The British Election

Mowich

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Barbara Kay: A victory lap for democracy after Jeremy Corbyn’s humiliating defeat

Boris Johnson’s Conservatives racked up a stunning victory in the U.K. elections, with numbers so decisive – 368 of 650 seats – we will hear no more rumblings about a “second referendum” on Brexit. You can love Boris or hate him, or struggle with mixed feelings (as I confess I do), but he now has a mandate to get Brexit done.

But I have no mixed feelings about the Labour Party’s humiliating loss, at 191 seats their lowest ebb since pre-World War Two. If ever a party leader deserved a definitive smackdown, it was Jeremy Corbyn and a victory lap is in order for democracy doing what it does best.

On seeing the results, I said to myself, “Yay!” The second thing I said to myself was, “Who will be the first to pull a Jacques Parizeau and how long will it take?” As it turned out, not long at all, and it was former London mayor Ken Livingstone who reprised Parizeau’s infamous “money and the ethnic vote” blame-shift after the Yes side’s narrow loss in the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum.

As soon as it was clear the U.K. Conservatives had crossed the threshold majority number of 326 seats, Livingstone announced Labour’s defeat was at least partially down to “the Jewish vote.” In fact, a Jewish population of 260,000 could not by itself have greatly influenced the result, but it is a mark of the anti-Semitic mindset to constantly exaggerate Jewish power.

Livingstone, who has called allegations of anti-Semitism within the Labour Party “lies and smears,” was himself suspended from the Labour Party in 2016 over an assertion that Hitler supported Zionism before he eventually quit the party in 2018. It was by no means his only egregiously insensitive remark. In April, he reportedly told the group Labour Against the Witchhunt that “It is not anti-Semitic to hate the Jews of Israel”.

In their own minds, Parizeau, Corbyn and Livingstone are just well-meaning politicians doing their best to serve the nation’s interests.

They believe they have been martyred because of baseless hatred from people who are not even really Québécois or English.

(I’m not being fair to Parizeau here. Livingstone has demonstrated that he hates Jews, while Parizeau was a mere xenophobe. There’s a huge difference. Parizeau didn’t hate Jews or immigrants or anglos in general. He principally saw them as a numerical federalist force standing in the way of the sovereigntist dream.)

Will Labour’s defeat and Corbyn’s likely exit from political life create the conditions for a moral cleansing of the party? Hopefully.

Meanwhile, some of us find ourselves brooding over the rise of institutionalized anti-Semitism of an atypical, more virulent kind for the English, who tend generally toward a casual anti-Semitism that is offensive, but not menacing.

For example, in 1996, when Princess Diana chose Anthony Julius, Diana’s personal solicitor. AFP as her divorce lawyer, the Daily Telegraph commented, “(Julius) is a Jewish intellectual and Labour supporter, and less likely to feel constrained by the consideration of fair play. ‘I’d be very worried if I were the Royal family,’ says a Cambridge don who taught him. ‘He’ll get lots of money out of them.’”

Now, you would never see that kind of stuff in any North American newspaper, much less a respected mainstream one, but this is not hatred speaking. It’s “genteel” anti-Semitism. (The Telegraph did apologize in the face of indignant response, but it’s telling that the editor didn’t see a problem with it.)

Julius went on to write an exhaustively researched history of anti-Semitism in England, published in 2010. In Trials of the Diaspora, Julius writes that although English anti-Semitism was brutal in its medieval incarnation, in the last few hundred years, it has remained widespread but relatively benign: “(The) typical English anti-Semite does not see Jews in every hiding-place and under every disguise; he is not obsessive; he is not at risk of being driven mad by his consciousness of Jews. Anti-Semitism is rarely burdensome to him.”

One might say that it is a fairly lackadaisical form of Anti-Semitism, more distrust than hatred. “Jew-wariness, accompanied by a certain disdain … is a story of snub and insult, sly whisper and innuendo,” Julius writes. The words “Jewish gentleman” are never irony-free in England.

None of the above applies to the hardcore anti-Semitism of Corbyn, Livingstone and a cadre of like-minded Labour Party MPs.

Ninety years ago, Bolsheviks claimed it wasn’t Jews they hated, only capitalists. Was it their fault the capitalists happened to be Jews?

Today’s bolshies – progressive ideologues allied with Islamists – claim Zionism is the cause of all the world’s ills. Is it their fault Zionists happen to be Jews?

Indulgence of extreme anti-Zionism has enabled a pernicious strain of anti-Semitism to creep back into English culture. Jew hatred cannot be openly expressed, but hatred of Israel as a proxy for Jews can be. To a point, which we have, hopefully, just seen illuminated and acted upon.

nationalpost.com/opinion/barbara-kay-a-victory-lap-for-democracy-after-jeremy-corbyns-humiliating-defeat?video_autoplay=true
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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but hatred of Israel as a proxy for Jews can be

Yes, I guess support of of Palestinians treatment by Israel is jew hate. Especially when Jews do it.

Oh well, Back to the politics of BRITAIN...Hopefully Soros left them some value in their pound.

In 1992, George Soros brought the Bank of England to its knees. In the process, he pocketed over a billion dollars. Making a billion dollars is by all accounts pretty cool. But demolishing the monetary system of Great Britain in a single day with an elegantly constructed bet against its currency? That’s the stuff of legends.
https://priceonomics.com/the-trade-of-the-century-when-george-soros-broke/

‘Destroying America will be the culmination of my life’s work.’~ George Soros.’"
https://www.politifact.com/facebook...rge-soros-never-said-he-made-it-his-lifes-mi/



So I guess is posting fact checker's quoting them.
 
