What does Labour’s landslide win mean for UK’s political future?

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Three former advisers from across the political spectrum gave us their verdict on Labour’s win.
    (Subscribe: bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe)
    Alastair Campbell worked for Tony Blair, he’s now a podcaster who writes children's books about democracy. Sir Craig Oliver worked for David Cameron, and Liz Lloyd worked for Nicola Sturgeon in the Scottish Government.
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Komentáře • 619

  • @denniswinters3096
    @denniswinters3096 Před 5 dny +243

    For Rees Mogg to say they should bring back Boris Johnson conclusively demonstrates that he's learnt nothing - absolutely nothing at all. Shameless and grasping to the last, like some hideous Dickensian caricature. He, Johnson and the rest of them have done immense harm to this country.

    • @SpitfireCallum
      @SpitfireCallum Před 5 dny +9

      Ye it’s finally over

    • @jamesrowden303
      @jamesrowden303 Před 5 dny +7

      He brings his nanny with him when he door knocks, named children after Catholic bishops, didn't change a nappy on any of his kids and excuses all his extreme views as being religious: Do you really think he's capable of original, non-Eton indoctrinated thought?

    • @ABC-dw7pe
      @ABC-dw7pe Před 5 dny

      Absolutely agree. The tories have disgraced themselves over the years.
      On top to this. Fk the snp.

    • @ABC-dw7pe
      @ABC-dw7pe Před 5 dny +1

      Absolutely agree. The tories have disgraced themselves over the years.
      On top to this. Fk the snp.

    • @georgesdelatour
      @georgesdelatour Před 5 dny

      @@jamesrowden303 Do you think Keir Starmer is the Nicola Tesla of political thought?

  • @DJ-nd4gp
    @DJ-nd4gp Před 5 dny +157

    Has Alastair Campbell slept in the past 36 hours?

  • @SteveRose-iq1cs
    @SteveRose-iq1cs Před 5 dny +86

    They need to stop MPs from having 2nd jobs. Being an MP is a full time job.

    • @EzraMerr
      @EzraMerr Před 5 dny +6

      Then they would ask for more income/salary, politics were never intended to be a career path but for those that truly wanted better community administration, business owners are perfect candidates because they have experience in administration. When you incentivise career politicians all you will get are career politicians

    • @TVIDS123
      @TVIDS123 Před 5 dny +7

      @@EzraMerr Raise their salaries then. I am fine with that.

    • @alvindimes649
      @alvindimes649 Před 5 dny +8

      @@EzraMerr That's a curious position to take! Business leaders may well be experienced in "Administration", but politics is a lot more than that. And Business men are driven by the "Profit" mindset. What about social justice, and the need for a stable society. 👍

    • @falkland
      @falkland Před 5 dny

      Local business owner who are not related or resent the finance system are good candidate, but far from perfect. Let alone MNC business owners who can travel and live in a different county easily @@EzraMerr

    • @notorio526
      @notorio526 Před 4 dny +5

      ​@@EzraMerrIncredibly naive take. These second jobs are massive conflict of interest. The current system is what creates 'career politicians'

  • @markmasterson4811
    @markmasterson4811 Před 5 dny +148

    WE need to stop expecting that the electorate needs to love parliamentary parties. We aren't marrying them. Their job is to govern us, to think about us and what we need to live our best lives and to flourish. There's been too much time spent where the people are stagnating while the govt fights with itself and leaves the country drifting into decline.
    Get your focus correct.
    And stop continuing to focus on the tories with/without farage. They are fish n chip paper and irrelevant for the next 5 yrs at least.

    • @sigmachad96
      @sigmachad96 Před 5 dny +16

      I agree with this. It also leads to a feeble mindset among politicians. For example with Sunak and his Rwanda plan, trying to do something completely impractical purely for appearances without any real impact on people's lives, and because he thought it would be what his voter base would want. You don't have to be loved by the people just better at the job than the other option.

    • @andrewcoulson2375
      @andrewcoulson2375 Před 5 dny +17

      I don't want to be governed....
      I want to be represented 🤷‍♂️

    • @nelty0987654321
      @nelty0987654321 Před 5 dny

      ​​@@andrewcoulson2375you want be represented unless you run

    • @anllpp
      @anllpp Před 5 dny

      ❤​@@andrewcoulson2375

    • @markmasterson4811
      @markmasterson4811 Před 5 dny +7

      To all who disagree that we need governing and want representation instead. Frankly none of these mps are representative of me, and most likely not of the voting majority. 'Representation' is appropriate but governing is what is needed, people who take decisions for all, not simply those they represent. It's a different and subtle concept distinction, the absence of which is what has led to drift. And yes I do believe in representative government emphasis on the last word.
      society

  • @Nathan-Fowlerxt8pp
    @Nathan-Fowlerxt8pp Před 5 dny +42

    Boris Johnson is chocolate teapot

  • @adamhuntytb
    @adamhuntytb Před 4 dny +18

    Love listening to Alastair Campbell talk politics.

    • @Edward-cv2gw
      @Edward-cv2gw Před 2 dny +1

      How pathetic

    • @24yrukdesigner
      @24yrukdesigner Před 23 hodinami +1

      We have found it!!! Someone who likes listening to grump old senile campbell lol
      Alistair is the sort of waffle you'd play on repeat to prisoners.

