Crosswords3 mins ago
Donald Trump
Why do so much of the media lie and wish to denigrate Donald Trump? Isn't he the best US President for generations?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. 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.// Mexico will pay for the wall. It will not cost the US anything. //
And how is that going?
I won’t out that as a lie, because absolutely no one (except Trump), believed it for a nono-second.
He is a snake oil salesman with the attention span of a goldfish. His Russian backers must be laughing their socks off.
And how is that going?
I won’t out that as a lie, because absolutely no one (except Trump), believed it for a nono-second.
He is a snake oil salesman with the attention span of a goldfish. His Russian backers must be laughing their socks off.
KARL// If in the UK Labour had a similar monopoly on power through crafty manipulation of the electoral system would the same people still be encouraging celebration or at least quiet acceptance ? There is democracy and then there is democracy. //. 12:35 Thu
It's a well known fact that Labour need fewer votes per MP elected.
Sure i read that in the 1997 election they needed half the number of votes per MP.
But don't worry, they are going to alter electoral boundaries (soon) to correct this disgraceful bias.
It's a well known fact that Labour need fewer votes per MP elected.
Sure i read that in the 1997 election they needed half the number of votes per MP.
But don't worry, they are going to alter electoral boundaries (soon) to correct this disgraceful bias.
A bit of a shame that Khandro seems to have not yet acknowledged my criticism of the UK system because it screwed UKIP in 2015.
I should also add that spicerack is essentially correct about the election of 1997 -- it wasn't quite a 2-to-1 advantage for Labour but was near as dammit. In 1983 (another disgracefully disproportionate election, the SDP/Libs scraping 20 seats from 25% of the popular vote), the Tories had "only" a 1.2-to-1 advantage over Labour.
It's also a turnout issue: Labour has a tonne of seats that it comfortably wins on pathetically low, c.50% turnouts (and the Tories have the opposite problem).
I should also add that spicerack is essentially correct about the election of 1997 -- it wasn't quite a 2-to-1 advantage for Labour but was near as dammit. In 1983 (another disgracefully disproportionate election, the SDP/Libs scraping 20 seats from 25% of the popular vote), the Tories had "only" a 1.2-to-1 advantage over Labour.
It's also a turnout issue: Labour has a tonne of seats that it comfortably wins on pathetically low, c.50% turnouts (and the Tories have the opposite problem).