After only five months in power, it is clearly evident that Keir Starmer’s government will be the worst in fifty years. The decision has been made:
The prime minister is doubling down on every error, bias, and principle of the failing dogma that has destroyed Britain, most likely because he really believes in it.
Seemingly unaware of his dismal poll numbers, he is unable and unwilling to change, yet it is simply astounding how incompetent he is at everything.
The speed of Starmer’s collapse, his lies, his shameless caving in to public sector unions, his lack of fundamental political skills, his ineffective communications,
His poor strategy and tactics, and the poor caliber of many of his ministers have all left even those of us who thought he would be a disaster in disbelief.
This week’s relaunch will just demonstrate that he has no other plans but to act as the Blob’s representative.
There is no likelihood of a significant shift in course, a sudden burst of inspiration, or a chance for a comeback. His new Civil Service boss is the most insider Whitehall insider.
He has ever appointed. He has surrounded himself with human rights lawyers who think that giving up the Chagos Islands and the Elgin Marbles,
Releasing criminals, raising energy and motoring costs in the name of net zero, banning porridge advertising, and targeting Israel is a logical and alluring policy plan for Middle Britain.
If all of that wasn’t bad enough, he will maintain the high levels of legal immigration, has no plans to deal with illegal arrivals in a meaningful way,
Can’t think of “improvements” to state services that don’t involve huge pay increases, will never really fight crime, is too scared to reform the NHS,
Won’t address the scandal of six million adults on out-of-work benefits, and will undo the hard-won progress in state education. After breaking her pledges and drastically raising taxes,
Rachel Reeves destroyed the economy. Not only is there no money, but it will soon be considerably less. Reeves will ultimately violate her most recent pledge.
To refrain from tax increases once again and target pension and property wealth tax breaks, sending the nation into a downward spiral. Nothing will change, not even if Reeves is fired:
Regardless matter whether non-player character occupies No. 11, Labour’s distinct philosophy and its indifference to the private sector will consign Britain to poverty.
Starmer’s abilities seem to be restricted to domestic politics; he is ridding his extreme-Left and filling Labour with devoted supporters who will not revolt, even if the polls continue to fall.
Which begs the crucial question: who stands to gain politically from Labour’s demise? Many self-satisfied Conservatives believe that because Reform peaked in July,
The pendulum will inevitably fall in their favor. However, we now live in a world where the center no longer holds sway, where the populist Right is the driving force,
where radical parties have either supplanted or been overtaken by traditional center-right parties, or by individuals like Donald Trump, and where squishy, “grown-up,”
“sensible” technocrats like Macron have no chance, regardless of the voting system. The UK shouldn’t be any different for no reason.
Pierre Poilievre of Canada, one of the few traditional leaders of a traditional conservative party that is poised for victory,
Is someone Kemi Badenoch should try to imitate. His views on immigration, taxes, and other issues have all changed sharply to the right,
And he has pledged to construct a significant number of houses for young people. He strongly opposes Islam and supports Israel. Badenoch is off to a strong start.
She made an excellent speech on immigration. Like several of her lieutenants, like shadow home secretary Chris Philp, she is aware of the enormity of the work at hand.
However, many of her MPs don’t: I continue to find the Tory establishment and personnel to be quite complacent. Too many people still think that a net migration of 300,000 is acceptable,
That the most that can be expected is the stabilization of the tax burden, and that the coalition of 2019 cannot be replicated. These folks need to join the Liberal Democrats.
Unless Badenoch smashes them first, they are the idiots who have damaged the nation and will kill the Tory party. They should have nightmares about the situation in Wales,
Where elections are scheduled to take place under new regulations in 18 months. The country has become a testing ground for failed socialist initiatives thanks to Welsh Labour.
However, the Conservatives have sunk, and its leader, Andrew Davies, has resigned after being strangely seen by his less intelligent colleagues as being too Right-wing.
According to a YouGov poll, Welsh Reform is tied for first place with either Labour or Plaid Cymru, with 25 or 26 Sennedd seats out of 96, up from zero in 2021.
Either Labour or Plaid, the third-place party, have 24 or 25 seats. With 17–19 seats, the Conservatives are in fourth position.
A Reform-Tory alliance, with Farage’s party as the dominating partner and Badenoch’s as the juniors, would likely be required to achieve a right-wing triumph,
Which may be as close as five seats. In addition to permanently altering attitudes and opening the door for collaboration at the UK level, this would cause a political earthquake in Britain.
Farage has a number of obstacles to overcome if he hopes to see “hundreds of [Reform] newcomers in Westminster”
In the near future—a ambition that no longer seems crazy. It must be something he really wants. I need him to democratize.
Transform must be seen as more than simply a platform for protests; it must be viewed as an alternative administration that can effectively rule and transform the state.
The rich businessman Trump is seen as a leader, a doer, and someone who will discipline the dishonest elites.
Farage has to surround himself with a competent executive team (in addition to Richard Tice and Zia Yusuf) since he is a compelling speaker and.
A one-man protest mega-brand rather than an apparent manager. Doctors, company entrepreneurs, and high-ranking Tory defectors may fall under this category.
Reform must carefully screen its candidates to avoid both amoral, unprincipled, Lib Dem-style careerists and fascist radicals. The failure of labor will be disastrous, but who will save us?
Reform or the Tories, or both? Will it be 1979, the beginning of Thatcher’s rise to power, or 1924, when Labour made its breakthrough? Let’s play, Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch.