Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 132 total)
  • Anyone voting liberal as a protest?
  • bodgy
    Free Member

    I voted LD last time round as a tactical vote against the Tories (I live in a Tory stronghold). Complete waste of time.

    That said, at the moment they are the party that most closely aligns with my beliefs on the big issues. Pro European, Anti-Brexit, pro Proportional Representation, pro enterprise / business /innovation, pro green issues and very strong locally at council level.

    Can’t vote for Corbyn because of his stance on the EU / Brexit.

    Can’t vote Tory. Obviously.

    km79
    Free Member

    The lib dems didn’t have to go into a coalition with the tories. Labour offered them the chance to form one with them which was declined. So I don’t buy the whole ‘holding back some of the tory crap” stuff either.

    wors
    Full Member

    I have voted for the only candidate to happen to live in the area i live, happens to be Lib Dem.

    SaxonRider
    Full Member

    The lib dems didn’t have to go into a coalition with the tories. Labour offered them the chance to form one with them which was declined. So I don’t buy the whole ‘holding back some of the tory crap” stuff either.

    No chance that Clegg sincerely interpreted the voice of the people as a voice calling for change after more than a decade of New Labour rule, then?

    I was so glad he did what he did at the time. Not because I wanted Cameron’s crew, but because I believed – and continue to believe – that every governing party needs a shake-up after two terms or more in office. Arrogance sets in otherwise, and however much I may not mind Gordon Brown as a person, I think his party had become somewhat arrogant.

    fifo
    Free Member

    No chance that Clegg sincerely interpreted the voice of the people as a voice calling for change after more than a decade of New Labour rule, then?

    The voice of the people didn’t say that. It simply (through the mangle of opinion that FPTP is) said it didn’t want a labour majority.

    failedengineer
    Full Member

    Yep, I will.  Hate the Tories, don’t trust Labour any more and as others have said, they are the only properly anti-Brexit lot.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    Good to see some intelligent decisions being made on this thread.

    poly
    Free Member

    TJ: Poly – the point is if the LDs had only done a supply and confidence deal the tories would not have been able to get many of the bills they did get thru parliament and its very likely we would have had another election

    OK, but you can imagine the narrative would then be: “the Lib Dems have forced you to have another election”, “the Lib Dems blocked the largest party from passing key bills”, “the Lib Dems are doing this to force you to stay in the EU!”, “the Lib Dems only got a tiny number of seats but weald an unreasonable amount of power”, “if you don’t want a Labour Gov / Ed Miliband as PM – you have to vote Tory, you can’t trust the Lib Dems to go with the majority.  Bearing in mind that the media not the parties influence the swing vote, the outcome could have been manipulated to give an outcome even worse than five years of Lib-Con.

    All the while, the markets are going jittery with the uncertainty, the UK’s credit rating falls and the cost of borrowing rises.  And whilst nobody is in control the juggernaut careers on, either burning money it doesn’t have or an emergency budget has implemented changes way worse than you go.

    Its very easy to imagine how a scenario could have developed differently, but its impossible to have any confidence on the actual end situation.  I’m pretty sure whoever was in charge, Nurse’s (especially those who are also landlords!) would not be sitting here today saying, “I’m glad it panned out like that, not only is the country in a great place but I’m financially better off than I could have been if there was a Lib-Con coalition”.  Its like trying to imagine what the UK or Scottish Economy would be like if either of the referenda had gone the other way.  Indeed if I was wanting to dwell on what if’s – it would be interesting to ponder what the political landscape, and therefore the potential for Brexit votes, the economy etc would be if the AV Vote had gone differently.

    yunki
    Free Member

    If you’re really feeling disenchanted, please consider protesting with a capital P. Organise, march, picket.

    Your ridiculous notion of a protest vote is as potent as crying into your pillow

    fifo
    Free Member

    Its very easy to imagine how a scenario could have developed differently, but its impossible to have any confidence on the actual end situation.