  • @johnrussell3961
    @johnrussell3961 Před 5 dny +131

    It’s getting rediculous . Labour are being asked to apologise for winning .

    • @rhubarb2301
      @rhubarb2301 Před 5 dny +18

      they got less than 34% of the vote

    • @BenJ2020
      @BenJ2020 Před 5 dny +16

      So they should 70% of the country don't want them

    • @Lynn.hot.legs.peters
      @Lynn.hot.legs.peters Před 5 dny +1

      ​@@rhubarb2301 Morron it's first past the post system.... % is meaningless and spends more time getting educated instead of posting rubbish !!!!

    • @EnglishAbundance
      @EnglishAbundance Před 5 dny +33

      @@BenJ2020Your mum doesn’t want you, Ben. Sort out your family.

    • @sciencefliestothemoon2305
      @sciencefliestothemoon2305 Před 5 dny +9

      ​@@BenJ2020uf the state of the education is showing

  • @smush5653
    @smush5653 Před 5 dny +27

    Interesting landslide
    2017: 40% 12.8m votes
    2019: 32% 10.2m votes
    2024: 34% 9.6m votes

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Před 5 dny +11

      So you’re saying that Corbyn ran a profligate and ineffective campaign? To lose with that vote share took some mishandling to achieve.

    • @smush5653
      @smush5653 Před 5 dny +8

      @@Dreyno You didn't have Reform splitting the tory vote for one. Not to mention a Tory Party that wasn't on the complete decine with voters at that time

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Před 5 dny

      @@smush5653 He came second to a batsh1t Tory party led by a House of Fraser mannequin come (almost) to life.

    • @MsZeeZed
      @MsZeeZed Před 5 dny +3

      Wow, you got Labour shaking, maybe you should be Tory leader? 😹🥂

    • @PooeyBum11
      @PooeyBum11 Před 5 dny

      Very good point. Keirs “move to the centre” had basically no effect. What happened on election night has almost nothing to do with Labour. It was an anti-Tory vote more than anything

  • @georgeheaton
    @georgeheaton Před 4 dny +29

    Great point by Campbell about Farage. The only way to beat him is by solving problems so he has no leg to stand on. He’s a problem creator not a problem solver.

    • @sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986
      @sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986 Před 4 dny

      He’s created problems for sections of the political establishment by raising issues most of them didn’t consider or never understood were issues with the public in the first place

    • @georgeheaton
      @georgeheaton Před 4 dny +2

      @@sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986 yes true I agree,but the dangerous thing about him and my secondary point is that he doesn’t solve problems,if you cannot legitimately provide policy solutions then you shouldn’t be able to lead a country. The danger is people won’t see that and they’ll elect him just to stand and shout and create no solutions but instead just bring division to the parliament and wider constituencies

    • @haruhisuzumiya6650
      @haruhisuzumiya6650 Před 3 dny +2

      He sells you the moon and gives you a video of Apollo 11

    • @haruhisuzumiya6650
      @haruhisuzumiya6650 Před 3 dny

      ​@@sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986
      Farrage knows that immigration is beneficial to the ruling class of Britain because it is used simultaneously as a way of cheap labour to destroy unions and a perfect scapegoat like the Nazis used the jewish and roma people alike
      Farrage is like Oswald Mosely

    • @alvindimes649
      @alvindimes649 Před 3 dny

      @@georgeheaton Absolutely, he stands outside the arena and just throws grenades in. He is an agitator tapping into people's insecurities and fears, many of them irrational. But offers no practical solutions. And he has been rewarded, he has got himself elected into a nice paying job, but he won't do anything, he can't. He has no power to either make or influence policy. Can't deny, he is a success at looking after himself. I find it sad that his followers can't see this. The consumat Grifter. 👍😊

  • @user-ux6jv7qf2k
    @user-ux6jv7qf2k Před 5 dny +19

    Boris didn't even want to do the job the 1st time, let alone a 2nd time.

    • @ABC-dw7pe
      @ABC-dw7pe Před 5 dny

      THINNGGGSSSS
      CANN ONLYYY GET BETTERRRR

    • @agt155
      @agt155 Před 4 dny

      @@ABC-dw7pe Sorry, no money left.

  • @sydnorth5868
    @sydnorth5868 Před 4 dny +4

    It's really quite simple. Labour have got 5 years before they have to worry about another election. In that time, they have to make people believe that things that they care about are improving. If the cost-of-living crisis has ceased, NHS waiting lists have significantly shortened and the public sector strikes have ended, then they will have a very good chance of being re-elected. If not, then they are going to face a populist backlash.

  • @VaucluseVanguard
    @VaucluseVanguard Před 5 dny +16

    Landslide in parliamentary representation but no landslide among the people.

    • @agt155
      @agt155 Před 4 dny

      19% of the voting public.