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Barbara Kay: A victory lap for democracy after Jeremy Corbyn’s humiliating defeat
Boris Johnson’s Conservatives racked up a stunning victory in the U.K. elections, with numbers so decisive – 368 of 650 seats – we will hear no more rumblings about a “second referendum” on Brexit. You can love Boris or hate him, or struggle with mixed feelings (as I confess I do), but he now has a mandate to get Brexit done.
But I have no mixed feelings about the Labour Party’s humiliating loss, at 191 seats their lowest ebb since pre-World War Two. If ever a party leader deserved a definitive smackdown, it was Jeremy Corbyn and a victory lap is in order for democracy doing what it does best.
On seeing the results, I said to myself, “Yay!” The second thing I said to myself was, “Who will be the first to pull a Jacques Parizeau and how long will it take?” As it turned out, not long at all, and it was former London mayor Ken Livingstone who reprised Parizeau’s infamous “money and the ethnic vote” blame-shift after the Yes side’s narrow loss in the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum.
As soon as it was clear the U.K. Conservatives had crossed the threshold majority number of 326 seats, Livingstone announced Labour’s defeat was at least partially down to “the Jewish vote.” In fact, a Jewish population of 260,000 could not by itself have greatly influenced the result, but it is a mark of the anti-Semitic mindset to constantly exaggerate Jewish power.
Livingstone, who has called allegations of anti-Semitism within the Labour Party “lies and smears,” was himself suspended from the Labour Party in 2016 over an assertion that Hitler supported Zionism before he eventually quit the party in 2018. It was by no means his only egregiously insensitive remark. In April, he reportedly told the group Labour Against the Witchhunt that “It is not anti-Semitic to hate the Jews of Israel”.
In their own minds, Parizeau, Corbyn and Livingstone are just well-meaning politicians doing their best to serve the nation’s interests.
They believe they have been martyred because of baseless hatred from people who are not even really Québécois or English.
(I’m not being fair to Parizeau here. Livingstone has demonstrated that he hates Jews, while Parizeau was a mere xenophobe. There’s a huge difference. Parizeau didn’t hate Jews or immigrants or anglos in general. He principally saw them as a numerical federalist force standing in the way of the sovereigntist dream.)
Will Labour’s defeat and Corbyn’s likely exit from political life create the conditions for a moral cleansing of the party? Hopefully.
Meanwhile, some of us find ourselves brooding over the rise of institutionalized anti-Semitism of an atypical, more virulent kind for the English, who tend generally toward a casual anti-Semitism that is offensive, but not menacing.
For example, in 1996, when Princess Diana chose Anthony Julius, Diana’s personal solicitor. AFP as her divorce lawyer, the Daily Telegraph commented, “(Julius) is a Jewish intellectual and Labour supporter, and less likely to feel constrained by the consideration of fair play. ‘I’d be very worried if I were the Royal family,’ says a Cambridge don who taught him. ‘He’ll get lots of money out of them.’”
Now, you would never see that kind of stuff in any North American newspaper, much less a respected mainstream one, but this is not hatred speaking. It’s “genteel” anti-Semitism. (The Telegraph did apologize in the face of indignant response, but it’s telling that the editor didn’t see a problem with it.)
Julius went on to write an exhaustively researched history of anti-Semitism in England, published in 2010. In Trials of the Diaspora, Julius writes that although English anti-Semitism was brutal in its medieval incarnation, in the last few hundred years, it has remained widespread but relatively benign: “(The) typical English anti-Semite does not see Jews in every hiding-place and under every disguise; he is not obsessive; he is not at risk of being driven mad by his consciousness of Jews. Anti-Semitism is rarely burdensome to him.”
One might say that it is a fairly lackadaisical form of Anti-Semitism, more distrust than hatred. “Jew-wariness, accompanied by a certain disdain … is a story of snub and insult, sly whisper and innuendo,” Julius writes. The words “Jewish gentleman” are never irony-free in England.
None of the above applies to the hardcore anti-Semitism of Corbyn, Livingstone and a cadre of like-minded Labour Party MPs.
Ninety years ago, Bolsheviks claimed it wasn’t Jews they hated, only capitalists. Was it their fault the capitalists happened to be Jews?
Today’s bolshies – progressive ideologues allied with Islamists – claim Zionism is the cause of all the world’s ills. Is it their fault Zionists happen to be Jews?
Indulgence of extreme anti-Zionism has enabled a pernicious strain of anti-Semitism to creep back into English culture. Jew hatred cannot be openly expressed, but hatred of Israel as a proxy for Jews can be. To a point, which we have, hopefully, just seen illuminated and acted upon.
nationalpost.com/opinion/barbara-kay-a-victory-lap-for-democracy-after-jeremy-corbyns-humiliating-defeat?video_autoplay=true

So the former London mayor blames the Jews for Labour's disaster.


No. One reason for Labour's disaster is that it's a racist, anti-Semitic party.

It deserves its trouncing.
 

Blackleaf

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DANIEL HANNAN Boris Johnson will make Britain a brighter country that can stand tall in the world

COMMENT
Daniel Hannan
14 Dec 2019
The Sun

DID they think we didn’t mean it? That 17.4million of us voted Leave as a bit of banter? That we weren’t fussed and would back down when corrected by our betters?

Well, they know better now. The British people stuck to their guns, politely but stubbornly.


Boris will make Britain a brighter country that can stand tall and proud in the world

A lot of MPs had tried to make the Election about stopping Brexit: Jo Swinson, Phillip Lee, Chuka Umunna, Anna Soubry, Dominic Grieve, Sarah Wollaston, Chris Leslie, Sam Gyimah. All of them ended up losing their seats.

We meant what we said in 2016. Three years of being told that we hadn’t understood what we voted for didn’t wear us down. It just annoyed us.

Plenty of people who voted Remain in 2016 were exasperated by the dishonesty of those MPs who, having promised to respect the result, did everything in their power to frustrate it. This week it was the country’s turn to speak.

Britain is a democracy. That doesn’t just mean that we hold votes from time to time: Russia, China and Venezuela do that.

It means we expect our votes to count. We expect MPs to act as our servants, not our rulers. We expect our decisions to be honoured.

Our bloody-mindedness obviously caused a degree of surprise in pro-Brussels circles. Other countries that have voted against European integration have been ignored or made to back down. Not Britain. When we say something, we mean it.

STICKING TO OUR GUNS

Sticking to our referendum result is not the only thing that makes us unusual.

Unlike many European countries, we have never had a Marxist party in office. Nor, in modern times, have we ever allowed an anti-Semitic party anywhere near power. Those two honourable records are still intact.
Above all, Thursday’s election was a vote for moderation. Although his detractors make him out to be some sort of extremist, Boris Johnson is a main stream politician.

Yes, he is unusually clever and gifted. Yes, he has a rich and eccentric speaking style. But his politics are pretty moderate — he is a one-nation Tory who, as a backbencher, backed Ken Clarke for the party leadership. He has always stood for liberal and humane conservatism.

The only way you can label Boris “far Right” is if you also apply that label to 17.4million Leave voters.

‘Voters treated as thick’

Plainly, the electorate doesn’t see Brexit as extreme. There is nothing wrong with wanting to live in an independent country that makes its own laws, just as Canada, Switzerland or Singapore do.

ANTI-DEMOCRATIC EXTREMISTS

People understood the real extremists were those who wanted to undo not only the referendum result but the free-market system that made Britain successful.

Jeremy Corbyn was not like previous Labour leaders.

Every past Labour PM, from Clement Attlee to Tony Blair, had accepted that the British economy rested on free contract.

Sure, they wanted to tax and spend more, but they never questioned the institution of private property.

Faced with a leader who planned to expropriate private pensions, schools and companies, the British people cheerfully sent him on his way.

