Dobba
Full Member
Does the House of Commons have a creche?Will Leadsom get a front bench position?
Does the House of Commons have a creche?Will Leadsom get a front bench position?
I remember when poor John Smith died so unexpectedly, it's in my mind that Blair was having his wisdom teeth removed that day or shortly after, and then suddenly he was leader. Was a surprise to me, that's for sure.Theresa May is my inspiration now:
If you sit around doing nothing you will eventually achieve your aims
sad but trueYeah of course they will. Labour are too busy arguing among themselves to bother to attack the Tories like this and that doesnt look likely to change anytime soon.
Which will be precisely her official reasoning for calling a GE. To obtain a mandate. Although, Brown never did.I cannot see how a GE cannot be called soon. May has no mandate to do anything.
She would win with the following slogan:I cannot see how a GE cannot be called soon. May has no mandate to do anything.
I think its quite easy to make the counterargument. Brown took over and didnt call a GE, for example. I dont think people will make much of a fuss about it.I cannot see how a GE cannot be called soon. May has no mandate to do anything.
You keep making the same point as me and beating me to it.Which will be precisely her official reasoning for calling a GE. To obtain a mandate. Although, Brown never did.
can you imagine the disaster a genral election would be right now, labour in a mess, the country divided, the hole election would just be about brexit, giving parties like ukip the chance to make massive gains.I cannot see how a GE cannot be called soon. May has no mandate to do anything.
Which will be precisely her official reasoning for calling a GE. To obtain a mandate. Although, Brown never did.
You keep making the same point as me and beating me to it.
I agree, she doesn't need to (constitutional law is clear on that), but she will want to. Especially considering Labour's current turmoil.The 'mandate' thing is a load of cobblers.
In an ideal world you're right, but we don't elect our PM (and never have) so in reality her mandate is exactly as strong as Cameron's was. She doesn't need to hold a General Election to govern and, like Brown, I doubt she will.
'May sweeps to victory as Scotland turns into a sea of Tory blue.'Hopefully we do have an election soon, then. May will look promising in all of the polls, but somehow lead the Tories to a 4th placed finish in the end.
The 'mandate' thing is a load of cobblers.
In an ideal world you're right, but we don't elect our PM (and never have) so in reality her mandate is exactly as strong as Cameron's was. She doesn't need to hold a General Election to govern and, like Brown, I doubt she will.
I agree, she doesn't need to (constitutional law is clear on that), but she will want to. Especially considering Labour's current turmoil.
To be honest, Leadsom dropping out in the way she did (contrasting nicely with Labour) smacks of the first shot fired in the run up to an election.
I think this is misleading. Technically yes. But in reality people vote based on the manifestos presented by the party leaders. Of course Brown is a precedent but he should have sought a mandate as well and his mandate was undeniably weaker than Blair's
Im no political strategist but I cant see why Tories would lose seats in a GE if it was held now. Why would Tory voters defect to UKIP when the party they voted for last year has now delivered them Brexit? I can see the risk that they dont trust May to actually go through with it, but that doesnt strike me as a big risk, and it is certainly manageable if she just keeps making reassuring noises about it. None of the other parties are going to lure Tory voters away at the moment. The party with the most to lose from a GE is Labour. UKIP might be bigger beneficiaries from a Labour collapse than the Tories, but they would be a weaker opposition. UKIP would certainly end up strengthening their position but that would only consolidate the Tory occupation of the centre ground.Will she? What's the benefit for her? Winning might give her a nice warm fuzzy feeling but there's a lot of risks and i'm not sure what the benefits are?
I could see it ending badly for her if she did. UKIP would barely even have to campaign to nick votes off the Tories from the right (and they'd take a lot off Labour too) the Lib Dems will surge (at least compared to last year) on their pro-European platform. Whilst they might win a stronger majority off the back of Labour disarray their slender lead at the minute suggests that it could equally likely go the other way and they'll be forced into a minority. Big gamble for not much gain
If she activated Article 50 then she wouldn't necessarily lose much to UKIP, but you are right that it would be a bit of a risk.I could see it ending badly for her if she did. UKIP would barely even have to campaign to nick votes off the Tories from the right (and they'd take a lot off Labour too) the Lib Dems will surge (at least compared to last year) on their pro-European platform. Whilst they might win a stronger majority off the back of Labour disarray their slender lead at the minute suggests that it could equally likely go the other way and they'll be forced into a minority. Big gamble for not much gain
Good points, but I think it will be a simple risk/reward calculation based on seats to be gained from Labour against the possibility of losing seats to a party to the right of the Conservatives.Will she? What's the benefit for her? Winning might give her a nice warm fuzzy feeling but there's a lot of risks and i'm not sure what the benefits are?