    • @MannatAjmani
      @MannatAjmani Před 3 dny

      It will get worse

    • @curmudgeon1933
      @curmudgeon1933 Před 2 dny

      Maybe not in the actual figures, but the swing from the last election to this, is quite telling. Right-wing infighting and political jockeying between Tories and Reform means, as in France, conservatives are travelling a dangerous path courting extremists in the search for power.
      Pandering to radicals, whether left OR right, turns off voters and saps energy which would be better used implementing policies which help the general population, not just fringe crazies...and everybody suffers.

  • @benstclair6427
    @benstclair6427 Před 4 dny +4

    They had a lot of "viable" alternatives, Alister. They had Reform, they had Greens, they had Lib Dems and in the end Labour captured less total votes than in 2019. So your argument that you were more viable this time round goes where exactly?

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Před 4 dny

      In 2019 Liverpool got 97 points and finished second.
      In 2024 Man City got 91 and finished first.
      About as meaningful as a comparison as yours.

    • @benstclair6427
      @benstclair6427 Před 4 dny

      @@CZcamsmessedupmyhandle erm... no. less people perceived labour as being a viable alternative this time around than in 2019 - evidenced by the drop in both turnout and total votes cast for Starmer's 'changed' (read austerity-lite and NHS privateer) Labour party. That's my point.

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Před 4 dny

      @@benstclair6427 you could also say fewer people saw Labour as unelectable this time than last. An actual analysis would be that it’s a different election with different candidates and different issues so comparing isn’t of much value.

  • @nicolenox7882
    @nicolenox7882 Před 5 dny +5

    Did they say Jeremy Hunt? Boris? Badenock?? Ate yiu fucking kidding me?????

  • @toddb9313
    @toddb9313 Před 5 dny +6

    It means that 57% of the vote controls almost the entire parliament (Labour and the Tories) while the other 43% of votes is almost not represented at all.

    • @zivkovicable
      @zivkovicable Před 5 dny

      Yes terrible system....just like the Tories ran the country despite gaining a minority of national vote share. The UK is centre left. Labour plus Lib Dem, Greens, Scottish & Welsh Nat's, SDLP, Sinn Fein....beats Tories plus Reform every time...

    • @MsZeeZed
      @MsZeeZed Před 5 dny +2

      Welcome to the UK Parliamentary system. One where your representative is easily removable if they do nothing for you.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 3 dny

      @@MsZeeZed How are they easily removeable? Some of them win their seats on less than 25% of the vote! try getting rid of that in a world where the opposition is split among several different parties. Or in a world where the constituency boundaries are deliberately drawn to create safe seats for major parties.
      Terrible system, get rid of it now.

  • @johndean1634
    @johndean1634 Před 5 dny +3

    Jeremy Hunt you have to be Joking. He would be the Worst Choice since Sunak. Everyone was Hoping He Lost His Seat.

  • @woildee9998
    @woildee9998 Před 5 dny +16

    Starmer won 9,712,011 votes
    In 1997 John Major won 9,591,085 votes in the catastrophic Conservative defeat. When the population was a lot lower.

    • @danielbliss1988
      @danielbliss1988 Před 5 dny +9

      71 percent turnout in 1997 versus 60 today. Competing with the LibDems in 1997 versus coordinating with them in this election and effectively withdrawing from seats where the LibDem candidate was more competitive. Both those things reduce the vote count, by a lot. Probably more instructive to add up centre-left and right votes and see how they tot up percentage wise, and in the coming days to analyze opening polling on things like policy issues, not just party preference. To me it looks like a very strong performance for the centre left compared to 2005 through 2019, but not as much of one as 1997 or 2001.

    • @JoeWedgwood-ik9zo
      @JoeWedgwood-ik9zo Před 5 dny

      So? It’s the seats that matter. You would know that if you had more than a single digit IQ

    • @dominicchallis2928
      @dominicchallis2928 Před 5 dny +1

      @@danielbliss1988If this were an AV based voting system these snarky comments that punish Labour for winning would disappear; someone not voting Labour doesn’t mean they don’t want them in power, and I think as you say that the Labour vote would benefit under AV for this reason.

    • @traviscutler9912
      @traviscutler9912 Před 5 dny

      Starmer got less votes then Corbyn got in either of his elections. It completely shows what a total scam UK democracy is and how complicit the media is in that scam. Starmer is going to do nothing except make sure the rich get richer and eventually you guys will get the reform party you deserve.
      The system works.

    • @MsZeeZed
      @MsZeeZed Před 5 dny

      Poor Labour, they must be really worried now 😹 🥂

  • @FarObserver
    @FarObserver Před 5 dny +11

    Ali sounds like he's been on the hooch

    • @CyborgSizzler
      @CyborgSizzler Před 5 dny +6

      Considering he has been awake for like 30 hours, thats probably why lol

  • @kirkuk2076
    @kirkuk2076 Před 3 dny +1

    So you get 30% of the vote and two thirds of the seats, that is not a landslide vote from the public

  • @RealOGfikey
    @RealOGfikey Před 5 dny +12

    "But, but, but... only +1.6%"... says every butthurt tory everywhere! 🤣🤣

    • @JamesSmith-qs4hx
      @JamesSmith-qs4hx Před 5 dny +6

      Voting Labour is like finding out your boat is sinking and deciding the way to fix it is to drill a few extra holes in the hull

    • @ricekrispi2602
      @ricekrispi2602 Před 5 dny +5

      @@JamesSmith-qs4hxand voting tory is like seeing your boat is sinking and denying that it is

    • @JamesSmith-qs4hx
      @JamesSmith-qs4hx Před 5 dny

      @@ricekrispi2602 The whole west is Weimar now. I hope we can put someone in power for no reason at all. Before it is too late.

