Discover Habbo's history
Treat yourself with a Secret Santa gift.... of a random Wiki page for you to start exploring Habbo's history!
Happy holidays!
Celebrate with us at Habbox on the hotel, on our Forum and right here!
Join Habbox!
One of us! One of us! Click here to see the roles you could take as part of the Habbox community!


Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 20
  1. #1
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default Exactly a year to go until the next British General Election

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-27308751

    365 Days until the Next United Kingdom General Election

    The four national leaders.

    Quote Originally Posted by BBC (state) News
    You can start the countdown now. Strike off the days one by one. Mark up your diaries.

    Thanks to the coalition's decision to scrap the prime minister's right to pick the date and to fix the length of this and future parliaments, we know the date on which we will get the chance to choose our next government.

    For the first time in the history of British democracy, there'll be no "will he or won't he?" speculation about secret Chequers summits, prime ministerial speeches or visits to the Palace which might or might not set the date of the election.

    All is certain. Well, up to a point.

    The next government of the United Kingdom will be chosen by the people on 7 May 2015 but will there still be a United Kingdom for them to govern?

    The people of Scotland might, by then, have voted to become an independent country.

    If they have, David Cameron might choose to resign as prime minister. Would that trigger an election or just the choice of a new PM from within the coalition?

    Whether he stays or goes, there will be a long gap between a "Yes" vote and the ending of the Union which raises the possibility that the next government of the United (for now) Kingdom could be kept in office by the votes of MPs in a country which had just chosen to leave.

    If that happened, would those MPs lose their vote at the time of independence, forcing a new election or would that government simply soldier on until the next election scheduled under the Fixed Parliaments Act?

    The outcome of the Scottish independence referendum could change everything

    Quote Originally Posted by BBC (state) News
    Of course, Scotland might vote "No". Indeed, the polls still suggest it will. So everything will be clear then, won't it? Well, not entirely.

    The general election may be portrayed as a contest between three men - Messrs Cameron, Miliband and Clegg. Or, on the other hand, it may be seen as one involving four - with Mr Farage stepping onto the stage.

    If UKIP win the European Elections and the Newark by-election, four party politics will arrive in England, as it already has in Scotland and Wales.

    If, on the other hand, UKIP don't quite live up to the current heady expectations and if their support shrinks once the focus is less on protest and more on choosing who governs Britain the next election may look and feel much like the last one.

    If, if if…Is anything clear I hear you ask?

    Well, surely we can all agree that the public haven't liked this coalition thing. That, at least, is what they tell the pollsters.

    Unfortunately, though, those same people also demonstrate in the polls that the country has - for now at least - not made a clear choice of who it wants to govern. Labour's lead has shrunk and is so small to make the result unpredictable.

    Ah yes, you may add, but look at history. It's true that history can be our guide. No government polling at this level a year before an election has gone on to win. But just hang on a second. It is also true that no opposition starting from so low a base and with such an unpopular leader has gone on to win.

    So, in conclusion allow me to sum up:

    There will be an election a year from today. There may or may not be a United Kingdom to govern for very long. There may or may not be a change of prime minister. There may or may not be another coalition

    There may or may not be another pact between the Liberal Democrats and the Tories or a new one with Labour. Oh, and did I mention that Boris might or might not run …
    A year to go then from today.

    I myself cannot see how the Tories can form a majority government in the slightest unless there's an amazing Falklands style diaster to save them. From the polling, although incumbent parties usually close the gap prior to election day, the Tories need to be on 7% at least just to break even and reach the 320 odd mark. Can you see that happening when it didn't happen in 2010? I can't. And that's not to mention that if Labour retain just 25% of the 2010 yellow vote, then they win. And that's not mentioning the purple effect that the Ukip vote will have in that it disproportionately effects the Tory vote. Interestingly enough some polling experts think that there's a strong possibility that the Tories will win the most votes, but Labour will win the most seats - something that last happened in 1951: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_...election,_1951 A quirk of the FPTP system.

    Of course, the unexpected can always happen as it did in Canada (under FPTP) in 1993: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadia...election,_1993

    I thought it'd be interesting though to ask what you *THINK* will most likely happen as opposed to what you would like to happen or who you support. Do you think we'll end up with a Labour majority? A Tory majority? A hung parliament? Which party will have most seats? Will the Liberals Democrats be wiped out? Do Ukip stand a chance of breaking into the House of Commons?

    The latest Westminster 2015 voting intentions poll from last night (Survation) has...

    Labour 34%
    Conservatives 33%
    Ukip 18%
    Liberal Democrats 8%
    Others 7%

    Thoughts?
    Last edited by -:Undertaker:-; 07-05-2014 at 03:50 PM.


  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    24,818
    Tokens
    63,690
    Habbo
    FlyingJesus

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Nick Clegg will save the Queen from an assassination plot orchestrated by Nick Griffin after hearing that her family isn't totally British and 80% of the country will vote Lib Dem
    | TWITTER |



    Blessed be
    + * + * + * +

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Personally I think it will be a Labour/Lib Dem coalition, but we'll wait and see.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    24,818
    Tokens
    63,690
    Habbo
    FlyingJesus

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Can't see Lib Dems getting enough seats to make them a worthwhile coalition partner tbh, more likely a Lab/Con duet and they'll have danceoffs to decide on who gets to make which policy
    | TWITTER |



    Blessed be
    + * + * + * +

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,226
    Tokens
    325
    Habbo
    Zitrone

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    probably labour :rolleyes:


    pmsl yesterday i saw a ukip billboard which made me laugh because the area i saw it is like the most immigrant place on earth

  6. #6
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    It'd be interesting to see what the Liberal Democrat rump would do in the event that Labour win most seats, but the Tories win most votes. Conventionally they'd go to the party of most seats for negotiations (as they did in 2010) as they had a greater mandate, but when the party with most seats hasn't won the most votes what then?

    You never know either, if the Tories or Labour are just a few seats short then DUP/SNP/Others may be involved.


  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Labour will be one off a majority, UKIP's Nigel Farage wins the party's only seat, they form a coalition with Nigel Farage becoming Deputy PM and suddenly declaring he thinks the EU is a good idea.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Posts
    14,107
    Tokens
    4,179

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    If labour get a majority I'm so done with this country. I'll see you all in Germany .

    No but seriously I'm reckoning a coalition again, unsure which parties though.
    /

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,226
    Tokens
    325
    Habbo
    Zitrone

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    labour broadcast is funny lol


  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Intersocial View Post
    If labour get a majority I'm so done with this country. I'll see you all in Germany .

    No but seriously I'm reckoning a coalition again, unsure which parties though.
    How come?

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •