Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Boris The Buffoon
So we are destined to suffer this utter buffoon in Downing Street just to keep the Tory Party together and in power. God help us all .....and they think it is democratic????
Answers
There are two or three rounds of voting to go, so it might not be the foregone conclusion it appears now. And Boris is only ever 5 minutes from an embarrassing gaffe, so it could all go pear shaped very quickly. It is scary that someone so obviously unsuitable is the front runner to lead a scary and unsuitable Government.
17:07 Thu 13th Jun 2019
//and they think it is democratic???? //
the leader of any party is a matter for the party. bear in mind we, the electorate, don't vote for a prime minister at a General Election, rather we vote for an MP to represent our interests. once all the MPs have been elected, under our party political system, the winning party is the one which commands the biggest majority and is more likely to be in a position to govern (ie have enough votes in parliament to schedule taxes, etc). the leader of that party is the one invited by the head of state to form a government, and thus becomes prime minister. if the PM stands down as party leader, it's for the party to elect a replacement. once a replacement has been selected, assuming that party still commands the biggest majority, the new leader is invited to form a government. the new PM may choose to call a G/E (as the last one did) to obtain their own mandate, but there's no requirement to do that - neither James Callaghan or Gordon Brown did so when they became party leader.
the leader of any party is a matter for the party. bear in mind we, the electorate, don't vote for a prime minister at a General Election, rather we vote for an MP to represent our interests. once all the MPs have been elected, under our party political system, the winning party is the one which commands the biggest majority and is more likely to be in a position to govern (ie have enough votes in parliament to schedule taxes, etc). the leader of that party is the one invited by the head of state to form a government, and thus becomes prime minister. if the PM stands down as party leader, it's for the party to elect a replacement. once a replacement has been selected, assuming that party still commands the biggest majority, the new leader is invited to form a government. the new PM may choose to call a G/E (as the last one did) to obtain their own mandate, but there's no requirement to do that - neither James Callaghan or Gordon Brown did so when they became party leader.