    • @randomdaveUK
      @randomdaveUK Před 5 dny +2

      ​@@JamesSmith-qs4hxwhy did the Tories vote for Truss then? She did exactly that 🤣
      Talk about sinking your own argument

    • @poolplayerpoolplayer7430
      @poolplayerpoolplayer7430 Před 5 dny

      Labour are just as bad as the tories

  • @StyledObject
    @StyledObject Před 5 dny +1

    Should have got him on with Adam Boulton, looks like the exact same spot as that classic from 2010

  • @chrissingh4730
    @chrissingh4730 Před 4 dny +1

    The Tories were working against Rishi Sunak!!

  • @LennonZA
    @LennonZA Před 5 dny +4

    So, what you're saying is...

  • @standstand6569
    @standstand6569 Před 2 dny +1

    A win built on quicksand !😏

  • @jamesrowden303
    @jamesrowden303 Před 5 dny +8

    Capaldi is looking old here. I hope he squeezes out another Thick of It special before he gets too past it.

  • @gdwlaw5549
    @gdwlaw5549 Před 5 dny +8

    Why is craig a sir?

    • @robertstraw9881
      @robertstraw9881 Před 5 dny +1

      David Cameron liked him.

    • @Cteabis
      @Cteabis Před 4 dny +2

      Because of the stupid honours scheme. Frankly there needs to be a rule of something along the lines of “no nominations for people from your own party”

  • @angelamay23
    @angelamay23 Před 5 dny +2

    I truly don't understand how politicians can lose sight so starkly of the complaints of its people ... serving its people and maintaining sovereign security is the primary responsibility of leaders ...ALL democratic countries have lost sight of this in the last two decades ..

    • @Left_as_value_freespeech
      @Left_as_value_freespeech Před 5 dny

      Let me clear it up for you... Money!
      Souls/principles are cheap. Thats why the media is a shitshow too nowadays

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Před 5 dny

      Don't forget the biggest spanner in the works - Brexit - was something _the public voted for._

  • @ianp7206
    @ianp7206 Před 5 dny +1

    Wasnt a landslide was it ! Labour won on 30% 😂😂😂😂

  • @anthonyferris8912
    @anthonyferris8912 Před 5 dny +1

    One who worked for Blair, one who worked for Cameron and one who worked for Sturgeon…You’re havin a laugh!😆

  • @fishreact
    @fishreact Před 3 dny

    Landslide - "an overwhelming majority of votes for one party or candidate in an election"
    It was not a landslide. Labour have the lowest vote share for a winning party since records began. 33.7% is not "an overwhelming majority of votes".

  • @donalobrien7582
    @donalobrien7582 Před 5 dny +2

    Must
    Be, a Reason why British TV keep asking WMD CAMPBELL for his Politicial Opinion.
    When you would think He would be the Last Person a Civil Society would wish to Speak 2.
    They don't ask his Boss Ant Blair for comment & why 700.000 died in Iraq because of their Minuplitation.

  • @naratipmath
    @naratipmath Před 3 dny

    It is about choosing Dumb and Dumber. On the bright side, we get Dumb to govern the country instead of Dumber.

  • @georginathompson3788
    @georginathompson3788 Před 5 dny +1

    Doesn’t mean anything for labour other than people are sick and tired of the incumbent bunch of clowns, and labour is the only alternative in a duopoly.

  • @nevillemignot1681
    @nevillemignot1681 Před 3 dny

    The Labour party in the UK reached out to the Labor party in Australia and their advisors for directions they should take in the run-up to the election. And a very good piece in the SMH [Sydney Morning Herald] was it was said to go easy on using the words 'Left' and 'Nationalize' , as it might scare the mainstream British voter too much and be seen as too radical. It looks like the 'Gently, Gently' plan did work.

  • @chrissingh4730
    @chrissingh4730 Před 3 dny

    Rishi should bid goodbye to. British politics. Sit back and enjoy!!"☺️

  • @abc-zz5zf
    @abc-zz5zf Před 5 dny +1

    Will the DAX increase to 18800 next week?

  • @Babasamama700
    @Babasamama700 Před 4 dny

    We should be talking about economy prosperity not economic growth.

  • @marleyhorne7580
    @marleyhorne7580 Před 5 dny +9

    Did AC go for a swim before he got on camera?

  • @Comfortzone99
    @Comfortzone99 Před 5 dny +1

    CH.4 I hope love is not blind and you will hold Labour accountable for what they do and not keep going on about what Farage is doing, he is not PM. Packages about the disintegration of the Tories may give some people pleasure but they are not running the country now, and we need to know what the government is doing.

  • @cnrbsmth
    @cnrbsmth Před 4 dny

    Weird that she just let the 'populist that became the encumbrant' remark slide.