    Taking a holistic view, I’d gently suggest that the scenario of ungovernable quagmire without brexit i.e a scenario with NOM in which a coalition wasn’t formed in 2010 would still be distinctly better than the apparent strong, stable, brexiting quagmire we’re blessed with currently.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    Can’t vote for Corbyn because of his stance on the EU / Brexit.

    Can’t vote Tory. Obviously.

    Aye.  This pretty much sums it up for me too.

    lunge
    Full Member

    I have this weird way of voting that nobody else seems to do.

    I read the manifestos of the parties at national and local level. Then I vote for the one who best aligns to my own beliefs as they currently are.

    Revolutionary, eh?

    Odd, i do this too and find it astonishing that very few others do.

    In answer to the OP, I’ll be voting LD, not as a protest but as I think their policies are better than the rest of them. plus Brexit of course.

    oldtalent
    Free Member

    For the local elections, I dont really care, whoever will get the potholes fixed & blocks new social housing. Obviously not labour though.

    miketually
    Free Member

    I have this weird way of voting that nobody else seems to do.

    I read the manifestos of the parties at national and local level. Then I vote for the one who best aligns to my own beliefs as they currently are.

    Revolutionary, eh?

    I took the additional step of joining that party, actively taking part in the local running of the party, and standing for election.

    We have all-out Council elections every four years, so none here this time around.

    zippykona
    Full Member

    In our local elections last year the tories promised to fix the roads. They didn’t.

    Plus it’s always been a tory council , what was stopping them mending them I have no idea.

    It’s probably that they are a bunch of ****.

    poly
    Free Member

    fifo – Taking a holistic view, I’d gently suggest that the scenario of ungovernable quagmire without brexit i.e a scenario with NOM in which a coalition wasn’t formed in 2010 would still be distinctly better than the apparent strong, stable, brexiting quagmire we’re blessed with currently.

    Yes but blaming the only party with a clear and consistent pro-EU message for Brexit seems far fetched.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    I’ll be voting labour.

    1) My tory MP is John Redwood, so as a former resident of Wales I have to hate him.

    2) My local councilor came round moaning about how wokingham  the most underfunded council in the country.  It’s not, it’s one of the richest boroughs in the country, if there’s a lack of funding it’s because we don’t have the problems that properly underfunded boroughs have.  And I’m confident in hypothesising it makes up for it with council tax receipts given the average house price!

    3) In the same paragraph he was very proud of how they’d had to cut services but maintained the important stuff, apparently we’re one of the few boroughs still with weekly bin collections.

    4) You could actually see him back away when he asked what I did and I told him I’d just lost my job as a result of Brexit.

    He had absolutely no interest in meeting the needs of those that needed help, only in maintaining the nice middle-class-ness of Wokingham.

    Our labour candidate came round for a chat about local services, speed limits in villages etc. I think he might actually have a chance as the week after his visit the tory councilors massively ramped up their leafleting telling everyone how they were actually going to protect local services and reduce the speed limits etc. I sincerely hope they get a gook kicking in the polls, if ever there was a definitive complacent tory council it’s Wokingham!

    Frodo
    Full Member

    If my constituency were voting (which it isn’t!) I would be voting Liberal …. and not as a protest vote. I would vote Liberal as they have the best candidate and policies for our area.

    This liberal bashing is quite simply pathetic. All parties make mistakes and on balance coalition was a relatively good government. That not to say they didn’t make some howling mistakes. How much are we to blame for squandering the opportunity of AV which would have led to more representative governance?

    Politics is polarised at the moment which is just not healthy, it invites a winner takes all attitude (i.e. Brexit). I don’t believe that the Conservatives or Labour are fit to govern at the moment. If anything I am dissapointed that the Liberals have failed to seize the center ground. Many people may have complained that in the past their was little difference between the Tories and Labour; the reality is that this is healthy in a first past the post system. Its a symptom that government is governing for the country and not the narrow interests of their party members!

    I really don’t like the political situation where we have a hard left Labour party with an autocratic leader that wishes to turn back the clock to failed socialist politics and a hard right Tory party that want’s to shut our borders and turn back the clock in a different way. Maybe we do need a new party – one that is forward thinking and looking. The only thing is …we would need an electorate brave enough to take a risk.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    I’ll be voting labour.

