Workingman wrote:It frightens me that the country is drifting into hard right / hard left factions with a vacuum in the centre.
Ah yes, the vacuum in the centre. People who think that they can just not vote because their vote "doesn't count" and things will just carry on as they were before.
Bless.....
It has always been the case that the fringes of politics are inhabited by people who believe the most and are motivated the most. The difference, today, is that through social media you can reach them all, in one go and get them to actually change things.
In this specific case, it is people who were probably Tories in the first place, by voting habit, who moved to UKIP because the Tories were too "in the middle" to suit. Coming back and joining the party to get the result you like? Well it gives funds to the Tories to fight the next election and it means the leader is more what they want.
How very undemocratic of those "right wing" voters.....
I have known that May's number was up since she fought the last election on more traditional Labour lines. The ONLY thing keeping her in a job is that she has to deliver Brexit and it has to be a real Brexit, not a watered down, fudged, mess as most of Labour want. That is very Tory too. Focus on the job at hand and get it done, one way or another.
Once that is done, she's toast.
Tories don't sink the boat when in government. Those who have threatened are going to pay for it, dearly.
You might note the veteran Tory, Ken Clark, is completely invisible right now. Because he knows that if he opens his mouth and stands with the rebels he is dead in the water as a Tory. I haven't seen a comment of his in months. Or maybe it's just the news I read. But he doesn't make the headlines right now. That can only be because he doesn't want to.
I had already considered joining the Tory party to have my say on the leader.
Thanks for the reminder..