rio wrote:
There is huge backing for a workers' rights-orientated party. Why did Labour get in with a landslide, and why has their vote decreased at the same rate at which they have moved further away from a workers' rights platform.
If the BNP do have a breakthrough, it will be because they have managed to frame the race issue as one of workers rights. Racial politics never gets anywhere on its own.
Well, the fractured left, of course, this is sad but true. No reason not to vote for a left party though.
Do you really want me to answer that first point? England voted NuLab in because Blair was a fresh face and toned down the socialist "Labour" stuff into a more general centre-right format that the average man could vote for. They got a landslide because people thought they genuinely offered something different, and their vote decreased as people moaned about the relatively small things - Iraq, corruption, the tabloid treatment David Blunkett. You have a better opinion of our countrymen than I do. If there was a general election now and the expenses thing never became a big issue, Cameron would win a landslide because of the same reason - slickness.
As for the BNP, I can't see Griffin winning that coveted seat considering, like someone in el Guardiano said, how such a fuss was made over the invitation to the garden party, and how every other party is saying 'vote for us, so the BNP doesn't get in!!11' I sometimes think it'd be better if he did win and the lines were drawn more clearly, just to bring the left together and we didn't turn completely into America with their Democrat vs Republican stuff. Which is why I voted left with the Greens, a lefty party!