General Election Dec 2019 thread
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- UndercoverElephant
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General Election Dec 2019 thread
Ladies and Gentlemen, your opening predictions please!
Mine:
This election will end up being viewed as the third great political shock the established pundits didn't see coming. Brexit, Trump, Corbyn. There will be no tory-bxp pact. Tories will stand in all mainland seats, and the BXP will stand in almost all of them.
Result will be the tories as the largest party, but at least 30 seats short of a majority. Labour will need both the SNP and the LDs to form a majority, and will do a deal with both of them to put Corbyn in Downing Street. Three referendums will follow - the first on brexit, the second on electoral reform and the third on Scottish independence.
Mine:
This election will end up being viewed as the third great political shock the established pundits didn't see coming. Brexit, Trump, Corbyn. There will be no tory-bxp pact. Tories will stand in all mainland seats, and the BXP will stand in almost all of them.
Result will be the tories as the largest party, but at least 30 seats short of a majority. Labour will need both the SNP and the LDs to form a majority, and will do a deal with both of them to put Corbyn in Downing Street. Three referendums will follow - the first on brexit, the second on electoral reform and the third on Scottish independence.
The Tories under Johnson are selling out the Leave vote no less than Labour would. Johnson's Brexit "deal" is little more than May's surrender treaty with lipstick on.
The only party that is currently in the pubic consciousness right now that is advocating a WTO Brexit, where we start from a position of total return of democratic sovereignty, is the Brexit party.
However, Johnson's administration has made it clear, yesterday and today, that no pact will be formed with the Brexit party in the election. This, in turn, could lead to the leave voted being split. But, not in terms of allowing both Brexit party and Tory party MPs to go to Westminster (that would require a non-aggression pact). Rather, in terms of stopping either of them getting a constituency majority and so allowing a Labour or Lib Dem candidate to win (Yes, I am aware of that UE). In turn, allowing a Labour/SNP/Lib Dem coalition to assume power even though they may actually have less than 50% of the popular vote countrywide.
If the above does come to pass and this country does not get its sovereignty returned, I predict troops being used on the streets of this nation to keep the peace within a decade.
In other words, I predict significant bloodshed at some point.
But, then, I was probably predicting that anyway.
The only party that is currently in the pubic consciousness right now that is advocating a WTO Brexit, where we start from a position of total return of democratic sovereignty, is the Brexit party.
However, Johnson's administration has made it clear, yesterday and today, that no pact will be formed with the Brexit party in the election. This, in turn, could lead to the leave voted being split. But, not in terms of allowing both Brexit party and Tory party MPs to go to Westminster (that would require a non-aggression pact). Rather, in terms of stopping either of them getting a constituency majority and so allowing a Labour or Lib Dem candidate to win (Yes, I am aware of that UE). In turn, allowing a Labour/SNP/Lib Dem coalition to assume power even though they may actually have less than 50% of the popular vote countrywide.
If the above does come to pass and this country does not get its sovereignty returned, I predict troops being used on the streets of this nation to keep the peace within a decade.
In other words, I predict significant bloodshed at some point.
But, then, I was probably predicting that anyway.
Last edited by Little John on 30 Oct 2019, 09:36, edited 4 times in total.
Re: General Election Dec 2019 thread
The SNP might support Corbyn, the price would be legally binding IndyRef2. The LibDems, no chance.UndercoverElephant wrote:Result will be the tories as the largest party, but at least 30 seats short of a majority. Labour will need both the SNP and the LDs to form a majority, and will do a deal with both of them to put Corbyn in Downing Street. Three referendums will follow - the first on brexit, the second on electoral reform and the third on Scottish independence.
I think the most likely outcome is a badly hung parliament with neither Labour or Tories able to form a majority. 2nd most likely is a modest Tory majority. I don't expect BP get more than 10 seats. LibDem likely over 40.
- UndercoverElephant
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Re: General Election Dec 2019 thread
If the tories+bxp+dup are short of a majority then the libdems will have no choice but to support Corbyn. He'll be offering a referendum that remain will probably win, and if Swinson refuses to go for this then we're looking at a potential no deal. If the libdems let no deal happen in that situation, then they are completely finished as a political party.clv101 wrote:The SNP might support Corbyn, the price would be legally binding IndyRef2. The LibDems, no chance.UndercoverElephant wrote:Result will be the tories as the largest party, but at least 30 seats short of a majority. Labour will need both the SNP and the LDs to form a majority, and will do a deal with both of them to put Corbyn in Downing Street. Three referendums will follow - the first on brexit, the second on electoral reform and the third on Scottish independence.
I think the most likely outcome is a badly hung parliament with neither Labour or Tories able to form a majority. 2nd most likely is a modest Tory majority. I don't expect BP get more than 10 seats. LibDem likely over 40.
