The British Election

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
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congratulations..... May this be the beginning of much better things in the UK......... with the aim of stabilizing into the frontier you are wanting.

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Boris Johnson��s Conservative Party officially wins Britain��s general election


Johnson �� the bombastic showman who led the campaign to leave the European Union in the June 2016 referendum �� is now positioned to be the prime minister to see Britain set sail from Europe next month.

source: WAPO
 
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Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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With 648 of 650 seats declared, the Tories have 363, an increase of 47, and Labour have 203, down 59.

Several prominent Remain MPs have lost their seats:

Mr Johnson has addressed cheering party workers at Conservative headquarters, telling them there has been a political earthquake, with the Tories winning a "stonking" mandate, from Kensington to Clwyd South.

Speaking earlier at his count in Uxbridge, west London, where he was elected with a slightly higher majority, Mr Johnson said: "It does look as though this One Nation Conservative government has been given a powerful new mandate to get Brexit done."

He added: "Above all I want to thank the people of this country for turning out to vote in a December election that we didn't want to call but which I think has turned out to be a historic election that gives us now, in this new government, the chance to respect the democratic will of the British people to change this country for the better and to unleash the potential of the entire people of this country."

Mr Johnson became prime minister in July without a general election, after the Conservative Party elected him as leader to replace Theresa May.

Speaking at his election count in Islington North, where he was re-elected with a reduced majority, Mr Corbyn said Labour had put forward a "manifesto of hope" but "Brexit has so polarised debate it has overridden so much of normal political debate".

Labour's vote is down around 8% on the 2017 general election, with the Tories up by just over 1% and the smaller parties having a better night.

In other developments:

Jo Swinson - who only became Lib Dem leader in July and began the election campaign by saying she aimed to be prime minister - lost her Dunbartonshire East seat to the SNP by 149 votes
Sir Ed Davey and Lib Dem president Sal Brinton are taking over as interim party leaders
Nigel Dodds, the leader of the Democratic Unionist Party at Westminster, lost his Belfast North seat to Sinn Fein
The Lib Dems took Richmond Park, south-west London, from Conservative minister Zac Goldsmith
Labour's Caroline Flint - who backed the Tory Brexit deal in defiance of her party - lost in Don Valley to Mr Johnson's party
Labour's longest-serving MP Dennis Skinner also lost his seat to the Conservatives
Remain-backing former Tory minister Dominic Grieve came second to the Conservative candidate in Beaconsfield
Anna Soubry, who quit the Tories to form a pro-Remain group of MPs, lost her Nottinghamshire seat to the Tories
It was also a bad night for new Lib Dem recruits, with ex-Labour MPs Chuka Umunna and Luciana Berger, and former Tory minister Sam Gyimah failing to win a seat

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2019-50765773
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Johnson meeting with Queen



Boris Johnson is now meeting with the Queen at Buckingham Palace - where the monarch will invite him to form her next government.

He was greeted by the Queen's equerry-in-waiting Lieutenant Colonel Charles Richards as he arrived at the Palace.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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I found it quite interesting that all candidates that ran in any of the constituencies are up on stage together to listen to their fates.

And you often see one candidate, say of the Monster Raving Loony Party or other whacky minor party, dressed as a banana or a teddy bear or something.
 

Mowich

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 25, 2005
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Eagle Creek
What a fantastic day for Britain. A resounding majority for the Conservatives and Boris. Now with Brexit a done deal, Brits can once again rule their own country without interference from the EU. Also very glad to see that awful old man corbie given such a resounding defeat. The labor party is all but dust in the wind - teach them to elect such a nasty racist person - defeat looks good on them all.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
28,501
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B.C.
What a fantastic day for Britain. A resounding majority for the Conservatives and Boris. Now with Brexit a done deal, Brits can once again rule their own country without interference from the EU. Also very glad to see that awful old man corbie given such a resounding defeat. The labor party is all but dust in the wind - teach them to elect such a nasty racist person - defeat looks good on them all.
There is a lot of wringing of hands and knashing of teeth this morning .
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
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Olympus Mons