Those who, even now, insist on seeing the Brexit project as a product of extremism should reflect on the fact that — again, unusually within the EU — Britain has no populist anti-immigrant party in its Parliament.

Nigel Farage, who spent the campaign attacking Boris’s deal and laying into the Tories, is now trying to claim some sort of role in their victory.

It won’t wash. People voted for Boris because they liked his politics and the settlement he was offering. Farage, like Corbyn, was sent on his way.

Above all, the electorate turned out to be brighter than MPs expected.

Ever since the 2016 referendum, political leaders have treated voters in general, and Leavers in particular, as a bit thick.

Labour’s campaign, like the Remain campaign, assumed we were dimwits.

We were supposed to believe, for example, in some plot to sell off the NHS, when it was clear in black and white that no one was proposing such a thing.

We were supposed to believe that the Government could spend an extra trillion pounds and no one outside the top five per cent would pay for it.

We were supposed to believe that a mandatory four-day week wouldn’t wreck our competitiveness.

We looked on these silly promises with a fond, if cynical, smile and, once again, we turned elsewhere. After three years of parliamentary blockage, we can finally leave the EU — and in a friendly manner.

We can rejoin the community of nations as a serious democracy, one that has turned away from extremism, anti-Semitism and revolutionary socialism.

We can, in short, stand tall in the world.

Daniel Hannan is Conservative MEP for the South East.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10549582/boris-johnsons-election-win-brighter-britain/
 

Mowich

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Dec 25, 2005
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So the Tories win.


We'll see now if they can give Brexit deal or no deal...


Win they did, Serryah............with the largest Tory majority since the Thatcher years. 67% voter turn-out. Brexit will happen on January 31 of 2020 and Britain will once again gain her autonomy. All that will be left is the nuts and bolts and Boris now has all the backing he needs to deal from a position of strength in negotiations. I can just imagine how members of the EU are taking this tonight.



In addition to the Conservative win, the SNP won handily in Scotland and are now looking to hold a referendum on independence. Thing is, Scotland is a heavily subsidized country. The EU contributes billions of dollars a year to prop up its economy. Two of the biggest contributors are Germany.........and Great Britain. Angela Merkel will not be sleeping easy these nights - with Great Britain out of the funding picture, the burden of billions of dollars of support for Scotland will fall on Germany's shoulders. Back home, Brits might just welcome the fact that the money freed could now be put to programs and improvements in Britain.

I can understand Scots wanting to be independent. My Mum was born in Glasgow and came over with her parents when she was 12. My grandparents were Scot Nationalists who came to the conclusion that their dreams of independence were just that............dreams and decided to emigrate to Canada. They often talked of about Scotland's politics. So, much as I understand the reasons why Scots want their freedom, the fiscal reality of their situation begs otherwise. Until such a time as Scotland is able to conduct its affairs without need of aid from the EU or any other country, independence must remain a dream. Just saying.
 

Danbones

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Opinion The Real Reason Corbyn's 'Anti-racist' Labour Just Can’t Deal With anti-Semitism

Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party, and the left more generally, can’t address its anti-Semitism problem by ejecting 'a few bad apples.' This is why..."


"The Chief Rabbi is surely correct to point to Labour’s want of effective leadership. But the issues which Labour faces go deeper than this. The very problem itself has been misconceived - both by the party leadership and its critics.

Amidst the claim and counter-claim over anti-Semitism in Labour there are two points of consensus. One is that prejudice against Jews is "a virus" (or sometimes a "disease," a "cancer" or, for Chief Rabbi Mirvis, a "poison") that erupts or takes root at different times and infects people who were once healthy.

It follows from these metaphors that anti-Semitism can be "expelled" or "stamped out" from the Labour Party.

The second point of agreement is that counting anti-Semites is the key measure of the party’s problem."
https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/...-just-can-t-deal-with-anti-semitism-1.8191704

Yeah, OK...so good bye to BRITISH politics all together. There is only one kind of politics in the world apparently and that ain't it.

Best of luck to the rest of the world.
 
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Mowich

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So the former London mayor blames the Jews for Labour's disaster.


No. One reason for Labour's disaster is that it's a racist, anti-Semitic party.

It deserves its trouncing.


Could not agree more, Blackie. I was chatting with my ex-Brit friend about the election. He's always supported Brexit.......even if from far away. LOL. He filled me in on some background facts about that vile specimen who heads up the Labor party. He has a brother in Scotland who is also onside with Brexit and who fills him in on things that don't make it into the news. The hate that man spews against another people is sickening and brings nothing but disgrace upon the party. The resounding drumming Labor took will hopefully be a lesson to those who think antisemitism has any place in their party.
 

Blackleaf

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Remainer Lord Heseltine, Defence Secretary under Thatcher and Deputy PM under Major, has said:

"We have lost, let’s not muck about with the language. Brexit is going to happen and we have to live with it.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Win they did, Serryah............with the largest Tory majority since the Thatcher years. 67% voter turn-out. Brexit will happen on January 31 of 2020 and Britain will once again gain her autonomy. All that will be left is the nuts and bolts and Boris now has all the backing he needs to deal from a position of strength in negotiations. I can just imagine how members of the EU are taking this tonight.
In addition to the Conservative win, the SNP won handily in Scotland and are now looking to hold a referendum on independence. Thing is, Scotland is a heavily subsidized country. The EU contributes billions of dollars a year to prop up its economy. Two of the biggest contributors are Germany.........and Great Britain. Angela Merkel will not be sleeping easy these nights - with Great Britain out of the funding picture, the burden of billions of dollars of support for Scotland will fall on Germany's shoulders. Back home, Brits might just welcome the fact that the money freed could now be put to programs and improvements in Britain.
I can understand Scots wanting to be independent. My Mum was born in Glasgow and came over with her parents when she was 12. My grandparents were Scot Nationalists who came to the conclusion that their dreams of independence were just that............dreams and decided to emigrate to Canada. They often talked of about Scotland's politics. So, much as I understand the reasons why Scots want their freedom, the fiscal reality of their situation begs otherwise. Until such a time as Scotland is able to conduct its affairs without need of aid from the EU or any other country, independence must remain a dream. Just saying.

There is no Scottish political party that wants independence. The SNP just wish Scotland to be ruled by Brussels rather than London.

A new poll has also shown just 44% of Scots want to break away from the UK.

And remember, Brexit makes it less likely that Scotland will break away.
 

Blackleaf

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Left-wing anti-democratic fascists...


