- Joined
- Oct 22, 2010
- Messages
- 62,851
- Caf Award
- Poster we miss the most 2021
SNP on course to hold balance of power in Westminster, according to new poll showing depth of Labour's collapse
Nationalists expected to take 54 of Scotland's 59 constituencies next May in poll predictions that could see Alex Salmond become minister in next UK Government
By Ben Riley-Smith, Political Correspondent
22 Dec 2014
The SNP is on course to hold the balance of power in Westminster after the next election as a poll revealed almost half of all Scottish voters plan to back the party.
A staggering collapse in Labour's appeal north of the border will see the Nationalists win 54 of the 59 Scottish constituencies and play a central role in any Coalition negotiations, pollsters found.
The predictions raise the prospect of Alex Salmond, the SNP's former First Minister who is running for Parliament, becoming a minister in the next UK Government – a scenario unimaginable six months ago when he led the campaign to break up the Union with Scottish independence.
The poll also reveals the depth of Labour's problem in Scotland and reveals the challenge Jim Murphy faces in turning around the party's fortunes after becoming Scottish Labour leader.
The loss of 37 of Labour's 41 seats in Scotland could prove fatal to Ed Miliband's hopes of entering Number 10, losing a power base the party has enjoyed for decades.
Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP leader and First Minister of Scotland, said the poll was a "great early Christmas present" for the party and promised a renewed push after the New Year to get the "strongest possible voice" in Westminster.
The Survation poll for the Daily Record predicted 48 per cent of voters will back the SNP next May – its highest ever predicted vote share in Westminster elections from the pollster.
Labour is expected to get 24 per cent, Conservatives 16 per cent, Liberal Democrats 5 per cent and the UK Independence Party 4 per cent.
Mr Salmond, who is expected to win the seat of Gordon next May, has suggested SNP MPs could controversially break with convention and start voting on English-only laws to prop up a Labour Government.
The prospect of a party set on Scottish independence holding close to one in six seats in Westminster could trigger fresh concerns for the state of the Union less than a year after Scots voted to stay in the UK by 55 per cent to 45 per cent.
Mr Salmond recently told The Independent there could be a "balanced" Parliament after the May election, adding: "That’s an opportunity to have delivered to Scotland what we have been promised" – a reference to the package of new powers which has been agreed for Holyrood.
Mr Murphy reacted to the poll by restating his autonomy from the party's Westminster leadership and warned a vote for the SNP would let David Cameron keep the keys to Downing Street.
"Scottish Labour is changing. We are one week into a new leadership team and really determined to change. We are rewriting the party's constitution so that decisions about Scotland are made here in Scotland. The days of the Scottish Labour leader having to ask the party in London about things are gone and gone for good," Mr Murphy said.
He added: "During the referendum Scotland was divided between Yes or No. But in the general election most Scots will be united in wanting to get David Cameron out of Downing Street. The choice Scots will face next year is between sending SNP MPs to the House of Commons to protest against the Tories, or Scottish Labour MPs who will remove the Tories. Voting SNP or Green in 2015 could accidentally keep the Tories in power."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/pol...w-poll-showing-depth-of-Labours-collapse.html
BBC journalist Norman Smith is booed by Labour Party supporters
The BBC's Norman Smith was heckled as he asked whether Labour was "scaremongering" about the state of the NHS in England.
He was called a "pillock" and told to "go back to London" by members of the audience in Salford.
Ed Miliband told the audience "we will hear people with respect" as he attempted to restore order.
He said: "You should talk to people in the NHS. They will genuinely say to you with an edge in their voice 'Where are things going to be in five years' time, what kind of NHS are we going to have?'.
"I met a young doctor a few months ago who had just qualified and he said to me 'You know you have got to have a plan, you know you have got to sort this out because I want the NHS to be there when I'm a doctor'.
Where's the self-righteousness in evidence?Such misplaced self-righteousness can't but amuse.
Its Salford mate, its hardcore labour. Also there is no self-righteousness to be found, how is it self-righteous to let someone speak and to berate the supporters from stopping him?Full article: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/gen...urnalist-booed-during-Ed-Miliband-speech.html
Such misplaced self-righteousness can't but amuse.