An unpopular Trump casts a shadow over Britain��s general election



In Britain, more than any other country aside from the United States, he has sought to bolster his political allies and trash his detractors. British officials have been taken aback by such overt election interference by a close ally.

source: WAPO


the bloke just can't help himself...........Has to meddle where he is not wanted. He has no understanding of the boundaries of what is appropriate.
Oh this is precious after O'Bumwad decided that Brexit was his business and threatened to put the UK at the back of the line for trade if they voted to leave. Or how about the fact the in just his last year alone, O'Bumwad interfered in Brexit, the Israeli general election and the Canadian Federal election. Oh but we can't say anything about that else it would be racist. In fact, Obama also interfered in the Ukraine and Russian elections as well, while idiots like you accuse Trump of colluding with the Russians because Putin gave the Democrats a little pay-back. Too bad you don't hold the other side to the same impeccably high standards you hold Trump to.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
28,501
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Oh this is precious after O'Bumwad decided that Brexit was his business and threatened to put the UK at the back of the line for trade if they voted to leave. Or how about the fact the in just his last year alone, O'Bumwad interfered in Brexit, the Israeli general election and the Canadian Federal election. Oh but we can't say anything about that else it would be racist. In fact, Obama also interfered in the Ukraine and Russian elections as well, while idiots like you accuse Trump of colluding with the Russians because Putin gave the Democrats a little pay-back. Too bad you don't hold the other side to the same impeccably high standards you hold Trump to.
Republican. Bad

Democrat. Good

All one needs to know .
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,887
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Boris's win is a harbinger of a Trump landslide victory in November.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Election result in full



Seats

Conservatives: 365 (+47)
Labour: 203 (-59)
SNP: 48 (+13)
Liberal Democrats: 11 (-1)
DUP: 8 (-2)
Others: 15 (+2)

Votes

Conservatives: 13,966,565
Labour: 10,269,076
Liberal Democrats: 3,696,423
SNP: 1,242,372

Vote percentage

Conservatives: 43.6%
Labour: 32.1%
Liberal Democrats: 11.6%
SNP: 3.9%

Total votes

32,026,222

Turnout

67.3%
 

Mowich

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 25, 2005
16,649
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Eagle Creek
Election result in full



Seats

Conservatives: 365 (+47)
Labour: 203 (-59)
SNP: 48 (+13)
Liberal Democrats: 11 (-1)
DUP: 8 (-2)
Others: 15 (+2)

Votes

Conservatives: 13,966,565
Labour: 10,269,076
Liberal Democrats: 3,696,423
SNP: 1,242,372

Vote percentage

Conservatives: 43.6%
Labour: 32.1%
Liberal Democrats: 11.6%
SNP: 3.9%

Total votes

32,026,222

Turnout

67.3%


Good to see such a robust voter turn-out, BL. None of the other parties can dispute that a clear majority was won by the Conservatives.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,906
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Good to see such a robust voter turn-out, BL. None of the other parties can dispute that a clear majority was won by the Conservatives.

Incredibly, Johnson is the most successful Tory PM since Thatcher even though he has only been in the job for 5 months.

It's the first time since the 2005 election that a PM has commanded s significant majority.

The Tories' percentage share of the vote is the biggest of any party since Thatcher won the 1979 election.
 

Mowich

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 25, 2005
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Eagle Creek
Incredibly, Johnson is the most successful Tory PM since Thatcher even though he has only been in the job for 5 months.

It's the first time since the 2005 election that a PM had commanded s significant majority.

The Tories' percentage share of the vote is the biggest since Thatcher won the 1979 election.


It's all good, BL.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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It's all good, BL.

Well Brexit is in the bag. That will be done by the end of next month.