Two arrested after hundreds of Antifa protesters clash with police outside Downing Street and are ridiculed for holding anti-democratic 'F*** Boris' protest just hours after the nation voted to make Johnson Prime Minister




Dozens descended on Whitehall, central London just hours after Mr Johnson pledged to heal the divisions of Brexit, as he returned to Downing Street after securing a crushing General Election victory over Labour (pictured, protesters outside Downing Street tonight where police are also in attendance). But despite Mr Johnson's promises, groups including Stand Up To Racism continued to shout and protest chanting slogans including 'to hell with Boris Johnson' and 'Boris, no, no, no'. Dozens have called out the protesters for taking to the streets so soon after polls closed (inset), and ridiculing them for thinking they will 'overthrow' the Prime Minister with such a small number.
 

Blackleaf

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The ultra-Remainers have lost. There will be no People's Vote, no second referendum, no revocation of Article 50. It is over...

DOMINIC SANDBROOK: We love our country. Jeremy Corbyn never understood that. Boris Johnson did. And THAT is why he won


The PM will begin whirlwind tour of the North today to repeat message that he will serve the whole nation

His victory was secured by working-class voters who want a patriotic, competent government for Britain

In speech outside No10, Mr Johnson urged voters on all sides to ‘find closure and to let the healing begin’

Mr Johnson will now have to carry out a Cabinet reshuffle and pass Brexit legislation in his first 100 days

By Dominic Sandbrook for the Daily Mail
14 December 2019

To future generations, the names of toppled Labour strongholds will tell the story of Boris Johnson's tidal wave.

It began in Blyth Valley, a former mining area in the North-East that had never before elected a Conservative.

It swept through Darlington, Sedgefield and Great Grimsby, Stoke Central and West Bromwich, culminating in that extraordinary moment when Dennis Skinner's seat of Bolsover — Bolsover! — was painted blue.

Even in Tory strategists' wildest dreams, they never expected this. The Conservatives' biggest majority since Margaret Thatcher's last victory in 1987, and their biggest share of the vote since 1979.

And for Labour's Jeremy Corbyn, a humiliation of truly earth-shattering proportions, with the party's worst showing since 1935.

Until now, two elections have defined Britain's history since World War II. One was Clement Attlee's Labour landslide in 1945, paving the way for the Welfare State and the NHS.

The other was Margaret Thatcher's 1979 victory, which turned the page on years of economic decline and inaugurated a free-market era upheld by Tony Blair.

Does Boris Johnson's victory belong in that category?

To some extent it depends on what happens in the next five years, but right now it certainly feels like it.

Watching people queue to vote in the rain, it was hard to banish the sense this was a genuine turning point, a decisive showdown for the future of the nation.

If Mr Johnson's gamble had failed, and if Jeremy Corbyn had walked into Downing Street yesterday, our country's future would now be utterly different.

Boris Johnson was in celebration mode as he left CCHQ after thanking staff for their role in his stunning election win




Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivers a speech outside 10 Downing Street in central London after the Conservative Party win the general election

A Labour victory would have been a victory for state control, nationalisation and the end of free enterprise.

It would have meant the probable death of Nato, as well as months and years of Brexit paralysis.

And perhaps above all, it would have ushered in an era of bankruptcy, bigotry, envy and anti-Semitism — all alien to every atom of our national soul.

But you should never underestimate the good sense of the British people. They had the chance to put Mr Corbyn into No 10, but they preferred to give Mr Johnson the first really clear, unassailable mandate since 2005.

So to borrow a couple of familiar slogans, not only can we expect to get Brexit done, but at last we have a genuinely strong and stable government.

On that subject, I wonder what Theresa May is thinking. As several commentators pointed out, it was her supposedly disastrous campaign in 2017 that paved the way for this victory, even if the result was a bit different.

For it was Mrs May who first made inroads into Labour's working-class electorate, even if she did not turn her Northern votes into parliamentary seats. So it turns out that her strategists, much mocked at the time, were on to something after all.

There is no doubt, though, that this is a colossal personal victory for Boris Johnson. Long dismissed as a clown and a joker, he will go down in history not merely as the Conservative mayor who twice won Labour London, but as the Tory Prime Minister who turned Bolsover blue.

As I wrote at the outset of the campaign, Mr Johnson has a remarkably classless appeal, reminiscent of past Tory showmen such as Winston Churchill and Benjamin Disraeli. He cheers people up, makes them laugh, rouses their spirits and reflects their patriotism.

And although high-minded snobs sneer at him as a vulgar demagogue — just as their predecessors sneered at Disraeli and Churchill — he has been proved triumphantly right. All his life he has gambled, and time after time he has won.

And if his opponents insist on underrating him — as they underrated Margaret Thatcher, another modern Tory populist — there is every chance he will keep on winning.

But winning elections is not the same thing as governing wisely. This is his task now, and it could hardly be more urgent.

His first priority is to get Britain out of the EU. It seems certain we will leave on January 31 — and despite the fact that I voted Remain more than three years ago, I will be heartily relieved when we are out.

Yes, trade talks will drag on for months, perhaps years. But as Mr Johnson remarked yesterday, there is no doubt that Brexit is the 'irrefutable, irresistible, unarguable decision of the British people'.

The ultra-Remainers have lost. There will be no People's Vote, no second referendum, no revocation of Article 50. It is over.




And if his opponents insist on underrating him — as they underrated Margaret Thatcher (pictured left and right after general election 1987), another modern Tory populist — there is every chance he will keep on winning

Mr Johnson could not hide his elation as he walked into CCHQ this morning with Carrie and aides in the early hours today

Perhaps, in the future, some Remainers may have the humility to ask themselves why they failed so abjectly. All those marches, all those court cases, all that screaming, sobbing hysteria — and it was all for nothing.

As Mr Johnson's consigliere Dominic Cummings remarked, the self-styled intellectuals 'should have taken a deep breath and had a lot of self-reflection [on] why they misunderstood what was going on in the country. But, instead, a lot of people just doubled down on their own ideas and f****d it up even more.'


Will they learn? I doubt it. If they didn't learn after 2016, why would they now?

Delivering Brexit is just one of many challenges ahead, and perhaps not even the most pressing.

When the euphoria of the election fades, the Prime Minister may find his in-tray overflowing.

Economic growth is too sluggish and productivity is too low. Our economy is still too dependent on the City of London, and we are dangerously vulnerable to a slowdown in the U.S. or China.

Small businesses, in particular, have been fearfully squeezed in recent years, partly by high business rates and corporation tax, but also by the decline of the High Street and the rise of online shopping. Mr Johnson should make it a priority to give them a break.

As for our public services, it is all very well to talk of thousands more nurses. But the reality — obscured by the mendacious drivel coming from Labour during the campaign — is that the NHS is creaking badly under the pressure of an ageing population.