    1) My tory MP is John Redwood, so as a former resident of Wales I have to hate him.

    That’s all the justification required!

    PimpmasterJazz
    Free Member

    Can’t vote for Corbyn because of his stance on the EU / Brexit.

    Pretty much this too. I actually admire the man’s ethics and persistence incredibly, but couldn’t bring myself to vote for him on the above issue alone.

    pondo
    Full Member

    100% agree

    zippykona
    Full Member

    If you vote for labour all the Leavers pounce on that as you actively  voting for the hardest brexit possible and whatever shit those tory **** can dream up.

    nickjb
    Free Member

    Is Corbyn standing in the local elections? Local elections are one place where voting actually does make a difference and smaller parties can get a few wins. Seems and odd place to protest vote or tactical vote. We have several greens here, largely because people vote for what they want. It took a little while to get traction but now the greens regularly get a good return, as do the lib dems, the tories not so much.

    deadkenny
    Free Member

    These are council elections so I put aside the main party politics. Not that I have an issue with LD like many still do over the “broken promise” of tuition fees, which was impossible to keep in a coalition with the tories anyway. Stupid thing to get upset about and let bucket loads of Tory muppets in instead.

    Anyway, local council is corrupt Tory who support the bonkers unelected chief exec idiot that has fingers in every wasteful development pie, wrecking the town centre and wants to make the town like Singapore with skyscrapers (yes, he actually compares Woking to Singapore!) which he wants to be visible from the Shard (huh?). Need to get rid and without Tory backing there may be more of a chance. Labour have zero chance here, and I’m no socialist anyway. LD it is.

    Makes no difference probably in strong Tory blue area, but I want to vote in this one as we’ve got the experimental ID thing to deal with voting fraud, which was an issue in Woking.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    I voted Conservative in a Labour/Lib Dem stronghold to protest does that count ?  🙂

    irc
    Full Member

    The last general election I voted tactically for a lib dem to get the SNP candidate out. On the basis it was a SNP /lib Dems marginal and  I didn’t want another indyref.

    Job done. One fewer SNP MP. Obviously another bunch of local voters had similar thoughts.

    With FPTP it isn’t always best to vote  for your preferred candidate.

    hatter
    Full Member

    “I’ll be voting LD, not as a protest but as I think their policies are better than the rest of them. plus Brexit of course.”

    +1

    Plus our current county councillor is LD and she works her little socks off.

    chestercopperpot
    Free Member

    How much are we to blame for squandering the opportunity of AV which would have led to more representative governance?

    This^^^^^ and was the only reason I’ve ever voted LD. The end of FPTP would be a stepping stone IMO and could enable some of the change people claim to want, whatever side of the divide you associate yourself with!

    wilburt
    Free Member

    TBH I’ll vote for anyone who’ll get rid of the Albanian Gypsies plaguing the local town.

    fatmax
    Full Member

    Voted LD is the last general election – partly on their policies and partly to ensure that the SNP didn’t get in again – Edinburgh West.  Job done.

    Can’t bring myself to vote for loons off to the left and right of our politics, so it pains me how ineffective the LD are in the centre ground.

    And locally they are superb, doing far more than any other party.

    And I don’t blame Clegg for going into coalition – seeing the Tories governing on their own makes me think they did as good a job as they could have done.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    I do have a lot of sympathy with anyone who intends to vote Lib Dem right now.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    The lib dems didn’ty even get a p0roiper vote on proportional representation.  AV is a poor system adn Cameron broke his promise on it.  That set the tone.  The li8b dems showed they had no backbone and Clegg saying they were in it for the fulol fi8ve years handed over any p-ower they might have had.  the lib dems got no significant policies thru sand instead pushed thru Tories policies that were not even in the manifesto like selling off the post office.

    the lib dems have simply turned into pale tories and sold all their principles.  When your USP is that you have principles and you sell those principles then yo have nothing left.