And Boris reigns supreme and can now pass his policies virtually unopposed as one of the most powerful people in the world.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,906
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Why Labour deserved to lose

It has grown to loathe the people it is supposed to represent.

TOM SLATER
DEPUTY EDITOR
13th December 2019
Spiked



On the night of 23 June 2016, an early result from the north-east of England let us know that we were in for an extraordinary night, when Leave triumphed in Sunderland, way beyond expectations. So it was again last night, when Blyth Valley, an old coalmining town that has been Labour since 1950, fell to the Tories, in the first big result of last night’s historic election.

Then the other dominoes began to fall. Bishop Auckland. Wrexham. Great Grimsby. Leigh. Sedgefield. Workington. As the night went on, the ‘red wall’ continued to crumble. The Tories even took Labour Leave seats that were some way down their target list. In North West Durham – the seat previously occupied by Corbynista Laura Pidcock – the Tories came from 8,000 votes behind to claim one of the biggest scalps of the night.

But Blyth Valley felt particularly symbolic – not least because of some Labourites’ shameful treatment of the former MP for the seat, Ronnie Campbell. Campbell – an outspoken socialist and veteran of the Miners’ Strike – represented the seat from 1987 to 2019. (He stepped down before the election.) But he was also a committed Leaver. And when he was mulling over backing Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal, to uphold the will of his constituents (60 per cent of whom voted Leave), he was attacked.

Guardian columnist Zoe Williams accused Campbell, who was leading picket lines while Williams was still at private school, of being a ‘scab’. Corbynite keyboard warrior Paul Mason accused him of ‘lacking moral fibre’. Mason has long argued that working-class northern English Leavers are basically a lost cause. He said at an event in May that Labour should ignore those who he caricatured as the ‘ex-miner sitting in the pub calling migrants cockroaches’.

This – in a nutshell – is why Labour was defeated last night, and defeated so badly. Its betrayal of its millions of Brexit voters, its embrace of a second referendum, proved decisive. It was strategically stupid (401 seats voted Leave in the referendum, including most Labour seats). But it was also shameful: the party that was founded to give the working class a voice set out to silence that voice. At their most charitable, Labourites saw Brexit as a cry for help from the left behind. And in place of political power – over the laws and people who govern them – all Labour offered voters at this election were handouts.

In this colossal miscalculation, both the right and left of the party are culpable. In the hours since that exit poll, Corbynistas have tried to blame their failures on their Brexit policy as if they had nothing to do with it, as if it was forced on them by recalcitrant Europhile Blairites. But they were in control of the party. They chose this path. They decided that chasing middle-class Remainers was more important than holding on to working-class Leavers. They assumed the plebs either wouldn’t notice or wouldn’t care.

What this tells us is that Labour no longer takes ordinary people seriously. At best, it pities them. And what we’ve seen so vividly since 2016 is that pity is often the flipside of hate. Labourites’ detachment from their heartland voters has bred a remarkable contempt for them, which takes various unseemly forms – whether it is faux-sympathetic MPs telling Brexit voters they got it wrong and must vote again, or their more excitable outriders smearing voters as racists and insisting they should just be dispensed with.

One of the tragedies of last night is that those in Labour who stood against this bourgeois, anti-democratic drift reaped the whirlwind that their colleagues had created. Caroline Flint lost her seat in the Don Valley, despite fighting tooth and nail for her Leave-voting constituents. Dennis Skinner, another Brexit-backing ex-miner, lost his seat in Bolsover, which he had held since 1970. What is left is a party that is a shell of what it once was, its numbers depleted and its moral authority shot.

This is why Labour deserved to lose last night. It has grown to loathe the very people it is supposed to represent. Just ask Ronnie Campbell, and his former constituents – who for the first time ever will now be represented by a man in a blue rosette.



https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/12/13/why-labour-deserved-to-lose/
 
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Mowich

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 25, 2005
16,649
998
113
76
Eagle Creek
Why Labour deserved to lose

It has grown to loathe the people it is supposed to represent.

