most definately. i might go for the monster raving loonies if they have a candidate this time around. good luck to all except labour, tory and conservatives!!!!! happy days!!
2007-09-24 00:21:16
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Lets not forget the poll tax and the selling off of public assets to subsidise the wealthy.
I will wait until the day of the election and check Ladbrokes' odds and the latest opinion polls. If labour are ahead, I will be voting Green, If Labour are lagging, they will get my vote.
I am under no disillusion that I am anything but working class. The labour Party have dragged many many people out of poverty during Tony Blair's leadership. I think Gordon Brown will continue to make this country great again.
2007-09-24 00:39:47
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answer #2
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answered by dave 4
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I caught the BBC news last night when they were interviewing Party delegates. There's doubt even among them that Brown would win: "If he calls an Election now, and gets beat he'll be the shortest term PM on record." (Northern chap - I don't know who he was) but it shows that there is doubt among their ranks about Brown's chances of consolidating his position.
Brown has to consider whether or not the public will carry the Iraq anger over to him; he will have to counter the public's indignation about the Labour lie regarding the promised referendum on Europe. Various polls, websites and one small village have shown that the British people *want* that referendum and feel that we are entitled to have our opinion of Europe on record.
Immigration will be another factor that could sink him. News reporting highlighted a school where local people are having to compete for 150 places to be allocated among 800 children, many of the the children being those of migrant workers. Some 50%!! of the children at one school included in the report cannot speak a word of English. That's a concern for the staff in terms of the children's health and safety. I strongly believe that in such places Labour's competence to continue government will be seriously questioned.
I'll continue to vote independent as usual. Others - if posts and responses on this site are to be believed - will favour the extremists.
Brown has a lot to consider - and hopefully correct - before he can call the country to the polls.
2007-09-24 01:10:14
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answer #3
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answered by HUNNYMONSTA 3
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No, because despite all their faults Labour are still the best for this country. Seriously, would you trust either the Tories or the Liberal Democrats?
Voting for another party just to surprise the Government is not a good idea, because when that other party wins you're stuck with them for 5 years! That's long enough to take this country back to the Hell it was before Labour took over.
2007-09-24 00:27:37
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answer #4
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answered by ♥ Divine ♥ 6
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i think of it may be any different way around, I even have constantly estimated the Lib Dems could pull out of the coalition rapidly after this AV vote, no count the way it fairs. If the Lib Dems get AV then they are going to pick yet another election, A) to get far off from the Tories and B) to purpose and do greater advantageous. in the event that they don't get AV, they at the instant are not going to get yet another attempt, so what do they get out of the coalition, different than for finding like Tories? no longer something. Why stay interior the coalition then? As on your question, i could vote Labour, they're the closest to what i think of, even nonetheless i think of there is a lot incorrect with them too. a million,4 and 5 are in basic terms in it for themselves, and the Lib Dems do pick to declare regardless of to purpose and do greater advantageous, and that i'm uncertain what they're different than for left.
2016-10-09 18:06:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I won't be voting Labour and thats a fact!
And for all the people who will vote labour just because they always have... Wake up to the state the country is in, and use your brain instead of voting for the sake of it. Get the undemocratic lying so and so's out.
Rip off Britain, where the rich get richer and the poor get taxed.
2007-09-24 01:24:03
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answer #6
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answered by trish 5
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I will be voting for UKIP,as always, out of principle and if I ever take part in an opinion poll I will lie and say I am voting labour in order to give them a shock on election night. I wish others would do this too to lull them into a false sense of security.
2007-09-24 05:04:29
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I would hope you would vote for a party who will do the best for the people of this country. Brown has to accept even with his brilliant speech that he was No 2 to Blair. He was responsible for Iraq as much as Blair. He could have resigned but his wages were too good. He wanted power at all cost. Now he has it he will waste it. just like our Gold Reserves. Today Gold is at its highest ever. Brown gave ours away. Vote for who you like but do not forget Brown is only Blair mk 2.
2007-09-24 10:11:21
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answer #8
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answered by deadly 4
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although i would love to vote for another party (not gonna state which) i will vote conservative as i think a vote for a minor party will be a wasted vote as we dont want labour dont really want conservative but if we vote for the minors then labour will win as they have a bigger bunch of stupid people following them. ones that have pleanty of money abd arent affected by the risese in taxes that only really effect the normal working person
2007-09-24 00:25:33
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answer #9
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answered by harveysmummy 3
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Vote Get Rid of Caps Lock Party!
Our Manifesto -
The mandatory removal of contributors who use capitals consistently when asking questions.
Free Twiglets on Tuesdays.
Spelling lesssons for our intellectually challenged contributors.
Bring back Sesame Street to the TV as it was better than Balamory.
'GROCLP makes spelling sense!'
2007-09-24 07:35:14
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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I shall be voting for another party. I have never voted Labour and never will.! A vote for Labour is a vote for the EU Constitution, for which Gordon Brown refuses a referendum,although one was promised TWICE in the New Labour manifesto at election time. If the new "Constitution" is established the institutions of the EU will dominate. Qualified majority voting will be extended into important new areas of law-making. The structure and language of the "Constitution" are designed to make us part of a new State and, in effect, a province of that State; to make our laws subordinate to the laws of that State; to diminish the importance of our Westminster Government and Parliament; and, after this Constitution is established and in place, to diminish what will be our electoral sovereignty and power in our general elections.
The Government drew "red lines" within which the Constitution would have to be confined. Today the "red lines" are not as red; and Brown now seems determined to sign up to the Constitution.
We must hope that this Constitution, dangerously destructive of our national institutions and of government answerable to our electorate, will not be signed or ratified.
"The time for individual nations [in Europe] having its own tax, employment and social policies if definitely over. We must finally bury the erroneous ideas of nations having sovereignty over foreign and defence policies. National sovereignty will soon prove itself to be a product of the imagination." — Gerhard Schröder, of Germany.
A vote for Brown is a vote for the EU Constitution................
all those against this,should write to Brown personally,or their local MP stating............NO REFERENDUM..........NO VOTE FOR LABOUR
2007-09-24 01:06:53
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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