Could the Lib Dems Come Second?

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
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    In this video, we’ll have a look at this - whether the Lib Dems could overtake the Tories and what this would ultimately mean for British democracy.
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Komentáře • 848

  • @Srindal4657
    @Srindal4657 Před 11 dny +1067

    It would be fascinating what the country would look like if it was divided between labour and lib dems

    • @jamescole1314
      @jamescole1314 Před 11 dny +142

      A lot better than it does right now! Or when labour were having to govern against Tory attacks in the new labour years

    • @reheyesd8666
      @reheyesd8666 Před 11 dny +21

      Just look at the mess you made after using the toilet. That's any government.

    • @isaacpayne-silk3996
      @isaacpayne-silk3996 Před 11 dny

      P😅0ooo😅o😅​@@jamescole1314

    • @Mastersharkmapping
      @Mastersharkmapping Před 11 dny +75

      Utopia, just need starmer out of labour and replaced by an actual left/cent. left politician

    • @togerboy5396
      @togerboy5396 Před 11 dny +38

      With the entire nation turning increasingly left wing many centrist conservative voters will likely move towards voting for Lib Dem’s. In this case many Lib Dem MP’s would vote slightly in favour of old Tory policies to please their new Tory members. It would basically become Tories 2.0 if I’m correct.

  • @kaylenscurrah5435
    @kaylenscurrah5435 Před 11 dny +780

    ‘Tories are set to win -5 seats’ but wait here’s how even worse things can get for the Tories

    • @ValiantValium
      @ValiantValium Před 11 dny +119

      "Tories are set to lose so hard, that 20 new seats in the House of Commons will be created and randomly distributed"

    • @larkwinth_real
      @larkwinth_real Před 11 dny +33

      Haha disproportional representation 💀

    • @Natalietransfem
      @Natalietransfem Před 11 dny

      Tories set to not exist but it could be even worse for them

    • @Bimmeroo090-cl5cz
      @Bimmeroo090-cl5cz Před 10 dny

      ECONOMY'S turning...strong growth, inflation and interest rates plummeting...great election prospects for Rishi!

    • @Decrepit_biker
      @Decrepit_biker Před 10 dny +9

      ​@@Bimmeroo090-cl5czget a grip. THE Tories need to go, and go NOW..... ABSOLUTE CESSPIT OF A GOVERNMENT

  • @socialistrepublicofvietnam1500

    2:39 I've seen one-party states with worse results than Labour in that graph, how did the Tories mess up this badly?

    • @XxHaythamKenwayxX
      @XxHaythamKenwayxX Před 11 dny +153

      Where to even begin. Everything in the country is broken, that's basically the way to sum it up. Years of austerity meant long-term side effects would be inevitable, Brexit has been a disaster as we took the worst version of it, effectively sanctioning ourselves from the biggest trading market in the world - and since Boris Johnson in 2019 we've had the worst of the Tory party in terms of sleaze and corruption and just outright disgrace. It's come to the point that whenever a headline in the news says 'A Member of Parliament has been found doing XYZ', everyone automatically assumes it's a Tory because 9/10 it usually is.

    • @joshuacampbell1625
      @joshuacampbell1625 Před 11 dny +44

      ​@@XxHaythamKenwayxXyeah there is a great amount of disillusionment right now in the UK, its part of the reason why smaller parties are doing well in the poll, like reform uk, even though reform is basically just the ultra-tory party.

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 Před 11 dny +48

      50% of the dislike for tories is purely from the fact they've been in power so long it's not possible to blame anyone else for all the problems in the country

    • @craigewen7542
      @craigewen7542 Před 11 dny

      They aren't left or right wing. They don't do anything about illegal immigration and are putting them in hotels angering the right. And the left doesn't like tories either for obvious reasons.
      But that's just one example. Basically they isolated themselves and sold out their voters

    • @ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031
      @ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031 Před 11 dny

      Imagine a situation like the collapse of Soviet Union. Now imagine this with pandemics while the leader of the government is making parties and his substitute is a sociopathic lettuce. This is the situation of the UK after Brexit.

