• fakeman_pretendname@feddit.uk
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    6 days ago

    So the press likes to tell us every day. I’d really think it was more down to the fact that a lot of people actually thought Boris Johnston was a good idea at the time (in the 2019 election) - compared to in 2024, when a lot of Tories/Undecideds (for a variety of reasons) voted for the UKIPs instead.

    If you’d put Keir in the 2019 election, he would have done even worse.

    These are first-past-the-post problems really, and problems of how boundaries are drawn.

    Anyway, it’s all theoretical anyway - as you say, it’s hard to compare one election to another in this way - and it won’t change anything, we’ve got a right-wing Labour Prime Minister for a few years, whether we like it or not.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      6 days ago

      Yeah, Boris had that Trump factor.

      Somebody people recognise from the TV and for some reason assume that means they’re suitable to run a country.

      Losing against Theresa May, on the other hand…

      The real issue is that we don’t really have democracy. We just sort of gesture in a direction every 4 years based the colour tie they wear, and then they do whatever they want and we get no say in it.

    • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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      6 days ago

      So your argument to explain Corbyn’s historic loss is…. The entire country temporarily went insane?

      Jezza, is this you?