  • @simonlambert6891
    @simonlambert6891 Před 4 dny

    Can interviewees please stop answering questions by starting with "we'll look" please

  • @stevenwilliamson6236
    @stevenwilliamson6236 Před 4 dny

    I can see the big drop in Colum Eastwood's vote from here.

  • @stevenwilliamson6236
    @stevenwilliamson6236 Před 4 dny +1

    The country sees a viable alternative. The same country that voted for Brexit. Are they right now? 2017 and 2019 were also viable alternatives,except in the eyes of the Labour right. Why did Harriet Harmon not condemn the vote thief in Chingford or the NHS privatisation guy in Islington North? The Labour right seems to be afraid of democracy.

  • @haruhisuzumiya6650
    @haruhisuzumiya6650 Před 3 dny

    We need more independent MPs

  • @RobThomson-x8g
    @RobThomson-x8g Před 3 dny

    How is a war criminal still free????

  • @netlanderdrushtadhyumnan

    It means nothing but a disaster for those people who think with their mouths.

  • @Jamal-Ahmed786
    @Jamal-Ahmed786 Před 5 dny +6

    Keir is this sort of person, he under promises and over delivers

  • @Paul-Revere54
    @Paul-Revere54 Před 5 dny

    life moves pretty fast, if you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

  • @nigelsutton8957
    @nigelsutton8957 Před 5 dny +1

    The usual spin from Campbell, Labours share of the vote increased by only 1.5% compared to 2019, despite all the disdain shown for the Tories. Without Reform splitting the Conservative vote this time, Labour would have gained little in England. Starmer has overseen Labour party membership fall by over 200,000. Little love shown for Labour by the electorate.

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Před 4 dny

      In 2019 Liverpool got 97 points and finished second.
      In 2024 Man City got 91 and finished first.
      About as meaningful as a comparison as yours.

    • @agt155
      @agt155 Před 4 dny +1

      @@CZcamsmessedupmyhandle You don't think the amount of votes matters in an election? Stick to soccer.

  • @jasonkingshott2971
    @jasonkingshott2971 Před 5 dny +1

    Ha, Alastair Campbell, Blair's Liar-in-Chief.

  • @EnglishAbundance
    @EnglishAbundance Před 5 dny +4

    ✨ 4th July 🇬🇧

  • @AH-te5gs
    @AH-te5gs Před 4 dny +1

    "Elections are best won from a central position." vs. Labour got far fewer votes now than in 2019 with Corbyn (but more MPs because of PR).

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Před 4 dny

      In 2019 Liverpool got 97 points and finished second.
      In 2024 Man City got 91 and finished first.
      About as meaningful as a comparison as yours.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 3 dny

      @@CZcamsmessedupmyhandle It's not really a meaningful comparison, only superficially so. There are a finite number of points a team can win in a season and all teams must play each other twice, therefore all teams will face the same relative challenge and "first past the post" actually works as a fair system in determing a winner. The other teams in the league may be relatively stronger or weaker in any given season, therefore the points needed to win the league may be higher or lower, however all teams will still play each other twice and thus face at least on paper the same challenge.
      Politics is not Party A vs Party B fixtures every week and add up the points, it is a simple measure of how much support a party has and therefore popular vote is a more relevant measure of performance than points in football. For example in politics different parties do deals with each other, such as Brexit/Tories in 2019 and Labour/Lib Dems in 2024, to influence the seat outcomes; they cannot however influence popular vote as much in this way. That kind of deal would never or almost never happen in football and definitely not in a league system, only maybe in some tournament competitions.
      So your comparison is not actually very meaningful.

    • @YouTubemessedupmyhandle
      @YouTubemessedupmyhandle Před 3 dny

      @@roberthudson3386 you do realise that you’ve just given an example why the original post comparison wasn’t meaningful, and my point was that these comparisons aren’t meaningful?

  • @goodvibrations6392
    @goodvibrations6392 Před 5 dny +1

    Ukraine, waiting list, immigration, labour shortage, interest rate, living cost, energy prices, EU deal, knife crimes, mental health, Gaza war, tuition fees - they have the mandate but time will tell.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 3 dny

      They don't have a mandate, they have a majority in parliament so will be able to do whatever they want however.
      An actual mandate would be a majority of votes.

  • @chemcintosh9704
    @chemcintosh9704 Před 5 dny +1

    the will to build a better society does exist. We must use it to secure the Great Reset that we so badly need. That will require stronger and more effective governments, though this does not imply an ideological push for bigger ones. And it will demand private-sector engagement every step of the way.

  • @colintofield1377
    @colintofield1377 Před 4 dny

    If Starmer is true to his word and works for the whole nation with honesty and integrity, then he will remain in power for at least 2 terms and hopefully bring respect back to politics and condemn Farage and his gaggle of racists to the dustbin of protest party

  • @jonathancardy9941
    @jonathancardy9941 Před 4 dny

    Yes lots of the votes that elected Lib Dem MPs were Labour supporters voting tactically. But it worked both ways, lots of Labour MPs were elected by Lib Dems voting Labour tactically. Take SW Norfolk as an example, the Lib Dem vote fell by more than the Labour majority over Truss. The difficulty is going to be next time, unless Labour can shift tack on Gaza, and the Greens can be brought more into the anti Tory tactical voting bloc.