  • @marsharbour5906
    @marsharbour5906 Před 11 dny +347

    “Lib Dems can win here” and it’s just a map of Great Britain

    • @alanfrost4661
      @alanfrost4661 Před 11 dny +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @lloydonyeka9316
      @lloydonyeka9316 Před 11 dny +2

      😂😂😂

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 11 dny +6

      In 2019 this was the case!
      There were 100 seats where they came within 400 votes of the Tories, they only lost these seats because Labour's claims to ve the main challenger based on the Lib dems historically bad 2015 results.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 Před 11 dny +3

      ⁠@@quintuscrinis8032 That requires going against the concept of multiparty democracy. Huh. I guess Britain isn’t that different after all.

    • @tiglishnobody8750
      @tiglishnobody8750 Před 11 dny

      Map of great Britain is entire of UK minus Ireland

  • @somethingfunny6867
    @somethingfunny6867 Před 11 dny +493

    torys are aiming for zero seats

    • @JupiterThunder
      @JupiterThunder Před 11 dny +38

      It's the most they can reasonably expect after their 15 years of 'achievements'

    • @Bulbs_Productions
      @Bulbs_Productions Před 11 dny +16

      *best case scenario

    • @johnburrows3385
      @johnburrows3385 Před 11 dny +14

      Here's hoping they can achieve their objective 😂

    • @theotherandrew5540
      @theotherandrew5540 Před 11 dny +4

      If only!

    • @Worldmisery
      @Worldmisery Před 11 dny

      No. The Tories will find a way to survive. They are undemocratic authoritarian oligarchs.
      I hate my country

  • @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023

    3:00 Regardless of your political opinion, this shows why the first-past-the-post system is stupid. Getting half the amount of votes but more than three times as many seats is ridiculous and simply unfair.

    • @hansgruber3064
      @hansgruber3064 Před 11 dny +48

      It’s such of out of date system, it just not fit for purpose in the modern world.

    • @beanward_xd527
      @beanward_xd527 Před 11 dny

      The fourth most popular party getting the second most seats while the third gets none is mental im surprised there isn't a bigger movement to change our electoral system

    • @cathulionetharn5139
      @cathulionetharn5139 Před 11 dny +13

      @@hansgruber3064 it is, but it has benefits, it avoids unlikeable corrupt politicians that scrape by on 20% of the vote from uninformed people getting into government by being chosen by a party that gets sub 20% everywhere
      Problem is, current day politicians getting majority vote are no better

    • @joesoy9185
      @joesoy9185 Před 11 dny +3

      @@cathulionetharn5139 plus the fact that a small party could be a majority provider and demand more cabinet posts than their number of MPs warrant. Moreover, coalitions often result in weak government.

    • @lif6737
      @lif6737 Před 11 dny +12

      I'm glad more and more people are realizing FPtP is an archaic system that has to go. We've iterated on our democracies before, and I believe getting rid of FPtP is the next step

  • @tsarnicholasii8725
    @tsarnicholasii8725 Před 11 dny +419

    It would be absolutely amazing if the libdems could comeback after basically a century of being 3rd or 4th

    • @jakel8627
      @jakel8627 Před 11 dny +16

      I didn't realise it was 2081 already

    • @bigships
      @bigships Před 11 dny +2

      I hope so

    • @griffinbastion
      @griffinbastion Před 11 dny +45

      @@jakel8627 liberal party which evolved into libdems was the main opposition party 100 years ago and further back

    • @nuzayerov
      @nuzayerov Před 11 dny +1

      @@jakel8627 the current LibDem Party is merger of the former Liberal Party with other parties. The Liberals were the opposition around a 100 years ago and before.
      More context: The Liberals themselves are the successor of the Whigs, which was the first ruling party of the UK, the party of Sir Robert Walpole and many other prime ministers of that time.

    • @iGamezRo
      @iGamezRo Před 11 dny +28

      The last Liberal PM was David Lloyd George, who was PM during WW1. After WW1, the PM has been either from the Tories or from Labour. The historical Liberal Party merged with the Social Democratic Party (a Labour splinter) in the 1980s to form the LibDems. A few Liberals chose not to join the new LibDems and there still exists a very fringe Liberal Party, but it lacked support as no central figure chose to back them. All of them joined the LibDems.