I believe they will demand electoral reform as the price of supporting Corbyn, and he will agree.
- UndercoverElephant
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There is a possibility that the brexit party starts making ground on the tories. This would happen if scrutiny of Johnson's deal leads more leave voters to agree with your assessment of the deal. This could be a nightmare scenario for the tories. If the brexit party starts nudging its way into the high teens then Corbyn might not even need the libdems in a confidence and supply agreement. Instead we'd be heading towards a formal coalition between labour and the SNP, or even a bizarre labour majority on the smallest vote share for a winning party in any UK election ever.Little John wrote:The Tories under Johnson are selling out the Leave vote no less than Labour would. Johnson's Brexit "deal" is little more than May's surrender treaty with lipstick on.
The only party that is currently in the pubic consciousness right now that is advocating a WTO Brexit, where we start from a position of total return of democratic sovereignty, is the Brexit party.
However, Johnson's administration has made it clear, yesterday and today, that no pact will be formed with the Brexit party in the election. This, in turn, could lead to the leave voted being split. But, not in terms of allowing both Brexit party and Tory party MPs to go to Westminster (that would require a non-aggression pact). Rather, in terms of stopping either of them getting a constituency majority and so allowing a Labour or Lib Dem candidate to win (Yes, I am aware of that UE). In turn, allowing a Labour/SNP/Lib Dem coalition to assume power even though they may actually have less than 50% of the popular vote countrywide.
And you think that does not end in bloodshed?UndercoverElephant wrote:There is a possibility that the brexit party starts making ground on the tories. This would happen if scrutiny of Johnson's deal leads more leave voters to agree with your assessment of the deal. This could be a nightmare scenario for the tories. If the brexit party starts nudging its way into the high teens then Corbyn might not even need the libdems in a confidence and supply agreement. Instead we'd be heading towards a formal coalition between labour and the SNP, or even a bizarre labour majority on the smallest vote share for a winning party in any UK election ever.Little John wrote:The Tories under Johnson are selling out the Leave vote no less than Labour would. Johnson's Brexit "deal" is little more than May's surrender treaty with lipstick on.
The only party that is currently in the pubic consciousness right now that is advocating a WTO Brexit, where we start from a position of total return of democratic sovereignty, is the Brexit party.
However, Johnson's administration has made it clear, yesterday and today, that no pact will be formed with the Brexit party in the election. This, in turn, could lead to the leave voted being split. But, not in terms of allowing both Brexit party and Tory party MPs to go to Westminster (that would require a non-aggression pact). Rather, in terms of stopping either of them getting a constituency majority and so allowing a Labour or Lib Dem candidate to win (Yes, I am aware of that UE). In turn, allowing a Labour/SNP/Lib Dem coalition to assume power even though they may actually have less than 50% of the popular vote countrywide.
This talk of widespread bloodshed is a broken record now. Please stop repeating it, it isn't going to happen unless no deal brexit happens (and even then 2-3 years down the road).
The result will be a hung parliament with labour having around 5 more seats than the tories. They won't get a coalition but the snp and libdems will go into a confidence and supply agreement that also requires a 2nd ref after a short renegotiation period which will lead to a stable-enough government for now.
1 year on it'll fall apart and they'll be another general election in the first half of 2021. Another hung parliament although a proper coalition is formed this time (lab-lib no corbyn) and there'll be parliamentary reforms regarding voting method and how we govern, with more split between the executive and the legislature and more formalisation of the consitution on broad terms - no more "gentlemen's" agreements, there are none in politics anymore.
Scotland will get it's second referendum and this time will leave. Ultimately they'll probably regret it economically imo.
The result will be a hung parliament with labour having around 5 more seats than the tories. They won't get a coalition but the snp and libdems will go into a confidence and supply agreement that also requires a 2nd ref after a short renegotiation period which will lead to a stable-enough government for now.
1 year on it'll fall apart and they'll be another general election in the first half of 2021. Another hung parliament although a proper coalition is formed this time (lab-lib no corbyn) and there'll be parliamentary reforms regarding voting method and how we govern, with more split between the executive and the legislature and more formalisation of the consitution on broad terms - no more "gentlemen's" agreements, there are none in politics anymore.
Scotland will get it's second referendum and this time will leave. Ultimately they'll probably regret it economically imo.
What, you think people like you are capable of proper civil unrest and violence with your pretty painted blue faces and trendy middle class demos? All because you did not get you undemocratic way?cubes wrote:This talk of widespread bloodshed is a broken record now. Please stop repeating it, it isn't going to happen unless no deal brexit happens (and even then 2-3 years down the road).