I shouldn't have thought it wise for either party to be filling the airwaves with pronouncements on health policy at the moment, and certainly all bombast is better left at the door.
Perhaps this audience was borrowed from Question Time though, there do appear to be similarities.
That Labour, its leader and activists, continue to peddle this 'guardians of the NHS' fallacy. That they in all seriousness presume to criticise the current state of healthcare, whilst brushing the party's role in events to one side and conveniently ignoring policies both past and present.
For a political organisation with a fleeting regard for tradition, what more than that and rhetoric separate them from the coalition? Well, besides Cameron committing himself to grater funding for the NHS going into the next election. An uncomfortable irony for some of those in Salford i'd imagine.
Well they aren't the ones privatising it and cutting it to shreds are they?
Blair implemented Tory policy to Labour's shame but the Tories would never have established the NHS in the first place and would privatise the whole kit and caboodle given half a chance.From what basis do you speak with such certainty?
Was it not Labour who were such fans of PFI, and increased the interaction between public and private health providers? Did they not closer services and downgrade hospitals during their years in office?
Pretty much what Peter said.From what basis do you speak with such certainty?
Was it not Labour who were such fans of PFI, and increased the interaction between public and private health providers? Did they not closer services and downgrade hospitals during their years in office?
Blair implemented Tory policy to Labour's shame but the Tories would never have established the NHS in the first place and would privatise the whole kit and caboodle given half a chance.
Pretty much what Peter said.
Well it wouldn't be quite all of it given the Tory dictum of 'privatise the profits and socialise the losses'.If i might start with that closing assertion first; the notion of complete privatisation of the NHS is as Norman Smith put it, scaremongering.
Nigel Farage has received a huge boost after a Government regulator said the UK Independent Party would be ranked as a “major party” at May’s election.
In practice the decision by media regulator Ofcom guarantees airtime for Ukip for two party election broadcasts on commercial radio and television broadcasters for the first time during the campaign.
But it means that Ukip will be on the same footing as the other national parties: the Conseratives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats.
It will also make it almost impossible for the major broadcasters to deny Mr Farage, the Ukip leader, a place in the televised leaders’ debate.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/gen...w-a-national-major-party-regulator-rules.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-30726499Prime Minister David Cameron has said he does not want to take part in the planned debates unless the Green Party are also included.
Mr Cameron is "quite happy for there to be no debates at all" during the campaign, BBC political editor Nick Robinson said.
Interesting tactic.
Yep would be a good idea.One of the debates is bound to have a focus on environmental policy, and by association that of utilities/energy, the Greens would at least be of benefit to that conversation i feel.
I'd also like to see charities and pressure groups invited to put questions, informed representatives with the option of a follow-up.
It's not Miliband he wants to avoid. Plus, debates in general aren't terribly easy to control. They aren't going to provide much benefit to him but could potentially make things worse. I don't actually like the debates much myself, they promote exactly the type of camera-friendly, soundbite-drenched politics that we should be looking to avoid. Add in the hoo-ha about which parties can be included and you've got more trouble than they're really worth.Bit surprising. I don't think Miliband's an overly great speaker and I reckon he'd do quite poorly in these debates, which would be a major boost to Cameron. You'd expect him to advocate them either way.
UKIP Expels MEP Over Expense Fraud Allegations
http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/gener...xpense-fraud-allegations/ar-BBiDUoJ?ocid=iehp
Cry about belonging in the EU and then freeload off them when you get a seat.
To be fair that's quite consistent with their narrative, we might as well claw something back.
Hague's ended up losing a fair bit of face with the last act in his parliamentary career. People on both sides of the House got genuinely angry at him.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics...-hagues-attempt-to-unseat-speaker-john-bercow
It's not a new subject though. Individual donors have to declared over a certain amount and listed companies state whether they made political donations in their annual results.Crassly done as it's the Mirror, but there is some merit in the discussion. Trade unionists have to opt in writing for their individual levy to be donated to a political party (rightly so), and on the same principle so should shareholders. A fairer and more democratic system would also include a maximum on the amount any one individual could donate.