To future generations, the names of toppled Labour strongholds will tell the story of Boris Johnson's (pictured with girlfriend Carrie Symonds) tidal wave

The Conservatives' biggest majority since Margaret Thatcher's last victory in 1987, and their biggest share of the vote since 1979

Mr Johnson's instinct may well be to keep throwing more money at it, with NHS spending projected to rise by £20bn a year until 2024.

But at some point, a brave — or foolhardy — politician will have to consider serious reform, perhaps even emulating the insurance systems that work so well in countries such as France. Overshadowing all this is the issue of austerity. Mr Johnson was right to recognise that the public have tired of cuts.

There is only so far you can push people before their patience cracks, and many of us are horrified to see so many homeless on the streets.

Yet the fact remains that the country is still running a budget deficit of more than £41 billion a year. We cannot simply turn on the taps by taxing and borrowing. If we genuinely want better public services, we need to make the money to pay for them, which is why it is so important to encourage enterprise through low taxes and high productivity.

But perhaps the greatest challenges for Mr Johnson are two huge existential questions posed by Thursday's extraordinary results. First, he must recognise the reality of his new coalition.

Thanks in part to Brexit, the landscape of British politics has fundamentally shifted.

The Conservative Party now represents the working-class North and Midlands as well as the middle-class South: a party of Bolsover, Bridgend, West Bromwich and Wrexham.

As the PM recognised in his victory speech, many working-class voters' hands 'will have quivered over the ballot paper' before they put their crosses in the Conservative box.

They cannot be taken for granted. The Government must listen to their concerns, reflect their values and rebuild their communities, which have been neglected for so long.

Mr Johnson was right, then, to emphasise his One-Nation credentials. He must reassure his new supporters that they belong inside the Conservative tent, and the only way to do that is to govern in their interests.

That might sound tricky, given that the Tories are often caricatured as a rich Southern party. But are working-class and middle-class interests really so different?

After all, history shows that from Disraeli to Thatcher, the Tory Party is most effective when it appeals to working-class families who want a patriotic, competent government, delivering safe streets, decent services and a chance to get on.

Mr Johnson is, I think, well placed to play that part again.

We sometimes forget that as London's mayor he cut a remarkably consensual, moderate, artfully classless figure, appealing to thousands of traditional Labour voters.

He may have lost some of that sheen in recent years, but he is clearly more comfortable as a British Ronald Reagan than as a British Donald Trump — amiable and optimistic rather than angry and hectoring. That is the Boris we need to see.

The Prime Minister is all smiles as he greets staff as he arrives back at 10 Downing Street after visiting Buckingham Palace where he was given permission to form the next government




While Mr Johnson was feted by supporters, Jeremy Corbyn cut a forlorn figure at his count in Islington as he announced he will step down as Labour leader

The other issue, and perhaps the most dangerous, is Scotland.

There is no getting away from the fact that having won 48 seats out of a possible 59, the SNP are the masters of all they survey.

And with Nicola Sturgeon pushing for a second independence referendum, Mr Johnson needs to play a very careful game.

He needs to stand up for the Union but can't afford to alienate Scottish voters through arrogant high-handedness or indifference to their concerns.

So, while the last thing Scotland needs is another referendum, the Government has to strike a delicate balance.

The only lasting answer is to show the Scottish people how well the Union works, by giving them a prosperous economy and a strong government. Give the Scots a reason to stay, and they will stay. Push them away, and they will leave — which would be a disaster.

All of this may sound daunting. But we should allow ourselves a little optimism.

At last the years of squabbling and uncertainty are over. Britain has a sense of stability and direction, reflected in the surging pound and buoyant stock market. We have a Prime Minister who is not afraid to take decisions, and a Government that can and will govern.

Above all, the election has been a reminder of the most essential, enduring element in our political constitution: the fundamental decency and common sense of the British people.

Like many people, I turned on the television just before 10pm on Thursday with a terrible sense of dread.

Was Britain really going to elect a man who sympathised with Hamas, Hezbollah, the Soviet Union and the IRA?

Were voters really going to fall for the bribes and lies of the most cynical, fanatical and dishonest Labour leadership in history?

And would the British people really reward a party in thrall to bigotry, Marxism and vicious anti-Semitism?

Staff at No 10 watching the PM address the media following his victory. Pictured: 1. Lucia Hodgson 2. Rob Oxley 3. Edward Lister 4. Dominic Cummings 5. Lee Cain

As the PM recognised in his victory speech, many working-class voters' hands 'will have quivered over the ballot paper' before they put their crosses in the Conservative box

I need not have worried. The British people aren't fools.

This was Labour's most pitiful defeat since the 1930s, worse than Michael Foot's showing in 1983.

And so Jeremy Corbyn, John McDonnell, their mad manifesto and their crazed cultists have ended up where they always belonged, in the dustbin of history.

In the weeks ahead, commentators will spill torrents of ink poring over the results. But if you want a very simple explanation of the election, it is this.

Deep down, we are a patriotic, small-c conservative nation.

We are cautious, grumpy and suspicious of change, but we are also honest, pragmatic and tolerant of difference. We hate being patronised, nannied and told what to do.

We despise ideology, we don't like being bribed and we hate being taken for fools.

We despise bigots and bullies, even when they dress up as high-minded martyrs.

And though we like to moan, nobody should doubt that we love our country.

Jeremy Corbyn never understood that. But Boris Johnson did. And that, above all, is why he won.

Well done, everybody.

Mr Johnson and his partner made a rare public display of affection as the reality of his victory started to sink in

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ountry-Corbyn-never-understood-Boris-did.html
 

Blackleaf

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RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: They wanted a second People's Vote... and they got the one they deserved

By Richard Littlejohn for the Daily Mail
14 December 2019


Did Swinson really think that the British people were going to take her threat to cancel the result of the biggest-ever popular vote in favour of anything lying down?

This wasn't just a defiant reaffirmation of the EU referendum result, it was a damning repudiation of those who have spent the past three and a half years trying to Stop Brexit.

It also served as a timely reminder that there is life outside the Westminster bubble, that social media is not the real world.

As late as Thursday lunchtime, political commentators were confidently predicting a hung parliament on the evidence of a handful of photos on Twitter showing a few dozen young people queueing at polling stations in London.

Like children chasing a football round a school playground, they all rushed to follow the herd.


The Corbynistas were crushed. The self-deluding Remain Alliance, which thought it could bully the British people into reversing the referendum result, was routed



That gurning gargoyle John Bercow, the ex-Speaker who has done more than most to frustrate the will of the people, turned up as a pundit on Sky News

We were told that not only would the Conservatives fail to secure an overall majority, but there was a real chance Boris Johnson would lose his own West London seat.

In the event, Boris romped home, not just in Uxbridge, but across the country, in constituencies which had never previously returned a Conservative MP.

