ChatterBank0 min ago
The Rising Of The Sphinx
With the redrawing of constituency boundaries , a top Conservative agenda ; will Labour find it even more difficult to do a Sphinx style rising from the ashes ?
http:// www.tel egraph. co.uk/n ews/115 93496/N ew-Comm ons-bou ndaries -top-Co nservat ive-gov ernment -agenda .html
''Redrawing constituency boundaries to lock Labour out of power for a decades is at the top of the agenda for the new Conservative government, senior Tories have said. ''
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''Redrawing constituency boundaries to lock Labour out of power for a decades is at the top of the agenda for the new Conservative government, senior Tories have said. ''
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Some level of boundary redrawing is sensible. It was said that the Tories lost at least 20 seats they might have won because of boundary issues (although these may have been the same seats the won anyway, of course). But it says something about how badly Labour did that even with the seat boundaries biased in their favour, they still fell well short.
But drawing boundaries specifically to "lock Labour out of power for decades" is a worrying development. Seats should be fair and competitive, rather than favouring one particular party. That's daylight gerrymandering of the worst sort.
But drawing boundaries specifically to "lock Labour out of power for decades" is a worrying development. Seats should be fair and competitive, rather than favouring one particular party. That's daylight gerrymandering of the worst sort.
Shouldn't the Boundary Commission be doing this not a political party acting in its own interests?
And by what right does the Tory party seek to reduce the number of MPs. That will mean fewer independently minded members of all parties and a higher proportion bound to the party line by direct connection with a government post.
The Turkeys have voted :-)
And by what right does the Tory party seek to reduce the number of MPs. That will mean fewer independently minded members of all parties and a higher proportion bound to the party line by direct connection with a government post.
The Turkeys have voted :-)
The Boundary Commission recommendations don't talk about "locking Labour out of power for decades" as some tories rather surprisingly perhaps have claimed. Nor do they talk about saving money on MPs pay which was the other spin being put on the reduction for reasons I find unfathomable. You'd think it would be the other side who'd be complaining.
It is little wonder the LibDems opposed them.
It is little wonder the LibDems opposed them.
I am sure you meant 1992 Gromit, and yes, of course you are right.
But it took the Tories 13 years, three Elections and God knows how many different Leaders, to come back in 2010, and even then they couldn't manage it without some LibDems busily brown-nosing. It was said on the News today that the Tories held their first Tory Cabinet Meeting today for 18 years !
I maintain that Labour are not in anything like as hopeless a position as the right-wingers will have us believe. Its just wishful thinking on their part.
I am not sure if AB was around in 1997 but it had been, what would our majority right-wingers have been saying then ?
But it took the Tories 13 years, three Elections and God knows how many different Leaders, to come back in 2010, and even then they couldn't manage it without some LibDems busily brown-nosing. It was said on the News today that the Tories held their first Tory Cabinet Meeting today for 18 years !
I maintain that Labour are not in anything like as hopeless a position as the right-wingers will have us believe. Its just wishful thinking on their part.
I am not sure if AB was around in 1997 but it had been, what would our majority right-wingers have been saying then ?
The big problem Labour have now is Scotland.
In 1992 it seemed straightforward: be like a softer version of the Tory party (and sit back and watch the Tories tear themselves apart).
But Labour has failed in Scotland partly because it is seen by many voters as not "proper" Labour any more. Especially as they have another party to the left of them
Also, the Tories are probably less likely to tear themselves apart now as the right wingers don't have the cause of "Maggie stabbed in the back" to be bitter about.
Plenty of time for that though :-)
In 1992 it seemed straightforward: be like a softer version of the Tory party (and sit back and watch the Tories tear themselves apart).
But Labour has failed in Scotland partly because it is seen by many voters as not "proper" Labour any more. Especially as they have another party to the left of them
Also, the Tories are probably less likely to tear themselves apart now as the right wingers don't have the cause of "Maggie stabbed in the back" to be bitter about.
Plenty of time for that though :-)
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