rio wrote:
This is all out of whack. First off, you're implying that the alternative to supporting a mainstream party is "sniping from the shadows", which is not true at all. Very often the main parties dictate a very closed-off agenda which a great many people don't believe in. A great many positive things (most, by far?) are achieved in spite of them, not because. And the people that achieve it are those people you implicitly class as "fringers" who are "sniping from the sidelines". Clearly, there have been points when votes for women, desegregation, abolition of slavery, independent trade unionism, I could go on, were defined as entirely "fringe" issues and had no representation whatsoever amongst those in charge.
Second, it's a completely defeatist attitude... if you can't beat em, join em. Sure, defeatists may present themselves as just realists or pragmatists, but then they are often the reason that progress, when it does happen, has taken so long.
Thirdly, bending to the lesser of two evils means you swallow their agenda and lose the capacity for independent thought, in extreme cases. Discussion is defined entirely on the terms of an extremely small group. This is why so much political discourse is just based around stupid tribalistic buzzwords like "small government" or "war on terror" etc. etc.
In DM's case, he doesn't support a party, so is a real fringer and that's what I meant, but what the hell: you voted for a party that doesn't intend to take up any seats it wins. Precisely how is that going to help? In Britain's case, the best thing possible now would be for the left-wing to rally around the Lib Dems, since their policies (and yes, let's assume that the party will stick to that) are the most progressive of the mainstream three. I know that back in the prehistoric past votes for women slavery etc were fringe issues, but they were eventually decided by mainstream politicians.
Defeatist? Depends how you look at it, I suppose. Is splitting a vote and allowing the BNP to make gains helping progression, or hindering it? And yes, Britain needs electory reform, agreed. Yet if refusing to bend means that they slip behind parties like UKIP, what's the gain?
I was happy to vote Green in the MEP elections, as they have good policies and have done good things so far. Will wait and see before committing fully to a LibDem-supporting position, but if they were to become the mainstream centre-left opposition to a Cameron-fronted Tory government, well, what's wrong with that?