LadyEllen
Posts: 10931
Joined: 6/30/2006 From: Stourport-England Status: offline
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I would love to see a LibDem government - but by 2015? I think probably five to ten years too soon to be honest. It will take much more than nine years to build the kind of reputation and to assemble enough people of the right calibre to form an effective government that would be worthy of power. They have lots of good people and that is growing and their reputation is growing as a possible alternative, but it will take time. Alongside that process of growth in themselves, they also rely on the steady decline of reputation of Labour and Tory, which as they decline will become less and less of a draw for the best and brightest who currently back them. LibDems have a lot of good policies which are welcomed by a huge proportion of the electorate, but for some time yet as English I believe said, there are far too many entrenched supporters of the two current major parties for the LibDems to have any chance except perhaps as power brokers in a hung parliament; literally, one could put a turd up for election in some constituencies and as long as its sprayed blue or red according to popular local taste there, it would be elected. Indeed, this is one of the key problems with Labour and Tory alike, it would seem, and it will be their downfalls. One of the key policies LibDems have is to switch from the current "first past the post" system of election, to one of proportional representation (PR), and it is simply inconceivable that the LibDems would ever change that, even if elected via the current unfair and unrepresentative system. How unfair and unrepresentative? Well, the exact figures I dont have to hand, but the current Labour government was apparently elected on less than 40% of the votes cast, in an election in which just over half the electorate participated. Why do people not vote? Because the current system makes it not worth voting for many, whose view will count for nothing in their constituencies, where the blue or red turd will be elected regardless. Add to that the cynicism with which politics is now regarded in the UK, and it is a recipe for such minority governments as Labour now to do as they please and be fairly sure of nothing more than nuisance protest against it. PR may well result in a myriad of small parties entering parliament and holding power in hung votes, carrying influence beyond their size and denying the so called strong government (dictatorship in all but name, often), that the current system provides for. But, that is the nature, or at least should be, of representative democracy - everyone gets a voice and a say. Inconvenient perhaps for some interests in this country, but far fairer. E
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In a test against the leading brand, 9 out of 10 participants couldnt tell the difference. Dumbasses.
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