  • @Leeds71
    @Leeds71 Před 5 dny

    I'll take this for 10 - please - another 5 years of the country run for people outside the country but they have red colours now.

  • @osmanfadil2451
    @osmanfadil2451 Před 5 dny +1

    a war criminal speaking

  • @susanthompson5381
    @susanthompson5381 Před 5 dny +1

    A labour land slide is brilliant the people have spoken labour will care about us working people and get rid of the nondom tax dodgers big company’s not tax payers labour will be fair not just for the rich and billion airs

    • @agt155
      @agt155 Před 4 dny

      Just like they did last time eh?

  • @duncannapier318
    @duncannapier318 Před 3 dny

    @Channel 4 the economic future is more important than the political future. A good economy makes people's lives better not politics, However a Channel as shallow as yourselves??? Saving Britain is as simple as stopping the boats. Lord Nelson and Churchill would only but agree. 🇿🇦👍

  • @markjohnston7869
    @markjohnston7869 Před 5 dny +1

    Starmers majority looks big but it is on extremely shallow ground. Very low vote share. Majorities in "safe seats" slashed to 3 digits in many cases and now he has to clash with reality. He has hidden over the last 4 years from actually saying what he will do but has promised change. But no change indicated by his actions. Now he has to actually do something and the public clearly don't like him so he better get it right straight away as he has no honeymoon period to hade from the voters in.

    • @marrrtin
      @marrrtin Před 4 dny

      They may not like him, but they don’t hate him. Otherwise yesterday’s result wouldn’t have been possible.

    • @markjohnston7869
      @markjohnston7869 Před 4 dny

      @@marrrtin Just look at the figures supporting him. About a third of voters on total voted Labour and of those 2% said it was for starmer the overwhelming majority voted that way to remove the Tories. Starmer was never an asset and if it had been a popular (or even just disliked) Labour leader the votes would have been different. So yes he is hated (as will be seen by the total lack of a honeymoon period) and unless he actually does something cue the many bi-elections that he will lose coming his way.

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 3 dny

      @@marrrtin Plenty of people strongly dislike Starmer. He was disliked less than the Tories and Sunak. That is why the result happened.

  • @RhysStone-d3z
    @RhysStone-d3z Před 4 dny

    This is so awesome

  • @Tom_murray89
    @Tom_murray89 Před 5 dny +23

    The adults are back in charge

    • @stephenelliott95
      @stephenelliott95 Před 5 dny +4

      😂

    • @paulmessenger9836
      @paulmessenger9836 Před 5 dny +2

      Let's see living standards over labours time in office it's going to drop of a cliff

    • @poolplayerpoolplayer7430
      @poolplayerpoolplayer7430 Před 5 dny +3

      The adults that don't know what a woman is?

    • @UCiWrMgES50tlUhV3l6NqjNA
      @UCiWrMgES50tlUhV3l6NqjNA Před 5 dny

      ​@@paulmessenger9836 by raising minimum wages and average wages??? and making sure to combat inflation for everyone??? is that what you call dropping off a cliff???

    • @matthewbaynham6286
      @matthewbaynham6286 Před 5 dny +1

      Not sure about that, we'll have to see if they can fix everything.

  • @anthonybrown4874
    @anthonybrown4874 Před 5 dny

    It looks very much like LP have an opportunity but have to get it right looks like CP need to reset and work out how to fix what's broken moving further right might absorb some RP votes but ultimately the centrist vote that deserted them is where it's at and as it stands the leading figures are a big turn off.

  • @haruhisuzumiya6650
    @haruhisuzumiya6650 Před 3 dny

    Labour voters don't want Red Tories
    Starmer is on watch g'day from Australia 🦘🌏🇦🇺

  • @user-ol6rd7pl5t
    @user-ol6rd7pl5t Před 5 dny +43

    The value of the £ has gone up already, we'll never get back any of the 100's of billions we've lost since brexit but at least it's going in the right direction again now.

    • @JamesSmith-qs4hx
      @JamesSmith-qs4hx Před 5 dny +1

      It's all fake money based on debt you muppet.

    • @hano-boy
      @hano-boy Před 5 dny

      globalist fool , you have no idea what you are talking about

    • @xenosscape8573
      @xenosscape8573 Před 5 dny

      no it hasn't its even worse now £1 = 1.18 euros xd if it really did settle well it would be £1 = 1.24-1.32 euros. its been £1=1.16-1.18 since 2020. xd

    • @edwardbernthal160
      @edwardbernthal160 Před 5 dny

      @@xenosscape8573 the pound has risen so trott off with your stupid figures.

    • @randomdaveUK
      @randomdaveUK Před 5 dny +3

      ​@@xenosscape8573it's been a day... 14 years of decline cannot be solved in a day

  • @saragonmcenany6229
    @saragonmcenany6229 Před 5 dny

    It means Labour has a huge legislative majority. The Tories made the electorate fall out of ‘love’ with politics.

  • @agt155
    @agt155 Před 4 dny

    Most mind blowing statistic is Johnson won 50% more votes in 2019 than Starmer got last week. 50%!!

