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Labour politician who gets it
You probably owe it to yourself to read this article, from one of the few members of the Labour Party with any credibility these days:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...ur-jon-cruddas Intelligent, knows where he's coming from, not afraid to throw punches. If Labour is to go anywhere it needs to stop listening to idiots and start listening to its own roots. Quote:
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Re: Labour politician who gets it
He seems to be saying we need a NEW New Labour. I seem to recall having heard that sort of thing before from Bliar and his cronies, normally just before and after elections..... :rolleyes:
I've heard Cruddas a fair bit on the radio and if he's the best they have I don't see much changing. |
Re: Labour politician who gets it
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Re: Labour politician who gets it
PR ends up with no real government or a government which nobody actually voted for. The LibDems would always side with Labour, so that would mean a perpetual Labour dictatorship with the LibDems having more influence than the electorate wanted.
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Re: Labour politician who gets it
Actually PR in the longer term encourages people to form a greater number of parties with narrower interests, rather than the current 'broad church' approach which forces us to vote for one of a very few large parties, all of whom have policies we would rather they didn't have.
Coalition negotiations are then much more complex affairs as it is often necessary for three or more parties to come to some sort of agreement for a Government to be formed. Or else, one party forms a minority administration and is then effectively held in check by Parliament because they can't simply ram a legislative programme through without any proper scrutiny or debate. Scotland provides a good example of this. There are five parties in the Parliament at the moment, plus one independent MSP: SNP, Labour, Conservative, Lib Dem, Green and Margo Macdonald. There would have been six, had the SSP not decided to implode, indulge in a good old fashioned leftie schism and split its own fragile vote in two. We currently have a minority SNP Government in power, without any coalition partners, but they don't control the Parliament which effectively means that all the parties have a say in what goes on. |
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