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Cameron Wants Another Seven Years In Office.
32 Answers
http:// www.gua rdian.c o.uk/po litics/ 2013/ja n/06/da vid-cam eron-se ven-yea rs-down ing-str eet
So Cameron wants another seven years in office, if you think that there is 'NO CHANCE', who would you wish to see rule the nation?
We saw 13 disastrous years under Labour, would you wish them to return, and if so under what leader?
Would another coalition party but this time a Tory/Labour one, be the answer?
So Cameron wants another seven years in office, if you think that there is 'NO CHANCE', who would you wish to see rule the nation?
We saw 13 disastrous years under Labour, would you wish them to return, and if so under what leader?
Would another coalition party but this time a Tory/Labour one, be the answer?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well that's hardly a surprise. What would you expect him to say: that he wants to lose the next election or the Tory leadership? If he isn't going to be the next PM it will be Ed Miliband. If one of the major parties doesn't have an overall majority then there may well be another coalition. What is interesting is whether Labour would want to do so with a Clegg-led LibDems
A Labour landslide looks more likely than a coalition Government.
The LibDem vote will collapse and Labour will get most of those (as it has done in the bye-elections). Conservative voters are dissatisfied but will not vote for either of the other parties, so they will stay at home.
Most of the conservatives I know are more anti tjis Government than I am. Over Christmas I met a Conservative Councillor who actually said he was hoping Labour would win the next election. The Shire Counties are very anti Cameron and hope he does badly so they can get rid of him.
The remains of what is left of the LibDems will ditch Clegg.
I am not convinced by Ed but he has really done much wrong in opposition. He is miles ahead of where Cameron was two years before the last election. The Coalition is so unpopular that Labour could have anyone as leader and they would win by miles.
'Another seven years' just shows how oblivious Cameron is to the mood of the country.
The LibDem vote will collapse and Labour will get most of those (as it has done in the bye-elections). Conservative voters are dissatisfied but will not vote for either of the other parties, so they will stay at home.
Most of the conservatives I know are more anti tjis Government than I am. Over Christmas I met a Conservative Councillor who actually said he was hoping Labour would win the next election. The Shire Counties are very anti Cameron and hope he does badly so they can get rid of him.
The remains of what is left of the LibDems will ditch Clegg.
I am not convinced by Ed but he has really done much wrong in opposition. He is miles ahead of where Cameron was two years before the last election. The Coalition is so unpopular that Labour could have anyone as leader and they would win by miles.
'Another seven years' just shows how oblivious Cameron is to the mood of the country.
There won't be a Tory/UKIP coalition because UKIP won't have any seats. If the mood of the Shire Tories is as Gromit claims then the Tories are finished for the foreseeable future.
There is still hope for the LibDems if they were to break from the coalition early. They ought at least to get some credit for wrecking Cameron's plans for boundary changes. What I find distasteful is the thought of them becoming a perpetual party of coalition, shifting their position from right to left as the need arises.
There is still hope for the LibDems if they were to break from the coalition early. They ought at least to get some credit for wrecking Cameron's plans for boundary changes. What I find distasteful is the thought of them becoming a perpetual party of coalition, shifting their position from right to left as the need arises.
/// Blair said his time spent on other activities since leaving Downing Street probably meant he was now better equipped to lead the country. ///
/// "What I have learned in the last five years would have been so useful to me," he said. "Because when you see how the world is developing you get a far clearer picture of some of the issues our country is grappling with.” ///
/// "What I have learned in the last five years would have been so useful to me," he said. "Because when you see how the world is developing you get a far clearer picture of some of the issues our country is grappling with.” ///
Thetaliesin
I imagine they will publish a manifesto before the next election which will contain all their policies.
They are keeping their powder dry at the monent. They have a 10 point lead over the Conservatives without really trying.
My beef with Milliband is not lack of policies (I think most voters know Labour's position) but the lack of any fight. Perhaps they are giving the Coalition enough rope.
I imagine they will publish a manifesto before the next election which will contain all their policies.
They are keeping their powder dry at the monent. They have a 10 point lead over the Conservatives without really trying.
My beef with Milliband is not lack of policies (I think most voters know Labour's position) but the lack of any fight. Perhaps they are giving the Coalition enough rope.
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