  • @richardjames3022
    @richardjames3022 Před 11 dny +451

    It would be great if the LibDems did come second

    • @EngineerRunner
      @EngineerRunner Před 11 dny +12

      it really wouldn't, they proved that they only cared about power when they entered the Coalition government and dropped all promises except ones that would be beneficial to them

    • @Srindal4657
      @Srindal4657 Před 11 dny +77

      @@EngineerRunner Please. This is politics we're talking about. Who isn't interested in power?

    • @EngineerRunner
      @EngineerRunner Před 11 dny +20

      @@Srindal4657 fair, but they could've at least implemented _some_ of their policies, or even left the Tories to struggle in a minority government, but instead they proved that they don't care about the voters.

    • @Srindal4657
      @Srindal4657 Před 11 dny +14

      @@EngineerRunner lib dems is divided between a left and right wing of their party. It's very difficult to get things done when the party doesn't agree.

    • @charlierichards5865
      @charlierichards5865 Před 11 dny +6

      @@EngineerRunnerThere is such thing as change; moreover, what may become the Lib Dem manifesto looks better and more sensible than either of the other two parties. You must bear in mind that within British democracy we are ultimately choosing the LEAST harmful as opposed to the “best”. Much is also dependent on local constituencies however and I wouldn’t advice ever wasting a vote

  • @electric_whelk1653
    @electric_whelk1653 Před 11 dny +18

    people saying that a "spell in opposition" would be maybe good for the Tories but I think a spell in the third party backbenches would be good for everyone

  • @aidanbyrne8267
    @aidanbyrne8267 Před 11 dny +165

    I would love to have a labour parliament with lib dem opposition

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 11 dny +6

      Need to prevent all these hard-roght defectors that Starmer seems to be welcoming in at bay though, so a coalition between th3 two would be even better

    • @lukeallison3713
      @lukeallison3713 Před 10 dny

      That would kill the lib dems as they would have to lean towards the centre right wing of the party. If labour move to clearly blairite third way politics, then it leaves an opportunity for the 'sdp wing' that Kennedy was part of to outflank labour on the left. That's when the lib dems found success

  • @Whitehalo732
    @Whitehalo732 Před 11 dny +111

    Vote Lib Dem to force Labour to institute electoral reform for proportional representation.

    • @joshquinn4964
      @joshquinn4964 Před 11 dny +19

      Yes! The fact that West Germany called the FPTP system 'authoritiarian when they were debating electoral reform in the 1960s tells you all you need to know.

    • @SPQSpartacus
      @SPQSpartacus Před 11 dny +18

      No. Vote the strongest candidate to defeat the Tories. Be it Libdem, be it Labour. But first, defeat the Tories. Then, when in power, demand Proportional representation.

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 11 dny +4

      ​@SPQSpartacus that sort of messaging is precisely why we had Conservative victories in 2017 and 2019!!
      2019 saw the Lib Dems come a close 2nd to the Tories in about 100 seats!
      And just as importantly, if Labour win a landslide this time they will shelve electoral reform just as they did back in 1997/2001!

    • @Bimmeroo090-cl5cz
      @Bimmeroo090-cl5cz Před 10 dny

      No keep voting Tory for a sound, thriving economy...don't risk your job and home in Starmer's casino.

    • @joshquinn4964
      @joshquinn4964 Před 10 dny +13

      @@Bimmeroo090-cl5cz come back to me when you find that thriving economy... I can't see it anywhere.

  • @ganrimmonim
    @ganrimmonim Před 11 dny +103

    I'm a card-carrying LibDem who in my seat am going to vote Labour, only way remotely possible to oust my Tory MP. I'd find it remarkable to find myself a member of The Opposition party.

    • @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197
      @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197 Před 11 dny +11

      Labour sucks just as much as the Conservatives but I get the logic behind this move.

