Tom4784 |
28-06-2017 02:05 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Brillopad
(Post 9403065)
I appreciate an honest answer.
I think many feel that from a tory, politician and voter, point of view this country would be better off with a Tory/DUP alliance than a Labour government under Corbyn - that is not about being a terrorist sympathiser but about thinking about the lesser of two 'evils'.
The DUP support the tories they don't make all the decisions. I for one feel safer with them than I do with Corbyn in charge. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that I could have been a Labour voter this time around with a different leader and depending on their manifesto promises on several issues - but definitely not under Corbyn. I simply don't trust him on several issues - but mainly on security and immigration, which in my view are related.
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I think a large number of voters went for Tories as a protest vote against JC, I know first hand that a lot of people i know personally that voted Tory did so, not because they believe the Tories to be the best option but because they dislike Coybyn and that's a dangerous thing to do. It's an attitude I saw a lot online too.
Labour has made gains in the polls since the election and I'd guess that's because a fair few people regret voting Tory probably because they voted, not because they believed (or knew anythng about) Tory policy, but as a protest against Corbyn.
The £1bn bribe is a digusting power grab by the Tories and it's a sign of things to come, Tories preach austerity but will waste ridiculous amounts of public money to hold on to power.
TBH though, I'm living for the Coalition of Chaos as there's a delicious irony in all the things that JC's detractors said about him being made a reality by Theresa May. The voters that voted Tory because they hate JC are getting exactly what they deserve.
Anti and protest votes are never a good idea and hopefully the people who voted Tory for those reasons might learn from the mistakes over the next few years.
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