
Gave me a good laugh as it feels pretty accurate. Sigh. I miss Lord Buckethead.
I suspect that the EU parliamentary elections, where as I understand it representation is proportional, will be a chance for the Brexit Party and UKIP to see who is the stronger horse while not actually spoiling each other. Whichever does the best will probably absorb the other before the next UK election (see Dutch Freedom Party vs. Forum for Democracy).TGLS wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2019 2:30 pmWell, the SNP do have the advantage of being located primarily in Scotland, while UKIP is all over Britain (Maxim 1: In FPTP, regional parties overperform). Add that UKIP will likely face competition from the Brexit Party, Labour and Tories may not be as disadvantaged (which would probably only be indicated if they held about the same number of pro-Brexit voters).clearspira wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2019 4:26 pm *Sigh* Traitors in Parliament. Said it before, say it again: referendum or election coming - and I would not automatically assume Tory or Labour to dominate that election. Keep your eye on UKIP. I think they'll do an SNP and carve a nice wedge for themselves.
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Here's a helpful diagram that explains "where next" https://jonworth.eu/brexit-where-now-the-flow-diagrams/
I'm not the Joker. I have never laughed at someone else's downfall or their tears - and anyone who did needs a good long look at themselves. But this woman has been a disaster for the country and her party, so much so that the conspiracy theories about how she was always intending to sacrifice herself to cripple Brexit are everywhere. At least she has proven magnificently that both men and women can make crap leaders.Madner Kami wrote: ↑Fri May 24, 2019 2:41 pm Well, there we go. The gift that keeps on giving, gave again. Theresa May finally resigned and this just one week before her re-"newed" Deal is set to be voted upon again. I haven't been following BrExit all too much in the last couple of weeks, so I am not sure on the implications, but last time I was watching, she offered resignation if her deal gets broad support from Labour, so I have to assume that this is linked and that her deal may actually get through this time, though I'd take that with a grain of salt.
The true beauty is the Diadochi-War that is now going to get really hot. I am genuinely sorry for her though, given she was tasked with the impossible, to do something that she was against, by the very same people who set light to the fuse of BrExit and then ran away like Zoidberg (the Futurama-character, not the Forum-member). Her starting to cry at the end of her speech was heart-wrenching, although I don't really feel she did the right things, because this woman got pushed around and tripped on every step of her way. She's truely defeated and I wish her the best, as well as the citizens of the UK, because right now, I don't really see any viable candidate with a broader appeal to replace her, as all the big names are a bunch of ultra-capitalist nationalists, power-hungry morons and completely unsymphathetic scare-mongers readying up for succession.