    • @bigships
      @bigships Před 11 dny +7

      As another card carrying lib-dem, I’ll be very happy if we become the opposition party

    • @venmis137
      @venmis137 Před 11 dny +14

      @@bigships As a Labour Member, I agree. An opposition pushing for liberalism and pro-europeanism as opposed to one pushing for fascism and isolationism (because the tories will lurch even farther to the right after the election) would be beautiful.

    • @williammountfield8508
      @williammountfield8508 Před 11 dny +3

      Please don’t, the party is cash starved as it is and if members are voting for other parties we will lose our deposits in many seats which will hurt. Having people vote lib dem even when we don’t stand a good chance of winning also helps highlight how rubbish fptp is.

    • @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197
      @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197 Před 11 dny +3

      @@venmis137 the only notable party on the "right" in the UK is the Reform Party.
      Labour are far left and Conservatives are centre left.

  • @user-sd3ik9rt6d
    @user-sd3ik9rt6d Před 11 dny +151

    Reform and Conservative fighting amongst themselves will lose them seats and send them into oblivion, good.

    • @garethbuckeridge6910
      @garethbuckeridge6910 Před 11 dny

      At best it is only approx. 30% of the overall vote, so irrelevant in the bigger scheme of things.

    • @dkoda840
      @dkoda840 Před 11 dny

      I don’t buy reform stealing that many votes from the conservatives, yes it’s possible but I find polls regarding this situation usually overplays just how willing people are to switch parties.

    • @kingdomofbird8174
      @kingdomofbird8174 Před 11 dny +2

      ​@@garethbuckeridge6910actually, Reform + Conservatives combined are single digits behind Labour, of course, you can't convince Reform that Tories are anything but Labour-lite, or to convince some lifelong Tories that Reform isn't some radical lunatics

    • @RickRossYuhM8
      @RickRossYuhM8 Před 11 dny +1

      @@kingdomofbird8174yeah i’ll he voting reform as labour isn’t going to be different to tories

    • @ballisticalrift
      @ballisticalrift Před 10 dny +2

      ⁠​⁠@@RickRossYuhM8Voting for an even further right wing party’s definitely gonna make things better !!
      I don’t like labor, but they’re infinitely better than the Tories and Reform

  • @Mitjitsu
    @Mitjitsu Před 11 dny +40

    As bad as Tony Blair was, he was right about one thing. Never underestimate the Conservatives; never overestimate the Lib Dems.

  • @MrSpasticdancer
    @MrSpasticdancer Před 11 dny +13

    if the tories couldnt even manage to be opposition, that would be hilarious

  • @psych0536
    @psych0536 Před 11 dny +27

    The thing about the MRP polls is that while on the surface it looks like the Tories are in a secure second, when you look below the surface and at the figures in each seat, it becomes plain that most of the seats categorised as Tory are not secure. Their share of the vote is low, and in many of the seats they are only just barely ahead. Furthermore, MRP does not factor in tactical voting at all, and a level of Labour/LD tactical voting even at a fraction of what we have seen in local and by-elections would be enough to halve the Tory totals in the MRP polls. In a high tactical voting scenario where Reform UK vote holds up it is a very credible and plausible scenario that the Lib Dems win more Westminster seats than the Tories. I wouldn't bet on it happening, but I wouldn't bet on it _not_ happening, either. I feel like its probably about a 1 in 3 chance

    • @DebatingWombat
      @DebatingWombat Před 11 dny +4

      I guess the tactical voting might swing both ways, i.e. some “holding their nose” and vote Tory to avoid a narrow LibDem or Labour win. The biggest factors are probably:
      1) Whether Labour and the LibDems agree not to run actively against each other, or at least do some kind of bargain to avoid splitting the vote and thus increase Tory losses.
      2) The extent to which Reform UK voters are so fired up that they’re willing to “waste their votes”, in which case the party may act as a serious Tory spoiler.
      3) The degree to which Keir Starmer’s “lurch to the right” alienates the Labour left to the extent that they either vote, say, Green (thus increasing the chance of “wasted votes”) or simply choose not to vote at all.
      If those reporting in opinion polls that they’ll vote Reform UK instead choose to vote tactically, you can almost certainly add all, or at least a large proportion, of that vote to the Tory tally. However, if they’re angry enough with the Tories, most of their votes will probably end up being “wasted”.