The result will be a hung parliament with labour having around 5 more seats than the tories. They won't get a coalition but the snp and libdems will go into a confidence and supply agreement that also requires a 2nd ref after a short renegotiation period which will lead to a stable-enough government for now.
1 year on it'll fall apart and they'll be another general election in the first half of 2021. Another hung parliament although a proper coalition is formed this time (lab-lib no corbyn) and there'll be parliamentary reforms regarding voting method and how we govern, with more split between the executive and the legislature and more formalisation of the consitution on broad terms - no more "gentlemen's" agreements, there are none in politics anymore.
Scotland will get it's second referendum and this time will leave. Ultimately they'll probably regret it economically imo.
You joker. You have no f*cking idea.
- UndercoverElephant
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It's all froth. All bark and no bite. He's actually harmless.cubes wrote:You're getting abusive to both other people and myself on here with your insistence that the country will rise up if we get anything except the harshest of no-deal brexits. I'm amazed that nothing has been done about it so far.
At a personal level, if someone is personally kind and respectful to me, I am the same in return. In terms of any other facets of me, personally or in terms of my social background, you don't know me UE. Don't make assumptions.UndercoverElephant wrote:It's all froth. All bark and no bite. He's actually harmless.cubes wrote:You're getting abusive to both other people and myself on here with your insistence that the country will rise up if we get anything except the harshest of no-deal brexits. I'm amazed that nothing has been done about it so far.
Last edited by Little John on 02 Nov 2019, 18:13, edited 2 times in total.
- UndercoverElephant
- Posts: 13585
- Joined: 10 Mar 2008, 00:00
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Getting back to the actual topic.
Can anybody tell me how the tories and BXP could manage to avoid splitting the leave vote?
Farage has the power to stop Johnson in his tracks - to inflict massive damage to the tories at the election. He thinks he has the right to use this power as leverage to force the tories to give him a free run at a significant number of labour seats, which would give the BXP a proper foothold in Westminster.
Johnson would be bonkers to agree to any such thing. He thinks the tories have a chance of taking those seats themselves, at least if the BXP doesn't run. More importantly, he can't ditch his deal, because he needs the votes of people who won't accept a no deal brexit and are scared of Corbyn.
Is Farage going to chicken out at the last moment, because he's scared of losing brexit altogether and has realised the tories aren't going to back down on this? I don't think his supporters would let him, even if he was inclined that way himself.
this dilemma is rapidly being recognised for what it is by both sides. Read the comments on these articles on Conservativehome.com if you don't believe me. Not the articles themselves, but what the tory and brexit party supporters are saying about them:
https://www.conservativehome.com/thetor ... l#comments
https://www.conservativehome.com/video/ ... l#comments
All they are arguing about is who is to blame for getting them into this mess, not the nature of the mess.
This means it now looks highly probable that the brexit party will stand in most or all mainland seats. And that is very bad news for the tories, and makes the result of this election wildly unpredictable. My guess is it means we are going to have an extraordinarily hung parliament with either
(a) a tory - libdem coalition which holds a remain vs deal referendum
or
(b) a Labour-SNP coalition which holds remain vs labour deal referendum, then a second Scottish independence referendum
Can anybody tell me how the tories and BXP could manage to avoid splitting the leave vote?
Farage has the power to stop Johnson in his tracks - to inflict massive damage to the tories at the election. He thinks he has the right to use this power as leverage to force the tories to give him a free run at a significant number of labour seats, which would give the BXP a proper foothold in Westminster.
Johnson would be bonkers to agree to any such thing. He thinks the tories have a chance of taking those seats themselves, at least if the BXP doesn't run. More importantly, he can't ditch his deal, because he needs the votes of people who won't accept a no deal brexit and are scared of Corbyn.
Is Farage going to chicken out at the last moment, because he's scared of losing brexit altogether and has realised the tories aren't going to back down on this? I don't think his supporters would let him, even if he was inclined that way himself.
this dilemma is rapidly being recognised for what it is by both sides. Read the comments on these articles on Conservativehome.com if you don't believe me. Not the articles themselves, but what the tory and brexit party supporters are saying about them:
https://www.conservativehome.com/thetor ... l#comments
https://www.conservativehome.com/video/ ... l#comments
All they are arguing about is who is to blame for getting them into this mess, not the nature of the mess.
This means it now looks highly probable that the brexit party will stand in most or all mainland seats. And that is very bad news for the tories, and makes the result of this election wildly unpredictable. My guess is it means we are going to have an extraordinarily hung parliament with either
(a) a tory - libdem coalition which holds a remain vs deal referendum
or
(b) a Labour-SNP coalition which holds remain vs labour deal referendum, then a second Scottish independence referendum