The Corbynistas were crushed. The self-deluding Remain Alliance, which thought it could bully the British people into reversing the referendum result, was routed.

That gurning gargoyle John Bercow, the ex-Speaker who has done more than most to frustrate the will of the people, turned up as a pundit on Sky News.

When the official exit poll predicting an 80-seat Tory majority dropped at 10pm, he looked as if he'd just heard through his earpiece that his wife was having an affair with his cousin Alan.

Order, order!

Bercow, nominally a Tory, appeared devastated by the scale of the projected Conservative victory. He wasn't alone. The outcome of this election was an even greater defeat for the forces of Remain than the original referendum in 2016.

They didn't see the Leave vote coming, but once the initial shock subsided they were able to regroup and move heaven and earth to overturn it, at little cost to themselves. After all, they argued, the result was merely advisory.


Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks outside 10 Downing Street after winning the general election

This time it was personal. This time they were on the ballot. They had everything to lose. And lose they did, on a spectacular scale.

They didn't just lose a referendum, they lost their jobs. They had it coming.

Grieve, Gauke, Soubry Loo and the rest were all sent packing. Not a single one of the turncoat Tory MPs who rebelled against their own government over Brexit managed to retain their seats.

Nor did any of those who resigned the Labour whip to join Change UK or the Lib Dems, Chucky Umunna included. What an ignominious downfall for the man dubbed (by himself, probably) Britain's Barack Obama.

Speaking of sticky ends, were you up for Swinson?

Me, neither.

But if there was a Portillo moment, it had to be the defenestration of Liberal leader and self-proclaimed 'next Prime Minister' Jo Swinson.


Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn leaves his home in north London on December 13, after his party lose the general election


The woman who promised to abort Brexit without so much as a second referendum couldn't even hold on to her own constituency.

(I'm no fan of Wee Burney, but the SNP leader's animated celebration when she heard Swinson was dead meat was a joy to behold.)

Did Swinson really think that the British people were going to take her threat to cancel the result of the biggest-ever popular vote in favour of anything lying down?

The most ludicrous argument put forward by Bercow and the Stop Brexit crowd as they paralysed Parliament to prevent Boris's withdrawal agreement being passed was that they were 'defending democracy'.

Democracy? They don't understand the meaning of the word.


One of the most famous scenes of election night was seeing SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon celebrating Jo Swinson losing her seat


Swinson was still at it yesterday, blaming the people for their stupidity in voting Tory.

For the past three and a half years, the mantra coming from the Remain camp at Westminster has been that Leave voters are thick racists, who didn't understand what they were voting for.

Now the People have taken their revenge.


Labour, in particular, has paid the price for prevaricating over Brexit and reneging on its repeated promises to honour the referendum result

Labour, in particular, has paid the price for prevaricating over Brexit and reneging on its repeated promises to honour the referendum result.

The Blyth spartans have spoken. So have millions of other former Labour voters across the party's traditional heartlands in the North-East, the North-West, North Wales and the Midlands.

Presumably, Labour didn't think the people of Sedgefield were all morons when they kept sending Tony Blair back to Westminster.

They can't all be thick racists. They are just sick and tired of being ignored, insulted and taken for granted.

In an election which we were told was about trust, voters have decided to put their trust in Boris Johnson and the Tories on everything from Brexit to the NHS.

They certainly didn't trust Corbyn and Labour further than they could throw them.

But Corbyn still doesn't seem to understand the calamity he has visited upon his party — or the reasons why. Yesterday he was grumbling that the problem was the election had become all about Brexit.

Eh?

Without the gridlock over Brexit, caused by Corbyn and Labour, there wouldn't have been an election. Since it was called, they've tried to make it about anything but.

Voters had other ideas, fortunately. They saw through Labour's Fantasy Island giveaway manifesto, and the lies about selling the NHS to Trump. Getting Brexit Done became an article of faith.

This was as much a vote for the sacred principle of democracy as it was for the Conservatives.

It helps that Corbyn himself was unelectable — although it is frightening to think that millions of people, particularly in London, were prepared to vote for a party led by a Seventies throwback, Marxoid, terrorist-loving, anti-Semite.

And if the post-mortem is anything to go by, the broadcast media still hasn't come to terms with what's happened.

Most of the analysis has concentrated not on the reasons why Boris won such a spectacular, historic victory, but on nauseating navel-gazing about how Labour can be saved for the nation. Who gives a monkey's?


This wasn't just a defiant reaffirmation of the EU referendum result, it was a damning repudiation of those who have spent the past three and a half years trying to Stop Brexit

Forget about Labour's troubles and concentrate on what this means for Britain.

The great news is that, yet again, the British people have resoundingly rejected Left-wing extremism. The ruinous notion that the citizens of this ancient democracy are gagging to live in a highly-regulated socialist utopia has been tested to destruction.

Thanks to the Tory landslide, we shall soon be free of the shackles of the sclerotic European superstate. And don't believe the naysayers who are already demanding an extension to our membership and trashing our chances of ever agreeing a free trade deal with Europe.

We've heard it all before. Under a united Tory government with a massive majority, we hold the trump cards in any upcoming negotiations with Brussels.

This was undoubtedly a personal triumph for Boris, but more importantly it was a glorious victory for freedom and democracy.

On the day after the referendum in 2016, I quoted G.K. Chesterton's line about the 'secret people of England who have not spoken yet'.

We have now.

They wanted a second People's Vote. They got the one they deserved.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/...D-LITTLEJOHN-wanted-Peoples-Vote-got-one.html
 

Blackleaf

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The REAL winners and losers of the election! From Lily Allen to Dilyn, Stormzy (and Diane Abbott's shoes) - who got a ballot box bounce?

By Ross Clark for the Daily Mail
14 December 2019

We all know Boris Johnson's Conservatives triumphed in Thursday's election, but there were plenty of other winners from the vote - as well as losers.

From Carrie Symonds' puppy Dilyn and Workington Man to weeping luvvies Lily Allen and Hugh Grant, here's our roundup of the results that 'really' matter...


Dilyn, the adorable rescue puppy adopted by the PM and who starred on the campaign trail with his girlfriend Carrie Symonds, is now top dog in No 10

Winners

Dilyn

The adorable rescue puppy adopted by the PM and who starred on the campaign trail with his girlfriend Carrie Symonds is now top dog in No 10.

There are Christmas cards featuring the Jack Russell cross wearing a Santa hat (packs of 10, £5) with proceeds going to the animal shelter in Rhondda, South Wales, from where he was rehomed.

Love Actually


Many will want to rewatch the heart- warming Richard Curtis romcom after the Tories mimicked a clip from the 2003 film, getting Boris Johnson to play a scene when a character declared his love for Keira Knightley on signs at her door.