  • @LuxVertas
    @LuxVertas Před 11 dny +23

    Folks, come the next election: VOTE! Don't just take these predictions and opinion polls as how things will be!

    • @hansgruber3064
      @hansgruber3064 Před 11 dny

      The Tories want people to be in the mindset of “I’m not voting, it doesn’t matter”

  • @dirtyden1
    @dirtyden1 Před 11 dny +28

    I don't think it will happen, but it would be hilarious if it did.

  • @Dardobul
    @Dardobul Před 11 dny +41

    Imagine claiming you have a mandate to lead based on the last parliament when you've lost more than 300 elected officials per year on average since then

  • @CRINOTH
    @CRINOTH Před 11 dny +40

    I'm a Lib Dem member and I'd love it if we came second. But I don't think I'd want us to be the official opposition with as few as 44 seats. We wouldn't be able to properly fulfill the duties of an official opposition. We wouldn't even be able to shadow the government ministers without doubling up (or tripling up). We'd look like shambles. Worth remembering that 44 seats would be fewer than we got when we were in third place in '97, '01, '05, and '10. Also it's fewer than the SNP got in third place in '15 and '19. So I have mixed feelings. I want second place, but we'd really need to be beating our previous highwater mark of 62 seats in 2005 to look anything like a proper opposition.

    • @distinctdipole
      @distinctdipole Před 11 dny +8

      What's wrong with forming a coalition opposition? For example Lib Dems and Greens with a few like-minded independents.

    • @CRINOTH
      @CRINOTH Před 11 dny +8

      @@distinctdipole Nothing wrong with that. But the Greens would only add between 1 and 4 seats to the total. I don't see where independents are likely to be elected, tbh.

    • @MrOats-bs1ry
      @MrOats-bs1ry Před 11 dny +2

      @@CRINOTH SNP+Plaid perhaps?

    • @distinctdipole
      @distinctdipole Před 11 dny +1

      @@CRINOTH True it would be very dependent on the actual outcome of the election when we finally get it, but I thought it was an interesting idea that would also highlight the need for (hopefully) progressives on both sides of the house further excluding the looney right. Would also be good to see collaborative politics taking over from the mess that is the current adversarial playground politics we have now.

    • @CRINOTH
      @CRINOTH Před 11 dny +1

      @@MrOats-bs1ry With the Lib Dems? Or as the main opposition grouping on their own? I personally wouldn't be in favour of working with either of the Nat parties.

  • @pedrofr1434
    @pedrofr1434 Před 11 dny +5

    LibDems on the first day at work as the official opposition: "The Whigs agree with the government to return to the EU"
    Everyone else: " The Whigs? I thought you guys reformed?"
    LibDems: "yes, that's what we wanted you to think"

  • @joefarrow1599
    @joefarrow1599 Před 11 dny +160

    I support talking more about the Lib Dems and giving reform UK less airtime

    • @jamescole1314
      @jamescole1314 Před 11 dny +6

      💯

    • @clmclmn21
      @clmclmn21 Před 11 dny +17

      All parties deserve airtime regardless of whether or not you agree with them. I don’t like the Green Party but they have every right to make their voices heard and tell everyone about their manifesto. Reform should also have that right.

    • @joefarrow1599
      @joefarrow1599 Před 11 dny

      @@clmclmn21 all parties do not deserve airtime, the Monster Raving Loony Party never gets any airtime and they shouldn't. Reform UK merit more airtime than MRLP, but the amount of attention that they are currently getting is clearly over inflated

    • @ILikedGooglePlus
      @ILikedGooglePlus Před 11 dny +25

      ​@@clmclmn21Reform gets disproportionate airtime compared to their actual support.
      Same as Trump in the Republican primaries in 2015, same as UKIP in the 2010s

