap of strongly aligning themselves with what I would see as fairly intolerant 'woke' politics and assuming that is the answer to our ills.
As for the Tories - totally out of the question because they seem to have abandoned any kind of moral compass.
Greens - also largely out of the question (other than possibly as a protest vote), even though I regard the environment and climate change as the most important issue of our times, because the Greens seem to have a completely unscientific approach, with a long history of frequently opposing things that are on balance good for combatting climate change (HS2, nuclear power, etc.) without apparently making any attempt to understand what they are opposing.
That seems to rule out all the parties. I suspect I will eventually end up with the LibDems on the basis of least-bad option, but I'm not feeling massively enthusiastic.
Assuming you mean, ex-Labour voters (given the topic of this discussion)....
- Rediscover the meaning of ethical values: MPs and ministers expected to behave honourably and within the law or be sacked. No more Government trying to rip up the constitution or demonize judges and lawyers for doing their jobs whenever the Government doesn't get its own way. And no more fighting election campaigns by basically non-stop lying about their opponents.
- Acknowledge that everyone is important and deserves a voice. No more 'dog-whistle' politics that try to secure votes from one group of people by demonizing some other group of people.
- More credible focus on the environment, and stop caving in to the motorist lobby. The Tories have actually improved an awful lot on this in recent years, but I still get the sense that they talk about green issues while in practice dragging their feet when it comes to action. And I'm not yet convinced that the improvement is permanent.
- I've no beef with their support for the market economy, but it needs to be part of a better articulated vision of how it can help everyone, including less fortunate members of society.
- A more internationalist approach to World relations and international affairs. No more petty nationalism.
- Supporting electoral reform and proportional representation would be a huge for me.
If they can do all that, then I might start seriously looking at them favourably.
I'm not sure it's so unrealistic: New Zealand has, for all practical purposes, achieved close to zero-Covid, and Australia and several Asian countries aren't too far behind. Obviously, to achieve that, they acted earlier than the UK and have had fairly strict quarantines on people coming into the country, something we've been reluctant to do here.
It seems to me a massive contrast to be voting for Farage, but still considering Labour. Although of course, nothing is black and white with political views.I can't believe I'm saying this but at this point, I'll be voting for Farage in the next election unless Starmer redeems himself post COVID or Conservatives have a decent leader.
I just hope his party is available in Scottish constituencies - would not vote SNP if forced to at gunpoint.
I can't believe I'm saying this but at this point, I'll be voting for Farage in the next election unless Starmer redeems himself post COVID or Conservatives have a decent leader.
I just hope his party is available in Scottish constituencies - would not vote SNP if forced to at gunpoint.
I can't believe I'm saying this but at this point, I'll be voting for Farage in the next election unless Starmer redeems himself post COVID or Conservatives have a decent leader.
I just hope his party is available in Scottish constituencies - would not vote SNP if forced to at gunpoint.
As somebody living in the next constituency who has voted Lib Dem in every General Election since 1992, and seen one elected on many occasions until recently, I cannot concur with your verdict on Candy Atherton, who didn't come well out of the 'expenses scandal', not so much because of the scale of her claims but what they were for, the Lib Dem equivalent of the taxpayers paying for an MP's moat. It did not go down well with the impoverished constituents of Camborne and Redruth: I recall other press stories around that time that painted her in a less than flattering light. Camborne had allowed itself to be seduced by the dubious charms of the entryist Sebastian Coe for the Conservatives in 1992 (although, in truth, it would have been the Falmouth half of the then constituency that elected him) and were now keen to be represented by someone not so nakedly seen to be in it for themselves.Indeed - that boundary change didn’t help the Lib Dem MP at all. She was (and still is) an absolute star and would unquestionably have been a Minister in the Coaltion Governement, and was being lined up for leadership.
As somebody living in the next constituency who has voted Lib Dem in every General Election since 1992, and seen one elected on many occasions until recently, I cannot concur with your verdict on Candy Atherton, who didn't come well out of the 'expenses scandal', not so much because of the scale of her claims but what they were for, the Lib Dem equivalent of the taxpayers paying for an MP's moat. It did not go down well with the impoverished constituents of Camborne and Redruth: I recall other press stories around that time that painted her in a less than flattering light. Camborne had allowed itself to be seduced by the dubious charms of the entryist Sebastian Coe for the Conservatives in 1992 (although, in truth, it would have been the Falmouth half of the then constituency that elected him) and were now keen to be represented by someone not so nakedly seen to be in it for themselves.