The PM replaced the messages with a Get Brexit Done slogan. The original film is on ITV2 on December 22.


Many will want to rewatch the heart- warming Richard Curtis romcom after the Tories mimicked a clip from the 2003 film, getting Boris Johnson to play a scene when a character declared his love for Keira Knightley on signs at her door

Milkmen

At a time of dwindling doorstep sales, they got the perfect publicity boost after Boris made a pre-sunrise delivery to a family in Yorkshire. He helped load a lorry with bottles of milk and orange juice.

Andrew Neil

Despite sulking after his BBC1 show This Week was axed after 16 years, the rottweiler interrogator’s reputation has been immeasurably enhanced by his broadcast monologue in which he appealed to Boris Johnson not to bottle out of being interviewed by him.


Boris made a pre-sunrise delivery to a family in Yorkshire. He helped load a lorry with bottles of milk and orange juice


Arboriculturalists (and the Mail’s Tree Angel Campaign)

Every party promised to plant more trees. Like so many of Labour’s promises, theirs was undeliverable: pledging to plant 190 trees a minute, 24 hours a day for the next 20 years. We’re left with the Tories’ more reasonable target: 150 million trees in the next five years.

Rishi Sunak

The Chief Secretary to the Treasury was a consummate media performer during the campaign.

A bright future beckons for this son of a doctor and pharmacist whose wife is the daughter of the billionaire founder of technology services and consulting firm Infosys.

Loch Ness Monster



The fabled creature will be spared sharing his waters with a naked Ruth Davidson.

The former Conservative leader in Scotland had promised to skinny-dip in Loch Ness if the SNP won 50 seats or more. They got 48.

Workington

Thanks to the Tories targeting ‘Workington Man’ — the voter-type fed up with being betrayed over Brexit — this Cumbrian town is well and truly on the map.

Visitors can enjoy Slab Pie (Steak & Ennerdale blonde ale or chicken & mushroom) at £9.60 at Oilys pub.

Brenda from Bristol

The unsuspecting pensioner spoke for the nation when, after being told by a TV crew that Theresa May had called an election, she angrily replied: ‘What? Another One?!’

Thanks to Boris’s resounding victory, Brenda should be spared another election for five years.


Andrew Neil's reputation has been immeasurably enhanced by his broadcast monologue in which he appealed to Boris Johnson not to bottle out of being interviewed by him. Brenda from Bristol spoke for the nation in 2017

Losers

Little Mix

Just as backing the Tories proved deeply embarrassing for the Spice Girls in 1997, the girlband threw its weight behind Labour.

Singer Jade Thirlwall wore a ‘For the many, not the few’ T-shirt. The group were widely ridiculed.

A typical comment: ‘I always base my political opinions on what Little Mix say.’


Lily Allen is pictured above in her Twitter video on the Labour manifesto, left, while the girlband Little Mix threw its weight behind Labour


Channel 4

Not only did its head of news Dorothy Byrne call Boris a ‘known liar’, the station insulted the PM by putting a melting block of ice in his place when he turned down an invitation to discuss climate change.

None of this is surprising considering its veteran newsman Jon Snow was heard to sing ‘F*** the Tories’ at Glastonbury.

Hugh Grant

Claiming that he had taken interest in the election because he cares for his five children’s future, the actor campaigned on an anti-Brexit ticket.

Every candidate he went on the road to support failed to become an MP. More like Four Candidates and a Failure.

Lily Allen

The emotionally incontinent singer posted a video on Twitter in which she held up the Labour manifesto and sobbed as she declared: ‘I think it’s the best manifesto I have ever seen.’

It backfired when many people thought it was a send-up. One critic accused the ‘warbling luvvie’ of never having gone outside the M25.


The grime artist was one of several who signed a letter to the Guardian — the Corbynistas’ house-journal — imploring people to vote Labour

Stormzy

The grime artist was one of several who signed a letter to the Guardian — the Corbynistas’ house-journal — imploring people to vote Labour.

For its part, the newspaper told readers that Corbyn had been ‘one of the few people who has fought against injustice all his political life, from apartheid South Africa to the bombing of Libya’.

Unfortunately, this reminded many that Corbyn had attended a wreath-laying service in Tunisia for Palestinian terrorists.

John Major

Along with his deputy PM Lord (Michael) Heseltine, he implored people to think about voting for non-Conservative candidates.

It was something he certainly managed to persuade many habitual Tory voters to do in 1997, when he led the Party to its worst defeat in a century.

Jo Swinson’s bus

The Lib Dems tried to show their green credentials by having an electric battle bus.

But that didn’t satisfy Extinction Rebellion, whose members dressed up like bees and glued themselves to it.

No doubt they were further enraged when it emerged the eco-vehicle couldn’t cope with long journeys and the party hired another, powered by filthy diesel.


Extinction Rebellion members dressed up like bees and glued themselves to the Lib Dem battle bus


Laura Pidcock



Tipped as a possible successor to Corbyn, she is now out of a job after losing her North West Durham seat and its near 9,000-seat majority.

Perhaps the 32-year-old was punished for having once claimed she helped more people in her constituency than Winston Churchill would have done.

Hamas

The Palestinian terrorist group has lost their most high-profile political ally in the Western world after Corbyn’s demise.

Although he remains an MP, perhaps he can ask them for tea in the Commons — like he invited two convicted IRA volunteers to a cuppa in Westminster two weeks after the Brighton bomb.

Jacob Rees-Mogg

The Leader of the Commons spent most of the election confined to his North East Somerset constituency after suggesting Grenfell Tower victims should have had the ‘common sense’ to flee the building — even though 999 operators were telling them to stay.

Diane Abbott’s foot

In one of the weirdest photos of the campaign, the Shadow Home Secretary was pictured wearing two left shoes. What, people asked, had her right foot done to be so mistreated?


In one of the weirdest photos of the campaign, the Shadow Home Secretary was pictured wearing two left shoes. What, people asked, had her right foot done to be so mistreated?

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...monster-Lily-Allen-got-ballot-box-bounce.html
 

Blackleaf

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Boris Wipes Out Remainers In Historic Brexit Election.

Last night, in the 2019 general election, Boris Johnson and the Conservatives managed to win a huge majority and defeat Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Party. With most Remainers losing their seats, Jo Swinson was forced to resign. Meanwhile, Corbyn announced that he will also be resigning as Labour leader with the Brexit Party not winning any new seats. Boris now has a mandate to get Brexit done.

 

Blackleaf

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The sweetest scalps of the Brexit election

Lots of anti-democrats and democracy dodgers were ousted last night.



Fraser Myers
Staff writer

Spiked
13th December 2019



The Brexit election has delivered a stunning smackdown to the Remain establishment, with many of the worst Brexit-blockers and anti-democrats getting turfed out of parliament by the voters last night.

