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Theresa May Statement: June 8th General Election requested

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This snap election is all about Brexit and the disaster around the corner that's going to be with us for years to come. Anything else is just noise to me. As someone who's still angry about how Brexit was decided on such a farcical exercise of duping voters into believing outrageous lies, there's only one sane and logical choice.

A vote for labour is just as much a vote for hard Brexit, as a vote for the conservatives. I don't care what anyone else says, for the first time ever I'll be voting Lib Dems. Might not amount to anything in the end, but I don't give a shit. This is the last chance really for the 16m on the remain camp and those on the other side who's felt remorse about the reality of leaving the single market. If the country still wants a hard Brexit after this, it deserves everything it gets.
 
Nick Clegg will now outlast both Cameron and Osbourne in the Commons (as he is likely to decisively hold Sheffield Hallam).

Politics, man.



We've had opposition debates before. This will be good for Sturgeon and Farron.

Farron is hardly mister charisma though is he? Sturgeon will clean up but it doesn't matter because she's already going to hold all her seats. People will grumble about May and accuse her of running scared but it doesn't matter because she will walk the election no matter what.

The real fight will be between Corbyn and Farron.

Are the Greens going to send both leaders or will it depend on which one of them is 'on' on the day of the debate?
 
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Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
They don't need to change the law. The FTPA says you get a GE if there's a vote of no confidence, which only needs a simple majority, which the Tories have. So, like two weeks or something? I dunno. The point is it wouldn't be a major obstacle, so Labour would come off looking like jellyfish for no gain at all.

Edit: Ninja'd :mad:

She wouldn't even have to do that. She could simply resign as Prime Minister while remaining leader of the Conservative party, refuse to allow any other government to form, and then after two weeks an election gets called automatically. No VoNC needed.
 
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Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Any tips from fellow lefties/progressives in this thread on how to cope with the state of the world at the moment?

I have a young family and I can feel the anxiety and depression caused by knowing Trump is in power in the USA, right-wing nationalism is rising in Europe and that we're facing another 5 years of possibly the largest Tory majority in my lifetime beginning to overwhelm me. Feels helpless and also like we're still at the beginning of this horrible journey.

If you don't mind me asking, which constituency do you live in?
 
She wouldn't even have to do that. She could simply resign as Prime Minister while remaining leader of the Conservative party, refuse to allow any other government to form, and then after two weeks an election gets called automatically. No VoNC needed.

Even easier! Labour voting against would have been absolutely pointless.
 
Investigate your local candidates and make your decision based on who you think is best for your community. Your local MP has a more significant impact on your day to day.

Both places I can vote are strong conservative seats, no chance they'll change really. Have been for years.
 

Pandy

Member
Yes. A lot worse.

I'm trying to imagine what 'a lot worse' would mean in the context of that polling showing a 140 seat swing from Labour to Conservative.

If that's the way you see it fair enough. Short of a parallel dimension machine neither of us can prove one outcome will be better or worse than the other. I just can't see that quietly agreeing to the Conservative proposal is going to help Labour at all, and by at least forcing the issue Labour could put the Tories on the back foot a bit.

EDIT: Sorry, that's a 140 seat swing. Roughly 70 seats going from one to the other. I imagine we'll get a whole pile of more accurate polling (?) over the next few weeks.
 
It's so weird to me that Labour under Corbyn was so lukewarm in support of Remain during the referendum. Freedom of movement and socialism are not inherently contradictory in my opinion. Push for strong unions and widespread collective bargaining to counter any negative effects large-scale labour immigration could have on the labour market and reap all the benefits of being in the common market as well. Basically the line championed by the Swedish Social Democrats
 
I mean, anyone with any common sense thinks this. Wings Over Scotland is just desperate to try and do Labour even worse than they already are, because the death of Labour and the success of the Conservatives in England is only a good thing for the SNP.

Up here the Nats have had a great time tearing Labour to shreds since the referendum, but quietly the opposition in Scotland has been moving away from Labour to the Tories. In last year's Scottish elections, Labour and the Tories drew the constituency vote evenly at 22% each, but the Tories had a 4-point lead, 23% to 19%, in the list vote, and ended up beating them by 7 seats. In a way, that's even more remarkable than the extreme dominance of the SNP, given the visceral hatred of the Tories in Scotland through the 90s and 00s. In the 2015 GE, when the SNP took 50% of the vote, Labour was still 10 points clear of the Tories. If the SNP vote drops off a tad - which is expected - keep an eye on where it goes. The Tories becoming the #2 party in Scotland, while in power? It's not completely impossible.
 