TOM SLATER
DEPUTY EDITOR
13th December 2019
Spiked



On the night of 23 June 2016, an early result from the north-east of England let us know that we were in for an extraordinary night, when Leave triumphed in Sunderland, way beyond expectations. So it was again last night, when Blyth Valley, an old coalmining town that has been Labour since 1950, fell to the Tories, in the first big result of last night’s historic election.

Then the other dominoes began to fall. Bishop Auckland. Wrexham. Great Grimsby. Leigh. Sedgefield. Workington. As the night went on, the ‘red wall’ continued to crumble. The Tories even took Labour Leave seats that were some way down their target list. In North West Durham – the seat previously occupied by Corbynista Laura Pidcock – the Tories came from 8,000 votes behind to claim one of the biggest scalps of the night.

But Blyth Valley felt particularly symbolic – not least because of some Labourites’ shameful treatment of the former MP for the seat, Ronnie Campbell. Campbell – an outspoken socialist and veteran of the Miners’ Strike – represented the seat from 1987 to 2019. (He stepped down before the election.) But he was also a committed Leaver. And when he was mulling over backing Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal, to uphold the will of his constituents (60 per cent of whom voted Leave), he was attacked.

Guardian columnist Zoe Williams accused Campbell, who was leading picket lines while Williams was still at private school, of being a ‘scab’. Corbynite keyboard warrior Paul Mason accused him of ‘lacking moral fibre’. Mason has long argued that working-class northern English Leavers are basically a lost cause. He said at an event in May that Labour should ignore those who he caricatured as the ‘ex-miner sitting in the pub calling migrants cockroaches’.

This – in a nutshell – is why Labour was defeated last night, and defeated so badly. Its betrayal of its millions of Brexit voters, its embrace of a second referendum, proved decisive. It was strategically stupid (401 seats voted Leave in the referendum, including most Labour seats). But it was also shameful: the party that was founded to give the working class a voice set out to silence that voice. At their most charitable, Labourites saw Brexit as a cry for help from the left behind. And in place of political power – over the laws and people who govern them – all Labour offered voters at this election were handouts.

In this colossal miscalculation, both the right and left of the party are culpable. In the hours since that exit poll, Corbynistas have tried to blame their failures on their Brexit policy as if they had nothing to do with it, as if it was forced on them by recalcitrant Europhile Blairites. But they were in control of the party. They chose this path. They decided that chasing middle-class Remainers was more important than holding on to working-class Leavers. They assumed the plebs either wouldn’t notice or wouldn’t care.

What this tells us is that Labour no longer takes ordinary people seriously. At best, it pities them. And what we’ve seen so vividly since 2016 is that pity is often the flipside of hate. Labourites’ detachment from their heartland voters has bred a remarkable contempt for them, which takes various unseemly forms – whether it is faux-sympathetic MPs telling Brexit voters they got it wrong and must vote again, or their more excitable outriders smearing voters as racists and insisting they should just be dispensed with.

One of the tragedies of last night is that those in Labour who stood against this bourgeois, anti-democratic drift reaped the whirlwind that their colleagues had created. Caroline Flint lost her seat in the Don Valley, despite fighting tooth and nail for her Leave-voting constituents. Dennis Skinner, another Brexit-backing ex-miner, lost his seat in Bolsover, which he had held since 1970. What is left is a party that is a shell of what it once was, its numbers depleted and its moral authority shot.

This is why Labour deserved to lose last night. It has grown to loathe the very people it is supposed to represent. Just ask Ronnie Campbell, and his former constituents – who for the first time ever will now be represented by a man in a blue rosette.



https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/12/13/why-labour-deserved-to-lose/


Great article, BL. Some of those former Labor seats were won by the Conservatives by outstanding numbers. One in particular caught my eye though I don't remember which - as the gap was well over 13,000 votes.