These were some of the sweetest scalps:

Jo Swinson

The Liberal Democrat leader began the campaign insisting she could be the next prime minister. She ended the campaign by losing her seat.

‘Jo Swinson’s Liberal Democrats’ ran a presidential campaign putting her front-and-centre. But polls later suggested that the more voters saw of Swinson, the more they disliked her.

Swinson was also responsible for the disastrous pledge to unilaterally revoke Article 50 – a policy so extreme and dogmatic that it turned off many Remain voters and even allowed the Labour Party to present its Brexit betrayal as the more reasonable option for ant-democrats.

Swinson lost to the SNP by 149 votes.

Anna Soubry

Anna Soubry was one of the zombie parliament’s most prominent Remoaners. Despite being elected in 2017 as a Conservative on a Leave ticket, in a pro-Leave seat, Soubry attempted to block Brexit at every turn. When she left the Tories to join The Independent Group (later Change UK, then The Independent Group for Change) she refused to hold a by-election. ‘My values, my principles, the mandate that I believe I had from the good people of Broxtowe has not changed’, she insisted.

Soubry also attempted to block a General Election: ‘A General Election will solve nothing’, she told the Commons. ‘It will get rid of you’, quipped Labour’s John Mann in response. With her party polling at zero per cent, Soubry was right to fear the judgement of the voters:



Laura Pidcock

Laura Pidcock was only elected in 2017 but as an ally to Jeremy Corbyn, and sometimes described as his de-facto deputy, she was widely tipped for the Labour leadership – until last night when she lost her seat, North West Durham, to the Conservatives. This was the first time the seat had ever fallen to the Tories.

When elected, Pidcock promised to be a ‘mouthpiece for my constituents and class’. But while her constituents and class voted Leave, Labour became a Remain party.

Symbolically, Pidcock’s old seat contains Consett. The Consett steelworks was one of the most iconic casualties of Thatcherism. But now Brexit has frayed this area’s loyalty to Labour and pushed voters towards the Conservatives – a once unthinkable scenario.



Chuka Umunna

Another former contender for the Labour leadership was Chuka Umunna. Way back in 2015, Umunna ran for leader and then withdrew.

This year he withdrew from Labour to join Change UK, before jumping ship again – this time to the Liberal Democrats. At no point did he bother the people of Streatham for their say on the matter. In yesterday’s election, he was moved to the much posher Cities of London and Westminster constituency but failed to get the votes.

Chuka’s democracy dodging caught up with him in the end.

Fraser Myers is a staff writer at spiked and host of the spiked podcast. Follow him on Twitter: @FraserMyers.

https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/12/13/the-sweetest-scalps-of-the-brexit-election/
 

Blackleaf

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The so-called People's Vote campaign is to be scrapped following Boris Johnson's overwhelming Brexit mandate.

Leading Remainers on Thursday watched their hopes of a second EU referendum go up in smoke as the Prime Minister stormed to a decisive 80-seat majority with which he can ram through his withdrawal deal.

Open Britain, which runs the campaign, conceded a fresh vote is no longer a realistic possibility and made the decision to mothball the grassroots movement.

The group will instead rebrand to an organisation that holds the government to account as it charts a course outside of the EU.

Tom Baldwin, communications director of the People's Vote campaign, said he '(didn't) think there is much chance' of the public having a final say.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ccept-second-referendum-not-going-happen.html
 

Walter

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The sweetest scalps of the Brexit election
Lots of anti-democrats and democracy dodgers were ousted last night.

Fraser Myers
Staff writer

Spiked
13th December 2019

The Brexit election has delivered a stunning smackdown to the Remain establishment, with many of the worst Brexit-blockers and anti-democrats getting turfed out of parliament by the voters last night.
These were some of the sweetest scalps:
Jo Swinson
The Liberal Democrat leader began the campaign insisting she could be the next prime minister. She ended the campaign by losing her seat.
‘Jo Swinson’s Liberal Democrats’ ran a presidential campaign putting her front-and-centre. But polls later suggested that the more voters saw of Swinson, the more they disliked her.
Swinson was also responsible for the disastrous pledge to unilaterally revoke Article 50 – a policy so extreme and dogmatic that it turned off many Remain voters and even allowed the Labour Party to present its Brexit betrayal as the more reasonable option for ant-democrats.
Swinson lost to the SNP by 149 votes.
Anna Soubry
Anna Soubry was one of the zombie parliament’s most prominent Remoaners. Despite being elected in 2017 as a Conservative on a Leave ticket, in a pro-Leave seat, Soubry attempted to block Brexit at every turn. When she left the Tories to join The Independent Group (later Change UK, then The Independent Group for Change) she refused to hold a by-election. ‘My values, my principles, the mandate that I believe I had from the good people of Broxtowe has not changed’, she insisted.
Soubry also attempted to block a General Election: ‘A General Election will solve nothing’, she told the Commons. ‘It will get rid of you’, quipped Labour’s John Mann in response. With her party polling at zero per cent, Soubry was right to fear the judgement of the voters:

Laura Pidcock
Laura Pidcock was only elected in 2017 but as an ally to Jeremy Corbyn, and sometimes described as his de-facto deputy, she was widely tipped for the Labour leadership – until last night when she lost her seat, North West Durham, to the Conservatives. This was the first time the seat had ever fallen to the Tories.
When elected, Pidcock promised to be a ‘mouthpiece for my constituents and class’. But while her constituents and class voted Leave, Labour became a Remain party.
Symbolically, Pidcock’s old seat contains Consett. The Consett steelworks was one of the most iconic casualties of Thatcherism. But now Brexit has frayed this area’s loyalty to Labour and pushed voters towards the Conservatives – a once unthinkable scenario.

Chuka Umunna
Another former contender for the Labour leadership was Chuka Umunna. Way back in 2015, Umunna ran for leader and then withdrew.
This year he withdrew from Labour to join Change UK, before jumping ship again – this time to the Liberal Democrats. At no point did he bother the people of Streatham for their say on the matter. In yesterday’s election, he was moved to the much posher Cities of London and Westminster constituency but failed to get the votes.
Chuka’s democracy dodging caught up with him in the end.
Fraser Myers is a staff writer at spiked and host of the spiked podcast. Follow him on Twitter: @FraserMyers.
https://www.spiked-online.com/2019/12/13/the-sweetest-scalps-of-the-brexit-election/
Schadenfreude is a great feeling.
 

Danbones

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Let's wait till the deal is finally done and then see...
;)
While I am hopeful, it isn't like the old bois haven't played the peeps out of their undies before.
 

pgs

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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/
Yes and for democrats in America it was that basket of deplorables in fly over country .