If that's the way you see it fair enough. Short of a parallel dimension machine neither of us can prove one outcome will be better or worse than the other. I just can't see that quietly agreeing to the Conservative proposal is going to help Labour at all, and by at least forcing the issue Labour could put the Tories on the back foot a bit.

A united, competent opposition certainly could have made some political capital out of it, but Labour can't really be described as either right now. There's no guarantee Corbyn would have been able to whip enough of his party to guarantee the bill would not pass. And even if he did, he would need a strong, consistent message about why he chose to vote against it, and would have to fend off accusations of cowardice from all sides (not least from within his own party).
 

PJV3

Member
She wouldn't even have to do that. She could simply resign as Prime Minister while remaining leader of the Conservative party, refuse to allow any other government to form, and then after two weeks an election gets called automatically. No VoNC needed.

Just out of interest, has a PM resigned without a successors name being given to the Queen? I know we have had a PM snuff it before, and Brown went in a strange limbo but with an obvious successor waiting.

The PM going for just a few weeks must be unusual. (you're probably going to name loads)
 

DiGiKerot

Member
I'm confused. Is this debate some unofficial debate that ITV are holding on their own, and inviting the party leaders for?

I mean surely there are debates that she will show up for, right? She didn't start a general election and then just go "fuck yall, I don't want to debate my opposition". She didn't actually do that, right?..

She did do that.
 

D4Danger

Unconfirmed Member
I'm confused. Is this debate some unofficial debate that ITV are holding on their own, and inviting the party leaders for?

I mean surely there are debates that she will show up for, right? She didn't start a general election and then just go "fuck yall, I don't want to debate my opposition". She didn't actually do that, right?..

That's exactly what she did. She's hoping the media will continue to do the work for her and all she has to do is sit back and not say anything too stupid.

Even today the BBC have asked every Labour MP about why Corbyn is so unelectable. Things are going great.
 
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Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Just out of interest, has a PM resigned without a successors name being given to the Queen? I know we have had a PM snuff it before, and Brown went in a strange limbo but with an obvious successor waiting.

The PM going for just a few weeks must be unusual. (you're probably going to name loads)

Not since 1894, but we wouldn't be British if we didn't preserve weird constitutional precedents for the unlikeliest occasions!
 

Maledict

Member
I'm confused. Is this debate some unofficial debate that ITV are holding on their own, and inviting the party leaders for?

I mean surely there are debates that she will show up for, right? She didn't start a general election and then just go "fuck yall, I don't want to debate my opposition". She didn't actually do that, right?..

Yes she did. There is absolutely nothing that requires her to debate. 2010 was the first time we actually had the debates, and that's because Brown was looking for something to avoid the inevitable.

The people in power very rarely want a debate. It brings the PM down to the level of the other leaders, and it gives the opportunity for something to go wrong.
 
The real opposition:

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

His answer was that it's not on the table - the PM called an election because she expects a massive Tory majority. He also said that this will be something that will become clear in the coming weeks. The SNP member kept shouting at him to answer yes or no before being eventually chided by the Speaker.

He's not pre-empting our manifesto announcements, is what he means.

Someone directly asked him if he thinks being gay is a sin though, and he did indeed say it is not a sin and he's proud to have voted through equal marriage, but there is much more to be done on LGBT rights.
 

Trickster

Member
She did do that.

That is fucking insane man. How can the majority of british people intend to vote for someone like that?

Maybe it's because I never really paid much attention to politics outside that of my own country and the US. But it's been shocking for me to learn what the state of british politics are.

Edit - Okay, I guess it doesn't seem quite a crazy if there hasn't really been a history of the current leader to participating in debates. It still seems like something that a leader really should do though. I would never vote for someone who would refuse to participate in a debate with the other candidates, seems so incredibly cowardly.
 

Rodelero

Member
Yes she did. There is absolutely nothing that requires her to debate. 2010 was the first time we actually had the debates, and that's because Brown was looking for something to avoid the inevitable.

The people in power very rarely want a debate. It brings the PM down to the level of the other leaders, and it gives the opportunity for something to go wrong.

Fundamentally, what ought to force Prime Ministers into debating is the fallout with the public if they don't. It's quite alarming that people are completely content with a Prime Minister who isn't brave enough to stand up in a debate against Jeremy Corbyn, of all people.
 

nOoblet16

Member
Man sometimes I am in awe how one man's baggage can affect a nation's politics for years to come. I'm ofcourse talking about Cameron.

I wonder how he will be looked at several years from now.
 