    Yes all parties make mistakes – but being able to own up to them and admit you were wrong is a key nthing.  the lib dems refuse to do this althjough every lib dem activist I know ( and I know a few) now accept coalition was a massive mistake

    KM – there was no possibility of a coaltion with labour. the arithmetic did not support it.  They should have ddone supply and confidence – that way thay would have retained a lot ofpower and would not have ended up as tory poodles.

    As for Clegg – he is a tory in the wrong party.l  He single-handedly killed the party  He is no liberal – he is a moderate tory

    belfastflyer
    Free Member

    Well, us in NI dont have a council vote this year can’t even can’t vote LD (or labour for that matter) anyway… but if I could it’d be LD.

    All of these comments about them getting nothing and pushing through tory policies clearly haven’t looked into the work they did in their departments and stuff like the triple lock pensions were LD policies. But I guess you dont get that detail when all you do is read a politically motivated tweet.

    They are the only middle ground party in parliament at the minute and have never played the “political idiology over the facts” hand. They have the right approach to brexit (and in NI thats what people are crapping themselves over) and have a lot of common sense policies. But **** that, they raised tuition fees.

    Sooner or later voters will have to take responsibility for how they cast their vote. Love how the UK is right now? Vote con and lab. Want somecommon sense? Vote LD

    eddiebaby
    Free Member

    I voted leave as a protest vote. That ended well.

    kerley
    Free Member

    Odd logic from a few people here who like most of Corbyn’s policies and approach but because of Brexit stance won’t vote for him.  You know the Lib Dems have absolutely zero chance of getting elected so why throw away a vote for a party that have a chance of winning and would do a lot of things you like?

    I don’t want Brexit either but no party that has a chance of a win is going to reverse it.

    hatter
    Full Member

    Because both main parties are desperately trting to work out what the electorate actually wants and a swing to the Lib Dems in the locals will be clearly be a sign of growing anti-Brexit sentiment.

    This will hugely increase pressure on the Tory and Labour leaderships to either pursue  a sane/soft Brexit or to support a final say referendum on the deal.

    Labours members, voters and MP’s are already overwhelmingly Pro-EU, if the leadership start to see that thier current policy vagueness and always being one notch less Brexity than the Conservatives is no longer working for them they will have to move.

    pondo
    Full Member

    Odd logic from a few people here who like most of Corbyn’s policies and approach but because of Brexit stance won’t vote for him.  You know the Lib Dems have absolutely zero chance of getting elected so why throw away a vote for a party that have a chance of winning and would do a lot of things you like?

    It’s just too big a deal, my conscience won’t let me vote Labour, even if the Lib Dems don’t have a chance, at least I’ll be able to sleep at night. And yeah, if they get a surprise swing, who knows how that might shape things going forward?

    poly
    Free Member

    Odd logic from a few people here who like most of Corbyn’s policies and approach but because of Brexit stance won’t vote for him.  You know the Lib Dems have absolutely zero chance of getting elected so why throw away a vote for a party that have a chance of winning and would do a lot of things you like?

    You do realise that this is a local election?  This is about whether your bins get emptied once a week or they spend that money on education, or social work etc.  Its nothing to do with Corbyn’s policies really, and the “approach” at local level is often very different (for better or worse) than national level.  At local election level the Lib Dems often do OK – in fact I think a recent headline was tipping them to gain 100 seats.

    hatter
    Full Member

    You do realise that this is a local election?

    Yup, but it’s also long been an opportunity to show the current government just what you think of them and it’s very  much seen as such within Westminster.

    If the Tories do well it will be loudly proclaimed as a vindication of Mrs May’s current course, if they do badly the press release will be that it ‘was all about local issues’ and of course nothing to do with the natrional picture but the message will have got through internally.

    A poor showing at a local level has historically been a very good indicator that a party’s heading for a bruising at the next GE, The Lib Dems losing over 300 Councillors in 2014 was a harbinger of the near wipe-out they suffered at the 2015 GE.

    mariner
    Free Member

    You do realise that this is a local election?

    Yes and the number crunchers will still extrapolate the figures and come up with a ‘if this were a general election’ type projection.

    A dam good kicking for the tories could help concentrate minds if they see their meal tickets in danger.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 132 total)

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