Originally posted by darmstadt
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Previously on "What is worse hard brexit or Corbyn as PM?"
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Originally posted by MasterBait View PostThe combination of having both Corbyn as PM and a hard Brexit would be total collapse of the economy as the UK as we know it
Trump wouldn't do a trade deal with a commie, hezbollah IRA supporter or would he, as Putin also supports and pays Corbyn and instructs him to give the Jezzer a good deal?Originally posted by Old Greg View PostProject Fear.
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Originally posted by MasterBait View PostThe combination of having both Corbyn as PM and a hard Brexit would be total collapse of the economy as the UK as we know it
Trump wouldn't do a trade deal with a commie, hezbollah IRA supporter or would he, as Putin also supports and pays Corbyn and instructs him to give the Jezzer a good deal?
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Originally posted by CryingSheep View PostAgree... I also think that Lib Dems and Labour will mainly get votes from each other
And from some of their results recently, they may be attracting support from some voters you really wouldn't expect them to attract.
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Originally posted by CryingSheep View PostMostly I agree with you, but Labour picked a side: if leaving never with no deal, and that can attract some electorate...Originally posted by CryingSheep View PostAgree... I also think that Lib Dems and Labour will mainly get votes from each other
No Brexit voter will vote Lib-dem
No Remain voter will vote Tory/Brexit party
No traditional Tory voter will vote Labour - it will be Lib-dem/Brexit party based on stance on Brexit
No traditional Labour voter will vote Tory - it will be Lib-dem/Brexit party based on stance on Brexit
Which leaves the Labour with a subsection of their traditional voters that don't feel strongly pro/against Brexit and some traditional Lib-dems who are pro-Brexit. I don't believe there are many of the latter out there.
Labour will have a massive drain of pro-remain voters to Lib-dem/SNP and small gain of pro-deal leave voters from various sources. They have no major source of additional voters, compared to the last elections to hope for a majority.
Bottom line is either way lib-dem are in for a major gain in seats and after the 2010 coalition fiasco I highly doubt they will enter into another coalition as a minority partner. So it will either be a hung parliament or a minority government on some sort of lib-dem/SNP/?? coalition
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Originally posted by CryingSheep View PostAgree... I also think that Lib Dems and Labour will mainly get votes from each other
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostShould attract a few LibDem voters.
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Originally posted by sal View PostZero chance of Corbin becoming a PM. Coming GE the only pledge/issue that will matter will be Brexit. Labour still suffers from "split personality" on the matter, they are trying to appeal to everyone by not picking sides but the result is that instead they will not appeal no neither remainers, nor brexiteers and will only get their die hard/core votes.
Tories under Boris, especially after last nights "purge" are decisively pro-Brexit, they will split the Brexiteer vote with the Brexit party
SNP will cream everyone in Scotland, likely completely wiping the Tories off the map and winning any marginal seats from Labour with their pro-remain agenda
Lib-dems will get the majority of the remain vote outside of Scotland.
Number of seats is another matter and will largely depend on cooperation, but in terms of % of the vote the EU elections gave a good idea of what's to come.
The Tories have some chances of attracting Brexit party votes with their latest agenda/rhetoric.
Labour has zero chance of attracting neither remain votes from lib-dems/SNP, nor Brexit votes from Tory/Brexit party, unless they pick a side.
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Zero chance of Corbin becoming a PM. Coming GE the only pledge/issue that will matter will be Brexit. Labour still suffers from "split personality" on the matter, they are trying to appeal to everyone by not picking sides but the result is that instead they will not appeal no neither remainers, nor brexiteers and will only get their die hard/core votes.
Tories under Boris, especially after last nights "purge" are decisively pro-Brexit, they will split the Brexiteer vote with the Brexit party
SNP will cream everyone in Scotland, likely completely wiping the Tories off the map and winning any marginal seats from Labour with their pro-remain agenda
Lib-dems will get the majority of the remain vote outside of Scotland.
Number of seats is another matter and will largely depend on cooperation, but in terms of % of the vote the EU elections gave a good idea of what's to come.
The Tories have some chances of attracting Brexit party votes with their latest agenda/rhetoric.
Labour has zero chance of attracting neither remain votes from lib-dems/SNP, nor Brexit votes from Tory/Brexit party, unless they pick a side.
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Originally posted by MasterBait View PostThe combination of having both Corbyn as PM and a hard Brexit would be total collapse of the economy as the UK as we know it
Trump wouldn't do a trade deal with a commie, hezbollah IRA supporter or would he, as Putin also supports and pays Corbyn and instructs him to give the Jezzer a good deal?
Leave a comment:
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What is worse hard brexit or Corbyn as PM?
The combination of having both Corbyn as PM and a hard Brexit would be total collapse of the economy as the UK as we know it
Trump wouldn't do a trade deal with a commie, hezbollah IRA supporter or would he, as Putin also supports and pays Corbyn and instructs him to give the Jezzer a good deal?Tags: None
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