Any party except for the SNP is on the menu for me depending on who they serve up as leader. As it stands as of today, a vote for Farage from me is more of a protest vote at the current abysmal leadership we have and whilst Farage is a definite opportunist, I do feel it's crucial that someone in the political world speaks up about the deadly effects of lockdowns.It seems to me a massive contrast to be voting for Farage, but still considering Labour. Although of course, nothing is black and white with political views.
You don’t have to answer, but what appeals to you about Farage? Regardless of his views, he seems to regularly lie and make u-turns, very much like the current government. He portrays an image of being anti-establishment, despite having an establishment background which seems very dishonest to me. He has also failed to become an MP on 7 occasions.
This is exactly why I feel more of an alignment to Lib Dem than to any other party. Alas you've summed up the difficulties very well.The lib dems are what huge numbers of people would want if you actually forced it out of them: a progressive party with sensible policies which - and this is the big one - not in thrall to vested interests and their lobbyists. Of course it is that last point that which is the reason there is no media coverage. They are perpetual outsiders.
Peter Hitchens was saying on Talk Radio recently that despite Labour voting with the Government on most actions, he doesn't think it will impact them too negatively come the next election, citing how the Tories voted with the Government on Iraq but Labour are almost wholly blamed/remembered for it. He believes the economic damage will largely be attributed to the incumbent Government, like has been the case in previous recessions.
On here many of us appear to be well informed and will think otherwise to this statement, however no particular platform is representative of the average voter, who may well think otherwise to our views.
Interestingly, my dad was semi-seriously considering standing as an independent last time, but never got around to it. Obviously there would have been no chance of him winning (very safe Conservative seat), but it would have been interesting to see what happened.I'm mulling the idea of standing as an independent in the next election. I'll almost certainly lose but Labour are never ever going to get in here and I think people might be persuaded next time around to vote for a "normal" aligned with their interests.
I'm not going to critise the government over Corona too much because it was something unpresedented in my lifetime and the chances of any government handling it totally right was never going to happen, and of course 'handling it correctly' is open to intrepretation depending on your viewpoint.
I'm not going not get into a Corona debate on this thread and I know a lot on here are anti lockdown which I'm not , but what I do know is that the hospital I was in a couple of weeks ago was very close to the limit, yes the government havent got it prefect by any means far from it, but I doubt Labour would have done any better, I'm more concerned what the general policies of the parties will be going forward, and I think all the parties still approach things from a 20th century perspective, when they should be looking at new ways to approach things from a 21st century perpective.But there is a difference between having a consistent policy (which different people may or may not agree with), and a constant stream of knee-jerk reactions ansd backtracking, and taking actions based on claims which contradict the actual data (e.g. claims that hospitals were already overwhelmed at the beginning of the latest lockdown, which the data shows they weren't, and many other similar cases).
Absolutely - it's so much more than just Covid (though for some people, they don't seem to be able to discuss anything else) and Farage is just an odious, right wing, dog whistler.I'm not going not get into a Corona debate on this thread and I know a lot on here are anti lockdown which I'm not , but what I do know is that the hospital I was in a couple of weeks ago was very close to the limit, yes the government havent got it prefect by any means far from it, but I doubt Labour would have done any better, I'm more concerned what the general policies of the parties will be going forward, and I think all the parties still approach things from a 20th century perspective, when they should be looking at new ways to approach things from a 21st century perpective.
Being more Centrist is where Labour HAS to be in order to be relevant, binding the old beliefs with the understanding that the world has changed. Hopefully, Starmer is now beginning to rebuild the Labour party into something that is reflective of what the electorate actually wants whilst also being true to its traditions; as a party of the working classes rather than some student protest or ageing middle class lefties fixated on class warfare, gender pronouns, and Palestine.
I certainly agree they need to bring PR in, and actually polling of Labour membership shows strong support that means it has a good chance of uniting the party enough for an election campaign centred on it, if that policy happens. If they split after the election they'll eventually realise they need to work together to get some form of power, which might actually make them more cohesive in future elections.They set the bridge on fire and are now upset that it's still burning.
The Labour party is simply finished, it can't put the coalition back together, and the best bet Keir has of getting into Number 10 is to put proportional representation into the manifesto and accept that the party will split itself into at least three peices after that is in place.
That might be enough to get the various wingso f the party to trust each other enough for one more election, but I doubt it.
I certainly agree they need to bring PR in, and actually polling of Labour membership shows strong support that means it has a good chance of uniting the party enough for an election campaign centred on it, if that policy happens. If they split after the election they'll eventually realise they need to work together to get some form of power, which might actually make them more cohesive in future elections.