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    12 commenti

    1. denyer-no1-fan on

      >Yet I am worried. All my life elections have been won on the centre ground by parties that are themselves coalitions. Now we may be heading for an election between an extreme-right party led by Farage and an extreme-left coalition of Greens and Corbyn-Sultanas.

      On one hand, exiting the Refugee Convention, the ECHR, and deporting 600,000 people from this country. On the other, end austerity for good, nationalise public services, and stop being complicit in war crimes.

      tHeY aRe BoTh EqUaLlY bAd

    2. Enough-Jackfruit766 on

      That’s it… do all you can to fracture the Left so Reform can swoop in … Yessss do it … _excellent_ … WHAHAHA 😈

    3. Heavy-Hall4457 on

      Corbyn showed us precisely how much the country wants ultra-left wing government.

    4. Enough-Jackfruit766 on

      They talk about people getting into politics for the wrong reasons… it’s clear this D list actor is just doing it for the attention.

      A vote for the greens is a vote for reform…

    5. Big-View-1061 on

      It’s almost like reality is complicated, and politicians in actual position of power have to compromise.

    6. DigbyGibbers on

      Reform isn’t extreme right. If things don’t change they’ll get to see extreme right. 

    7. My underlying problem with modern politicians is their lack of experience in actually delivering stuff.

      In the past when left wing people advocated greater state intervention it was usually coming from people with actual lived experience of delivery. Civil servants who had been part of government. Local authority leaders who had delivered economic regeneration. Industry leaders and skilled workers with practical experience of product and project delivery.

      Similarly, when proper business people could point to actual success in the private sector it seemed reasonable to conclude they might run things more efficiently when advocating more right wing positions.

      The experience gave them a greater degree of credibility when saying they could do a better job of delivering positive state transformation.

      I don’t understand why I should trust any of Kemi, Zach, Fruit or Nut, or Farage when they just assert they will make public services better. They have no practical, real world examples to draw on.

    8. muse_head on

      I’m not sure why people talk about Corbyn (and the Green party) as extreme left wing, it sounds like a huge exaggeration. Extreme left wing would be banning private companies, banning the private ownership of land, huge wealth redistribution on a massive scale (i.e. fortunes being confiscated by the state), immediate dissolution of the monarchy, etc.

    9. TastyYellowBees on

      Zack Polanski is a dancing man turned hypnotist turned politician whose national strategy we must take very very seriously indeed.

    10. Kindly_District8412 on

      Zack irrelevantski

      Green Party do not stand for anything meaningful except for some circle jerk woke liberal nonsense echo chambers

    11. Diadem_Cheeseboard on

      “Sell-out” is probably the most accurate thing that can be said about Keir Starmer since he became PM. Either that, or he was a decietful liar whilst in opposition.

    12. Enough-Jackfruit766 on

      Vote green! “_We promise to destroy your country and economy with delusion net zero policies. Please please vote for us. Please 🙏_”

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