    • @robertnotingher7972
      @robertnotingher7972 Před 11 dny +14

      ​@@clmclmn21 he didn't say they dot deserve their voice heard. Just said that reform get a disproportionately large amount of airtime whereas lib dems get too little

  • @Martiansfromthemoon
    @Martiansfromthemoon Před 11 dny +17

    Hoping and praying for a big come back from Lib Dem. Their policies are so much more mature than Labour and Tory policies

    • @Adam-wg2rf
      @Adam-wg2rf Před 11 dny +1

      What are they offering? They never said in the video

    • @buzz1ebee
      @buzz1ebee Před 11 dny

      They are probably lying again like in 2010. They'll say anything for a sniff at power, then do the opposite when they get in.

    • @LOLE_Editz
      @LOLE_Editz Před 11 dny +2

      I'd just like to see the tories and Lib dems switch.

    • @williammountfield8508
      @williammountfield8508 Před 11 dny +8

      @@Adam-wg2rfthe right to see a gp within a week, named gp‘s for over 70s and those with long term conditions, fixing social care, giving the sewage companies a kicking, a milliard pounds a year to help farmers transition to sustainable farming practices, 8,000 new detectives, reverse Rwanda, reverse the tax breaks on the big banks and fossil fuel giants, etc…
      Historically speaking our manifestos have been independently assessed as being the only consistently costed and budgeted manifestos from any of the main parties.

    • @treeaboo
      @treeaboo Před 10 dny +5

      Unlike Starmer's Labour they actually care about my human rights as a trans person (they aren't actively throwing me under the bus for the culture war like Labour) so that's a big plus for me personally. Their candidate in my constituency is an actual local and a genuinely good person, and the only plausible opposition to one of the nastiest Tory MPs.
      Not to mention them having more ambitious policies than Labour, they actually seem to believe in something unlike Starmer.

  • @ABI-qw2bj
    @ABI-qw2bj Před 11 dny +34

    People should be talking more about the Lib Dems than about Reform. The Lib Dems are the only third party that may have a real impact on the seat share, while Reform is going to struggle to get more than a couple of seats despite their high vote share.
    Heck, Reform has won fewer council seats than George Galloway's party in the recent local elections. It's just how the first-past-the-post system works.

    • @mattevans4377
      @mattevans4377 Před 11 dny +1

      Speaking of Galloway, that party has a lot of core voters that are dominant in some areas. I think the mainstream parties are in for a shock from Galloway, and they might actually open their eyes to the consequences of their actions.....

    • @dontcomply3976
      @dontcomply3976 Před 11 dny +6

      Terrorists do seem to live in the same areas

    • @fremes3918
      @fremes3918 Před 11 dny +3

      Reform didn’t win many seats because they put next to no one forward, they have a higher vote share than the Lib Dem’s but are spread out, I agree that FPTP is stupid, but a two party system while flaws does have benefits compared to SV or proportional like Holland, Italy or Germany all three of which have seen very right wing party’s rise up as it is easy to do so with proportional.

    • @mattevans4377
      @mattevans4377 Před 11 dny

      @@fremes3918 If right wing parties gain traction, that's not a problem with the voting system. It just means left wing parties are sh*t

    • @jean-lucpicard5510
      @jean-lucpicard5510 Před 11 dny

      ​@@dontcomply3976Calling Galloway a terrorist, hilarious.

  • @Arksimon2k
    @Arksimon2k Před 11 dny +12

    Unfortunately it doesn't seem likely to happen until the UK gets some sort of propertional representation. I've always been a lib dem voter and we've generally been too spread out to win a first past the post contest. I'm in a labour winning seat and polling suggests the lib dem candidate is nowhere near. But with proportional vote I could still get my vote in and just put labour as my second choice.

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 10 dny +2

      There are a lot of people like you. I remember talking to so many like you in St Albans back in 2017!!

  • @cgt3704
    @cgt3704 Před 11 dny +23

    Libdems: *happy noises*

  • @TomJohnson67
    @TomJohnson67 Před 11 dny +7

    I don't understand the Tory strategy, it's as if they are going for a 0 seats any% speedrun.

