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Election Poll: Which way will you swing, and will it be hung?
With the last leader's debate over and done with, and the election less than a week away, we would like to check, probably for the last time, what your voting intentions are.
We would also like to hear your opinions on the prospect of a hung parliament.
This poll is closed.
If The Election Were Held Today, Which Party Would You Cast Your Vote For?
- Conservatives - 25 votes
- 40%
- Labour - 14 votes
- 23%
- Liberal Democrats - 10 votes
- 16%
- BNP - 7 votes
- 11%
- UKIP - 4 votes
- 6%
- SNP - 1 vote
- 2%
- Green - 1 vote
- 2%
- Plaid Cymru - 0 vote
- 0%
- Monster Raving Loony Party - 0 vote
- 0%
- Respect - 0 vote
- 0%
Which Coalition Is Likely To Be In Power Should There Be A Hung Parliament?
- Lib-Lab Coalition - 21 votes
- 35%
- Lib-Con Coalition - 17 votes
- 28%
- There won't be a Coalition - 10 votes
- 17%
- Con-Lab Coalition - 6 votes
- 10%
- Con-Other Coalition - 3 votes
- 5%
- Lab-Other Coalition (Green, UKIP, BNP, SNP, Plaid Cymru, Respect and the Irish Parties) - 2 votes
- 3%
- Lib-Other Coalition - 1 vote
- 2%
Stats until: 09:40 Sat 23rd Nov 2024 (Refreshed every 5 minutes)
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Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by AB Editor. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have voted Labour all my life and will be doing so again next week, but I do not think that Gordon Brown is the right person to lead the Labour Party or be Prime Minister.
Tony Blair was a far better Prime Minister whether people liked him or not.
Gordon Brown was fine as Chancellor but we need a more charismatic figure to lead Labour from the front, because he has to represent this Country on his travels abroad as well.
Tony Blair was a far better Prime Minister whether people liked him or not.
Gordon Brown was fine as Chancellor but we need a more charismatic figure to lead Labour from the front, because he has to represent this Country on his travels abroad as well.
"Gordon Brown was fine as Chancellor "
tell me i didnt read that ! you cannot be serious can you.
He has virtually single handedly ruined this country and its economy.
Care to look back and see how many billions were in the coffers when he took over as chancellor and then squandered, against all advice he sold our gold reserves when gold was at virtually the lowest price in recent history, nned i go on.
Who was it as chancellor vetoed virtually all regulations being imposed that would have prevented the investment banks from losing so much money.
You would be better off doing stand up comedy
Brown is labour , labour only ever has one policy, spend and tax
tell me i didnt read that ! you cannot be serious can you.
He has virtually single handedly ruined this country and its economy.
Care to look back and see how many billions were in the coffers when he took over as chancellor and then squandered, against all advice he sold our gold reserves when gold was at virtually the lowest price in recent history, nned i go on.
Who was it as chancellor vetoed virtually all regulations being imposed that would have prevented the investment banks from losing so much money.
You would be better off doing stand up comedy
Brown is labour , labour only ever has one policy, spend and tax
It depends on when you think it should have been sold
This was over 10 years ago in 1999
All that Gold still just amounted to $3.5 billion about £2 billion
This amounts to 1% of UK national debt
Yet people still run around with this idea that somehow we're in the mess because Gordon Brown sold all our gold at a bad price
http://www.hm-treasur...uk/d/GoldReserves.PDF
This was over 10 years ago in 1999
All that Gold still just amounted to $3.5 billion about £2 billion
This amounts to 1% of UK national debt
Yet people still run around with this idea that somehow we're in the mess because Gordon Brown sold all our gold at a bad price
http://www.hm-treasur...uk/d/GoldReserves.PDF
Browns blunder cost £2billion, which is a good £1.4 billion short of the record, held by Ken Clarke, in whom we may be again about to trust our finances. He managed to lose us £3.4 billion on Black Wednesday...
// In 1997 the UK Treasury estimated the cost of Black Wednesday at £3.4 billion, with the actual cost being £3.3 billion which was revealed in 2005 under the Freedom of Information Act (FoI)[1].
The trading losses in August and September were estimated at £800m, but the main loss to taxpayers arose because the devaluation could have made them a profit. The papers show that if the government had maintained $24bn foreign currency reserves and the pound had fallen by the same amount, the UK would have made a £2.4bn profit on sterling's devaluation.[2] Newspapers also revealed that the Treasury spent £27bn of reserves in propping up the pound. //
// In 1997 the UK Treasury estimated the cost of Black Wednesday at £3.4 billion, with the actual cost being £3.3 billion which was revealed in 2005 under the Freedom of Information Act (FoI)[1].
The trading losses in August and September were estimated at £800m, but the main loss to taxpayers arose because the devaluation could have made them a profit. The papers show that if the government had maintained $24bn foreign currency reserves and the pound had fallen by the same amount, the UK would have made a £2.4bn profit on sterling's devaluation.[2] Newspapers also revealed that the Treasury spent £27bn of reserves in propping up the pound. //
bazwillrun, when you say he sold the gold 'against all advice' - could it be that most of this advice came well after the sale? I don't recall much of it when he did it. Perhaps if you have a link to somewhere you made a personal protest at the time...
Gromit, wasn't it Lamont rather than Clarke at the time of Black Wednesday? I think the actual ill-timed entry to the ERM was the work of John Major when chancellor.
Gromit, wasn't it Lamont rather than Clarke at the time of Black Wednesday? I think the actual ill-timed entry to the ERM was the work of John Major when chancellor.
Whatever the election result, it won't please everyone. I wish those who say they hate the Conservatives would better explain their reasons. 'Maggie' has been blamed for so many things, but what else should she have done with the mess she inherited from the previous Labour administration? Seems we may now have to go through that whole wretched process again - once more of Labour's making.
She could have avoided her Monetarist mantra that caused the devastation of our industry and replaced it with the easily movable elsewhere service industry.
As for mess of Labour's making, I assume you mean mess of the bankers' making. Labour has achieved enough own goals without blaming the economy on them as well.
As for mess of Labour's making, I assume you mean mess of the bankers' making. Labour has achieved enough own goals without blaming the economy on them as well.
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