Originally posted by french frank
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State of the parties as 2015 General Election looms.
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I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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If, as http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...y-9691712.html appears to suggest, UKIP proposes to field a mere dozen candidates and anticipates gaining just 3 - 5 seats after the next General Election (in other words, failing in 7 - 9 constituencies and ending up with just 1 - 3 more MPS than it has now), its Parliamentary ambitions would appear to be in inverse proportion to the froth and pother that seems always to go with its terriroty; it would also be the case that such an anticipated result would pose a vanishingly small threat to any other political party and have scant effect on the make-up of HoC in the aftermath of that election. Doesn't this - in UKIP's own words - help to put it into perspective?Last edited by ahinton; 21-11-14, 17:02.
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amateur51
When UKIP ran a candidate who wasn't the previous MP for the constituency they didn't win but came a very creditable second.
I hope the Greens start getting more 'sensible' coverage in the Press, and not just in the Guardian's environmental section.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postthere is no point in the 4 year football cycle when there aren't qualifiers for the World cup or European championships going on, apart from the 6 months build up to the two major tournaments, which may explain some of the folks who never take their flags down.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI hope the Greens start getting more 'sensible' coverage in the Press
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View PostIt may very well be the entire explanation but for me, not being interested in football, it would still seem very peculiar to be flying a flag for a country that isn't actually playing a match, on the grounds that at some point in the future it will be. Doesn't that lose any association the flag might have with football?
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt may very well be the entire explanation but for me, not being interested in football, it would still seem very peculiar to be flying a flag for a country that isn't actually playing a match, on the grounds that at some point in the future it will be. Doesn't that lose any association the flag might have with football?
They also played an international match game a few days before that too.
All of which is entirely irrelevant.
We know what Gordon Brown, Thornberry et al think of white working class English voters. Hopefully, white working class English voters will continue to tell them what they think of them, at the polling booths.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostPrimarily, the fact that a shadow cabinet member should be so clueless as to make herself look like a caricature of the "liberal metropolitan elite" in that time and place, and that the party then goes into knee-jerk PR overdrive to neutralise her, none of which really has any bearing on the actual issue in question, ie. working-class patriotism and the possibility of coaxing it into xenophobia which was exploited so successfully by Enoch Powell back in the day.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostMaybe it was just there to conceal the goings-on in the upper rooms of the house...
One thing that puzzles me is that UKIP intends fielding only 12 candidates at the General Election, suggesting as it does the kind of lack of active base that typifies the "something must be done about it" mentality of the populist-supporting Right I always heard voiced by local Tory members when living with my activist parents, which is tantamount to "but I haven't a clue what - I leave that to people far wiser than myself".
Another possible explanation is maybe detectable in the tendency of Farage to backtrack and play down expectations whenever UKIP policies come up (rarely that this is), indicating how much the party's fortunes come to rest upon the Tories giving them the in/out referendum not in their own programme. Or maybe they just don't have the readies to hand to conduct a general election campaign.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt's not really surprising that the press ignore it, given that it seems to be the only party which doesn't attempt cynically to appeal to people's baser instincts just to get into power. The press would have to be interested in raising the level of political discussion in the country, which heaven forfend on current showing.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMy suspicions too...
One thing that puzzles me is that UKIP intends fielding only 12 candidates at the General Election, suggesting as it does the kind of lack of active base that typifies the "something must be done about it" mentality of the populist-supporting Right I always heard voiced by local Tory members when living with my activist parents, which is tantamount to "but I haven't a clue what - I leave that to people far wiser than myself".
Another possible explanation is maybe detectable in the tendency of Farage to backtrack and play down expectations whenever UKIP policies come up (rarely that this is), indicating how much the party's fortunes come to rest upon the Tories giving them the in/out referendum not in their own programme. Or maybe they just don't have the readies to hand to conduct a general election campaign.
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