I could see it ending badly for her if she did. UKIP would barely even have to campaign to nick votes off the Tories from the right (and they'd take a lot off Labour too) the Lib Dems will surge (at least compared to last year) on their pro-European platform. Whilst they might win a stronger majority off the back of Labour disarray their slender lead at the minute suggests that it could equally likely go the other way and they'll be forced into a minority. Big gamble for not much gain
Im no political strategist but I cant see why Tories would lose seats in a GE if it was held now. Why would Tory voters defect to UKIP when the party they voted for last year has now delivered them Brexit? I can see the risk that they dont trust May to actually go through with it, but that doesnt strike me as a big risk, and it is certainly manageable if she just keeps making reassuring noises about it. None of the other parties are going to lure Tory voters away at the moment. The party with the most to lose from a GE is Labour. UKIP might be bigger beneficiaries from a Labour collapse than the Tories, but they would be a weaker opposition. UKIP would certainly end up strengthening their position but that would only consolidate the Tory occupation of the centre ground.
Honestly the more I think about this the more I think it makes sense for the Tories and the more worried about it I feel.
Of course you're right that that's what people think they're voting for, but the reality is that it isn't. People being misinformed is apparently not enough grounds to reject the democratic process (otherwise we would be ignoring the EU ref).
Is there anything that holding a general election will allow May to do that she currently can't do now? Even if she went fully evil, which she might who knows, there's nothing the electorate can do.
Because all UKIP need to do is run on a platform of 'they're holding a general election to get out of listening to the electorate, we are the only party who will actually deliver Brexit' and they'll reap in the votes. They don't even need to say that explicitly that's the opinion people will form regardless.
Besides I think people forget how recently we had an election. They'd be trading four years ish of a mandate of sorts for five years of a stronger one.
Of course I think we should have an election ASAP because it gives us a chance of booting May out but I think that's precisely why they won't do it.
It hurt Brown's reputation as well, he was polling very well in the months immediately after him becoming PM but not having a general election then was the first, albeit not the most significant, event that damaged him. As you it's true that technically we elect our local MP's but people obviously do so with the potential government and Prime Minister in mind. Theresa May arguably has even less of a "mandate" than Brown given it was clear he was going to take over before the 2010 election (the Tories were even stating this in their 2005 election posters) whilst May would not have been even the second favourite to take over from Cameron last year.I think this is misleading. Technically yes. But in reality people vote based on the manifestos presented by the party leaders. Of course Brown is a precedent but he should have sought a mandate as well and his mandate was undeniably weaker than Blair's
Suzanne Evans? Im surprised Nuttall ruled himself out to be honest, he seemed like the one who could deliver Labour voters.UKIP's problem is that they don't even have a leader now, and I struggle to see who will be a viable replacement for Farage.
UKIP's problem is that they don't even have a leader now, and I struggle to see who will be a viable replacement for Farage.
In other countries it's the same. In the USA after Kennedy was assassinated Johnson became president without an election.
Sometimes the opposition will demand an election such as when Blair left office. But that's only seen as fair by the oppositition, whoever it is.
Not sure she's allowed to stand as she's suspended. Stephen Woolfe wouldn't be a bad bet.Suzanne Evans? Im surprised Nuttall ruled himself out to be honest, he seemed like the one who could deliver Labour voters.
And we can't even enjoy it, that is the biggest travesty in all this.Cameron looked like a angry broken man at his press conference.
Not as alarming as the prospect of Leadsom being in Number 10.The idea of May running the country is truely terrifying.
In our system your vote goes directly to the MP but that person is usually a repreresentative of a party. So in reality, although some MPs carry the addittional weight of their charisma or ideals (Michael Foot, Boris Johnson, George Galloway ? ), the vast majority of people vote for the party not the individual. Hence expressions such as Tory stronghold, safe Labour seat ( a thing of the past maybe). The leader of that party becomes PM but as far as I know there's no constitutional requirement to hold a GE if the leader reesigns. In this case "party" functions like "ticket". Churchill, Macmillan, Douglas-Home, Major and Brown all became PMs as a result of resignations.He was the VP though - he ran on the same ticket as Kennedy so the voters had already agreed to him being next in line if anything happened to JFK..
What about Boris or Gove?The idea of May running the country is truely terrifying.
I wonder if all the leavers banging on about democracy and the EU will have any issue with May becoming PM like this...