  • @eamonnmurphy-if3xc
    @eamonnmurphy-if3xc Před 3 dny

    Hres a thought the labour party received less votes than when corbyn was leader, now please explain,when the next parliament and government party,make the people mad, ,,,,,the vote in the last election went all over the place,,, what does the future hold,,chaos

  • @jpsion
    @jpsion Před 5 dny

    gotcha!

  • @marcdaniels9079
    @marcdaniels9079 Před 4 dny

    Is there anyone whose name is well known that is not a children’s author. They know it’s a great way to rake in the cash. 😮

  • @colinthompson3111
    @colinthompson3111 Před 5 dny +3

    Disappointed that Ch4 is trying to take away from a large victory for Labour.

    • @Billbob228
      @Billbob228 Před 5 dny +2

      You see disappointment in the coming months

    • @xenosscape8573
      @xenosscape8573 Před 5 dny +1

      lol you think that really ? , all I hear is praise from ch4 for labour and criticism of everything else.

  • @philiptyson4000
    @philiptyson4000 Před 5 dny +4

    We have to remember that one of these two started a war on a false pretext!!

    • @agt155
      @agt155 Před 4 dny

      Crazy how Johnson is the bad guy for eating a birthday cake during COVID yet war criminals like Campbell and Blair are still darlings of the MSM. It's almost as if Globalist media supports globalist politicians.

  • @bettyholmes1155
    @bettyholmes1155 Před 3 dny

    Old brigade are coming out of woodwork I’ve noticed Blair Brown mandelson for starters

  • @24yrukdesigner
    @24yrukdesigner Před 23 hodinami

    What does Labour’s landslide win mean for UK’s political future?
    Pre-civil war pre pre ww3 if Starmer continues his marxism.
    Not a single person would fight for Starmer though, I mean not a single person would give him time of day really.

  • @Jim90117
    @Jim90117 Před 4 dny

    Tories need a clean slate if they want to come back, the old guard need to go, no one is voting for them again. They need a fresh faced new roster of leading Tories, they run the same known names and they'll be unelectable for the coming decades.

  • @paulmorgan6269
    @paulmorgan6269 Před 2 dny

    Get a new name for the Tories, call it The Rich Peoples Party.

  • @user-lk9lp3br3g
    @user-lk9lp3br3g Před 5 dny +2

    Sir Keir, is Ruthless in a very positive Way...I thank God, he became PM

  • @donalobrien7582
    @donalobrien7582 Před 5 hodinami

    Ahaaaaa!
    WMD Campbell, why is he Allowed to Walk the Streets, he's not just a Danger to Himself but to the Whole World.

  • @fburton8
    @fburton8 Před 5 dny

    Labour mudslide

  • @user-ei7rs1vo9c
    @user-ei7rs1vo9c Před 5 dny

    i eneded up on this channel by accident good interview BUT I CANNOT GET OUT OF MY HEAD THE DIRTY TRICK YOU TRIED TO PLAY ON Reform I nevber what c4 News now i wwatch 5
    NEWS

  • @lw1zfog
    @lw1zfog Před 2 dny

    more of the same W.E.F. $hitshow

  • @jamessmithson-br7rm
    @jamessmithson-br7rm Před 5 dny

    “All number of electoral records have been broken”… really does that make sense Channel 4… surely “a large number” is more accurate but not “all” 😂😅

  • @inquiring8059
    @inquiring8059 Před 4 dny

    !!!... Landslide...??? 😂😅😊😂

  • @ABC-dw7pe
    @ABC-dw7pe Před 5 dny

    THIIIINGGGGGSSSS
    CAN … ONLYYYY GET BETTTERRRRRR
    CANNNNN ONLY GET BETTTTTERRRRRRR
    TONY TONY TONY 🎶 🎶

  • @Tybourne1991
    @Tybourne1991 Před 5 dny +1

    Hi,
    We keep hearing about change, but it's not always clear what we're changing from or to. And public service? Service for what? At least building houses is specific, though it will cost money and mean tax rises-we need to be upfront about that. We also need to make sure these new houses are sustainable-flood-proof, environmentally sound, and affordable. This means reforming the market as well as building more. Let's be clear and honest about our goals and the steps needed to achieve them.

  • @hbt739
    @hbt739 Před 5 dny

    Still speaking about ne migration havent learned a thing

  • @DaleHanson-nw9yc
    @DaleHanson-nw9yc Před 5 dny +10

    Five Years of Labour Government 💖🌹

  • @meenasingh676
    @meenasingh676 Před 5 dny

    There 💩 coming down 😅

  • @peterherridge6342
    @peterherridge6342 Před 4 dny

    Plenty of EU flags in the background but no politicians willing to confront the elephant in the room!

    • @ryanf6530
      @ryanf6530 Před 4 dny

      Well it was the most divisive debate in modern British politics and it split the country in half. Why would a politician want to re-open that debate?

