Hmm, on the sideline of the Scottish parliamentary election, be interesting to see how the Tories and Labour do in Scotland relative to their recent performances.
The Tories have focussed quite a lot on leadership, probably quite rightly since Ruth Davidson is in a different league from Kezia Dugdale.
-- Edited by indiana on Thursday 5th of May 2016 05:20:08 PM
I ll agree on that Indy Dugdale is a disaster. Davidson seems like a decent leader although I wouldn't trust her in the slightest. She is a classic Tory in that regard.
The tories in Scotland seem to think tonight's results shows they are becoming popular here. Purely a protest unionist vote. SNP vote up reflects its Labour losing. In fact the tories misleading popularity is actually good for the SNP and I'm confident it will push through another referendum by 2020.
It's certainly a very sad day for me. To see the many that I know enjoy the benefits of the EU for their lifetime, living in areas of large EU funding, deriving the benefits of social progress that the EU has in part helped to engender, the wide and reciprocal nature of the free movements, then choose to spurn them once they have benefited, is particularly painful for the younger vote.
It is indeed a very sad day, but those that voted remain need to come to terms with it and try to make the best of a bad situation (though the temptation to emigrate to Canada is overwhelming for me at the moment).
The result is not a surprise when you consider the following:
1. There is no understanding amongst the electorate as to what the EU is and what it does and does not do. The role of the EU is not taught within our schools, and I wonder how many who voted yesterday could name our 27 soon to be former colleague states?
2. The media in this country loves to focus on the negative. Over the last decades we hear about how bureaucratic it is in Brussels (understandable to a degree given you are trying to balance the views of 28 countries), we get articles about all of the negative niggling small rules or regulations (rather than the ones that are beneficial - and let's face it UK manufacturers, those that are still in business anyway, will have to conform to EU regulations anyway as it surely won't be economically viable to do otherwise we will just have no say in what the regulations are), and stories of EU migrants that have abused our welfare system. We do not hear that much about the EU investment in places like Newcastle and Cornwall. We do not hear stories like the one my colleague told me yesterday of the amazing Italian midwives who supported their sister deliver her first child in challenging circumstances, or the EU migrants who have set up businesses that employ UK workers, or the fact that we need migrants to fill roles where we have a shortage of skilled workers in this country. This is swept under the rug as it's not "click bait" or headline grabbing.
3. We have (for a few months still at least) a conceited and arrogant PM who thought he could bluster his way through the campaign. Who failed to see that the electorate was not going to bend to him on this matter. That choosing to hold a referendum at a time when UKIP was on the march in the general and local elections was foolish. That choosing to hold a referendum at a time when your post election swaggering has alienated most MPs within your own party was foolish. That choosing to hold a referendum when the Syrian refugee mixed with migrants situation on the continent had not been resolved was foolish. That choosing to hold a referendum when people are afraid of other cultures due to recent events in Paris, Brussels, Orlando, Tunisa, Istanbul, Sharm el Sheikh, Iraq and Syria was foolish. That choosing to hold a referendum at a time when the UK and EU economies have not recovered from the economic crisis was foolish. The timing of the referendum could see no other outcome.
4. The Remain campaign (like the Leave campaign, No Scottish referendum campaign and the Conservative 2015 General Election campaign) relied too heavily on trying to scare the public with economics, even if the economic reasons were valid from valid experts (and the market uncertainty of today and the coming months will likely lead to more cuts and tougher financial conditions for those already struggling to make ends meet), they never once truly highlighted the positives of the EU or bring into focus those things that people don't realise are attributable to the EU.
Great Britain as a whole has never really understood the EU it seems. We have not really tried to embrace it as a nation, or been willing to recognise the benefits. It's a toxic issue for Conservatives for a reason. Despite my fondest wishes for us to remain within the EU, it was not hard to see this outcome coming.
9 of the 12 regions voted out; given the scorn thrown London's way by the SNP during the Scottish Independence referendum, it's somewhat ironic that the biggest Remain support came from Scotland and London: this referendum has certainly seen some strange bedfellows. The numerically huge London vote in favour of Remain has masked the scale of Remain's defeat in England. To a lesser extent the same applies to Cardiff and Wales.
What vast swathes of England including Birmingham and Wales have done has nothing to do with what Trump or le Pen think of the matter. The Remain politicians made a huge mistake in hiding behind the opinions of "all the experts" (instead of making a positive case themselves) and expecting people to swallow those opinions whole. In the campaign Cameron quickly dropped all reference to "a reformed Europe" presumably because people were laughing in his face as his negotiations had produced no reform whatsoever and could see that the EU would never reform; and that the UK would continue to often be outvoted 27-1 on important decisions.
When someone like James Dyson says the country needs to free itself from the EU in order to prosper more, and to more readily get in talent from around the whole world rather than just the EU, now that is an expert I am prepared to listen to.
There may be some short term pain but I believe the country has made the right call and will prosper.
Everyone, and I mean everyone, in the Remain campaign should resign, retire, and hang their heads in shame. They had a basically unloseable position, and through arrogance, disdain, disinterest and bullying they managed to drive the country into the arms of Nigel-******-Farridge.
I don't really care one way or the other (I really can't see how it affects the average Joe in the street), but if what the Innies have been saying is true, then I hold them - each and every one of them, but with Osborne at the head of the queue - personally responsible.
What staggering incompetence from folk that believe themselves to be capable of running a country. They couldn't run a bath.
Now there is going to be a real battle to stop the remnants of the political establishment turning this country into a fascist idiocracy.