British politics or muffins taste nice? Or both?
snoopcester Send a noteboard - 26/04/2010 10:52:35 AM
But. And here is the wonderful thing that makes following British politics a bit like a glorious car boot sale: today's paper makes clear (what it probably assumed I knew yesterday) that there is in fact a "constitutional convention" that in a hung parliament the Prime Minister is allowed to try to form a government first. So there is a genuine possibility that a man with the least votes gets to be PM. What happens if the LibDems turn down Labour the first time around (ie Gordon as PM) and then when it becomes their turn decides to run with Labour over Conservatives (which, let's face it, is the sensible thing to do for them), would Brown then say yes? Does anyone know?
As I understand it, Brown is PM until a working coalition is formed that gives enough MPs to someone else to be PM. So if the Lib Dems and Tories did form a coalition, either Cameron or Clegg would become PM in place of Brown, depending on which one is the dominant party. I could be wrong though, as from what I've seen most journalists seem a little hazy on it so I could have got the wrong end of the stick but it is basically to make sure there isn't a prolonged period with no Prime Minister.
Also, why would Clegg want a coalition with the Conservatives? He doesn't agree with a word they say!
It could be a good tactical move - it serves as a good way to tell the public that despite what the Tories say, voting Lib Dem won't automatically mean Brown gets to be PM. It is a good way to show the Lib Dems are an independent party and will make choices on what they think is best for the nation... it also is a good position to agree a coalition with New Labour - it makes it clear that New Labour need to offer an attractive deala nd not just assume he Lib Dems will agree a coalition because they've got not other choices.
*MySmiley*
Robert Graves "There is no money in poetry, but then there is no poetry in money, either."
Henning Mankell "We must defend the open society, because if we start locking our doors, if we let fear decide, the person who committed the act of terror will win"
Robert Graves "There is no money in poetry, but then there is no poetry in money, either."
Henning Mankell "We must defend the open society, because if we start locking our doors, if we let fear decide, the person who committed the act of terror will win"
British politics is ... like a basket of crazy muffins. But they taste nice.
26/04/2010 09:34:57 AM
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British politics or muffins taste nice? Or both?
26/04/2010 10:52:35 AM
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Both
26/04/2010 05:11:54 PM
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Indeed
26/04/2010 11:01:30 AM
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Re: Indeed
26/04/2010 11:06:10 AM
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Didn't mean to put the effectively in there
26/04/2010 11:17:20 AM
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That makes more sense
26/04/2010 11:24:33 AM
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Yeah, I follow elections in lots of countries.
26/04/2010 11:11:28 AM
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Re: Yeah, I follow elections in lots of countries.
26/04/2010 05:17:55 PM
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It's all very entertaining.
26/04/2010 01:46:25 PM
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It works alright when you have a two- or 2½-party system with support divided geographically.
26/04/2010 04:40:31 PM
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Would it really be so bad if the BNP gained seats?
26/04/2010 05:03:06 PM
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I don't have a problem with it as such (I dow ith the fact that people want to vote for them)
26/04/2010 05:15:02 PM
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Re: It works alright when you have a two- or 2½-party system with support divided geographically.
26/04/2010 06:14:44 PM
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Big fucking deal. Coalitions of less than 5 parties = LAME *NM*
28/04/2010 12:03:36 AM
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Rather a bigger deal when it happens in a first past the post system. *NM*
28/04/2010 08:20:42 AM
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