Pandy

Member
A united, competent opposition certainly could have made some political capital out of it, but Labour can't really be described as either right now. There's no guarantee Corbyn would have been able to whip enough of his party to guarantee the bill would not pass. And even if he did, he would need a strong, consistent message about why he chose to vote against it, and would have to fend off accusations of cowardice from all sides (not least from within his own party).

They can say that the Fixed Term Parliaments Act is a Tory policy, and that the Tories are simply trying to make party political gains at the expense of the country. They don't even have to vote against a GE, they can abstain and argue it is up to the Tories to generate parliamentary support for one.

I'm not saying it would be a political masterstroke that would win the GE for Labour, but I think the ensuing mess the Tories would have to go through would at least provide some damage limitation from the current predictions.

That said, I've mostly been talking about Labour as they are today under Corbyn. For Labour's longer term prospects getting rid of Corbyn now will probably work out better for them in 5 years time. I guess that's a valid strategy for a lot of Labour MPs, but not one for Corbyn himself to be following, surely?
 
That is fucking insane man. How can the majority of british people intend to vote for someone like that?

Maybe it's because I never really paid much attention to politics outside that of my own country and the US. But it's been shocking for me to learn what the state of british politics are.

Because

a) most people probably support brexit
b) the alterntives are a communist and a no-hoper
 

nOoblet16

Member
That is fucking insane man. How can the majority of british people intend to vote for someone like that?

Maybe it's because I never really paid much attention to politics outside that of my own country and the US. But it's been shocking for me to learn what the state of british politics are.
TV debates are not required be it by law or by tradition, 2010 and 2015 were the only times they were done.

Regardless, she'll show up because otherwise she'll be seen as a cowers especially after being called out like that in the house of commons.
 
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Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Working on an Election OT.

May (badoom tish) be up tomorrow.

Too late, I've decided to put up a snap OT. I've had to cut the section on the Labour Party short, though.
 

Jackpot

Banned
An interesting interview with May

https://www.theguardian.com/politic...ls-mrs-merton-combative-theresa-may-interview

Just explain to people how many times have you been defeated in the House of Commons on Brexit?

We got the article 50 legislation through –

None. No defeats.

No defeats in the House of Commons –

A majority of 384. So where are these divisions in Westminster that are doing you so much damage?

When we took article 50 legislation through it was very clear and we were able to say to people that this was delivering on the vote of the British people in the referendum ... But what became clear around that time was yes, people voted in the House of Commons to trigger that process but they were intent on frustrating the necessary things that we have to do afterwards.

They’re the opposition, prime minister. It is the duty of the opposition to oppose. We see headlines this morning – let’s look at the Daily Mail: “Crush the saboteurs” – is that how you regard people who simply don’t agree with the direction you’re taking the country in?

Absolutely not. Politics and democracy are about, of course, people having different opinions, different views, it’s important in parliament that people are able to challenge what the government is doing, that there’s proper debate and scrutiny of what the government is doing, and that’s what there will be.

You seem committed to fighting an election without spelling anything new out at all. Nothing new about Brexit, nothing new about immigration, nothing new about trade. That is what people call seeking a blank cheque – just saying trust me, I’m in control, I’ll get it sorted.

If I may, with due respect, it’s not about seeking a blank cheque when I say to people, look what we’ve done already, look what we’ve delivered as a government already.

Such detail on that last question.
 

Carl2291

Member
Talking amongst people at work today. I work in an ex mining town with a group of 50-60 year olds gutted by Thatchers Tories, and it's weird to hear them backing May against the "idiot", "spineless", "hasn't got a clue" Corbyn.
 
Talking amongst people at work today. I work in an ex mining town with a group of 50-60 year olds gutted by Thatchers Tories, and it's weird to hear them backing May against the "idiot", "spineless", "hasn't got a clue" Corbyn.

But the middle-class students know better about what working class people need
 

Hazzuh

Member
The 13 MPs who voted against an election:

C9x-En3XkAAepy2.jpg
 

Principate

Saint Titanfall
Long term economic plan and less foriegners

It's mostly just less foreigners. There's no way people in less impoverished areas think that even 10 years down the line Tories are suddenly going to put funding in their areas. If they do they're fools and haven't been paying attention.
 
It's mostly just less foreigners. There's no way people in less impoverished areas think that even 10 years down the line Tories are suddenly going to put funding in their areas. If they do they're fools and haven't been paying attention.

The story that Labour fucked the economy and the Tories are putting it back on an even keel is widely believed and a big part of the reason people didn't vote for Ed
 
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