    • @peterherridge6342
      @peterherridge6342 Před 4 dny

      @@ryanf6530 Well Labour only polled 34% of the vote and that won’t win them an election in five years time. Pro-EU Labour supporters are drifting away to the Greens and Lib Dems that’s why Thangham Debbonair lost Bristol Central. The TCA with the EU is up for renegotiation and renewal in 2025 Starmer needs to be bold. He doesn’t need a debate, he can do whatever he wants if he’s bold enough. Brexit is stifling growth and reducing our GDP, if you want to fix this country’s problems you have to wake up to that reality

  • @anthonyferris8912
    @anthonyferris8912 Před 5 dny +9

    Johnson won his last election with 43.6% of the popular vote, while Corbyn lost it with a 32.1%, on a voter a 67.3% turnout of the electorate.
    Starmer’s Labour have won the 2024 election with 34% of the popular vote on a voter turnout of 60%, the lowest turnout since 2001.
    There’s been no great shift left and things will change little, because the global economy dictates the limits of what any government can do and the UK’s monumental civil service, will dictate the rest…Keep Calm and Carry On. You’ll hardly notice the difference.

    • @mr.mayhem7402
      @mr.mayhem7402 Před 5 dny

      Extremely well put and will act as a restraint whether AC agrees or not because they will know that if they try to do things that the British don't want, then they can also go the way of the Tories in 5 years time.

    • @JD83000
      @JD83000 Před 5 dny

      Correct. We are governed by neo-liberal globalists.
      They aren't interested in listening to their electorate and their concerns. It's not a conspiracy, it's just group think. Technocratic elitism.

    • @raiden24
      @raiden24 Před 5 dny +2

      This was the result of an intentional strategy though, Labour intentionally did next to no campaigning for safe seats and spent all their time campaigning for seats that they were close to taking. This resulted in low voter turnout in many constituencies where they could've gotten a lot of extra Labour votes, but they were not trying to win the popular vote they were trying to win the election. In the end it is impossible to discount the effects of the first-past-the-post system from the popular vote, it is influenced by both campaign strategy and by tactical voting.

    • @chrisfell5073
      @chrisfell5073 Před 5 dny

      Correct well put.

    • @Thelma7361
      @Thelma7361 Před 5 dny

      @@raiden24lowest voter share of any incoming majority winning government since 1918. Labour’s overall voters barely moved an inch since 2019. `Labour only won seats because people were so sick of the conservatives they swung back to Labour or other parties. But Labour absolutely bled voters out the back as well.

  • @jonnobloggs8642
    @jonnobloggs8642 Před 5 dny +2

    I hope that Big Nigel hangs around for the next 10 years to split the right wing vote .The centre left vote was split in the 80's between Labour and the Alliance parties to give the conservatives an electoral advantage and what goes round comes round .

  • @peterellis4982
    @peterellis4982 Před 5 dny +4

    We are fucked

  • @noneofyourbusiness4022

    Seriously what is wrong with leftists

  • @carolineroosyoga2017
    @carolineroosyoga2017 Před 4 dny +6

    Jeremy Hunt? Jeez what a horrible man

  • @anon2602
    @anon2602 Před 4 dny +2

    We are fu*ked.

  • @jakehowie442
    @jakehowie442 Před 5 dny +2

    Cathy Newman one of the best news presenters imo even if she is a socialist

    • @paulmessenger9836
      @paulmessenger9836 Před 5 dny

      Champagne socialist

    • @AndreaJones-eh3sd
      @AndreaJones-eh3sd Před 5 dny +1

      @@paulmessenger9836I’d much rather a champagne socialist than a Tory. What’s wrong with doing well and wanting other people to also get that chance?

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 Před dnem

      Conservatives want others to do well, fair opportunity and lower taxes though

  • @jn4126
    @jn4126 Před 5 dny +4

    It means our electoral system is broken

    • @Jessjoe1956
      @Jessjoe1956 Před 5 dny +2

      Cheer up, you lost, get over it.🌹🌹🌹

    • @Billbob228
      @Billbob228 Před 5 dny

      @@Jessjoe1956I think you will find future generations have lost these lot are going to end this country

    • @HellBot-gi5si
      @HellBot-gi5si Před 5 dny

      No it means you vote out of office for screwing up the UK economy with Brexit.

    • @jn4126
      @jn4126 Před 5 dny +1

      ​​@@Jessjoe1956 i spoiled my ballot, as I said the electoral system is broken. When 33% of 59% of voters grant a massive majority, you have a government with no popular mandate. If you don't see a problem with that, then you simply don't agree with the principles of democracy

    • @Omnipotent-Q
      @Omnipotent-Q Před 5 dny +1

      @@jn4126 ​​⁠ ​​⁠​⁠ ​​⁠The requirement for ID, which was designed to reduce turnout is no doubt a factor.
      Voter apathy with politics no doubt as well. The amount of divisive shite thrown about online is off putting to many people.
      Very difficult to inspire anyone when all that comes out is negativity irrespective of what political party it might be.
      The guy above, perfect example. Doom and gloom seldom convinces anyone about a political view, it just puts people off all politics completely.
      The time of year when lots of people are on holiday - deliberate choice of timing again to limit turnout.

  • @ronbock8291
    @ronbock8291 Před 5 dny +2

    Hilarious. ‘Miniscule Labour majority means Sunak actually won. First question to Labour talking head, how much do you hate Starmer, a ton, or all the much?’ I guess we can look forward to 5 long years of this type of coverage.

  • @davidscott4637
    @davidscott4637 Před 5 dny +1

    Campbell should stick to children's books.