  • @YonaSoundcloud
    @YonaSoundcloud Před 11 dny +26

    Proportional representation please

  • @BenDBeast
    @BenDBeast Před 9 dny +2

    It's unlikely but would be such a large step in the right direction for the country.

  • @jakel8627
    @jakel8627 Před 11 dny +11

    🔶️LIB DEM🔶️
    🔶️LIB DEM🔶️
    🔶️LIB DEM🔶️

    • @spaghettiisyummy.3623
      @spaghettiisyummy.3623 Před 11 dny +3

      Love them?

    • @treeaboo
      @treeaboo Před 10 dny +1

      @@spaghettiisyummy.3623 Well I think they love them if they're chanting their name, so it translated the meaning accurately

  • @ErinStephanie-mf2qk
    @ErinStephanie-mf2qk Před 11 dny +25

    The centre right space has already been vacated by the Tories. And Labour are moving to filling it. The Lib Dem’s are better off to take the centre left space, Labour are increasingly vacating.

    • @7ookee
      @7ookee Před 11 dny +7

      I'd vote libdem if they did that. What I mostly want is PR.

    • @dontcomply3976
      @dontcomply3976 Před 11 dny +6

      Labour? Centre-right
      What planet are you on?

    • @jackthehacker05
      @jackthehacker05 Před 11 dny +4

      @@dontcomply3976agreed, we ought to just say right for now

    • @7ookee
      @7ookee Před 11 dny +4

      @@dontcomply3976 that's how Labour are attracting voters who would vote Tory otherwise. Centre right is always pliable.

    • @williammountfield8508
      @williammountfield8508 Před 11 dny

      We are Centre left and always have been.

  • @adeforeman86
    @adeforeman86 Před 9 dny +2

    The chances of the Lib Dems finishing second are about the same as Jo Swinsons chances of becoming Prime Minister at the last election.

  • @vishmaster09
    @vishmaster09 Před 2 dny +2

    In 2080 i will be telling my grandkids that there was once a political party called the conservatives

  • @jasonshallcross2741
    @jasonshallcross2741 Před 11 dny +7

    Another strong possibility is a major scandal, which for the Tories seems to be a weekly event. However, the scandals rarely seem to have as much impact on voting as you'd imagine.

    • @MrJonezy541
      @MrJonezy541 Před 11 dny +2

      It's because they're so frequent, people have come to expect scandals from the Tories. Anyone who still supports them are fine with it.

    • @treeaboo
      @treeaboo Před 10 dny +1

      To a certain degree they've lost most of the people who would be turned away by scandals thanks to the previous scandals, all that's left are the diehard Tory voters and those on the fence about switching to Reform.
      Hence new scandals seem to have relatively little impact on their current voting numbers, merely solidifying the opposition to them from those who have already turned away.

  • @captainshakesbeard2453
    @captainshakesbeard2453 Před 11 dny +8

    They promised to do things, we voted for those things. The tories ignored what we voted for and ousted the people who wouldn't

    • @7ookee
      @7ookee Před 11 dny

      Fptp is a stupid system to base a democracy on. In our democracy 59% of our electorate consistently have no say in government. This is an elective dictatorship more divided on class than political ideology.

  • @pastyman001
    @pastyman001 Před 11 dny +4

    This would be a fascinating dynamic. LibDems would attack mostly from more radical position on environment and energy constitutional issues, Europe, migration etc. I was under Tories forever, suddenly over 3 years, I have 3 LibDem councillors in my ward, a LibDem led Cherwell DC and a LibDem led Oxfordshire Country Council, with most other councils in the county LibDem led, two by Labour and none by Tories any more. Greens are in coalition.

  • @kevinohiggins3868
    @kevinohiggins3868 Před 11 dny +5

    from Liberal and Conservatie being the main parties in the 1800's, to Labour and Conservative, to Labour and Liberal.

    • @Worldmisery
      @Worldmisery Před 11 dny

      What's the point of Labour? It's bourgeois socialism. It reforms nothing, it serves the financial oligarchy by prescribing pankillers to the proletariat, but they can snatch the milk away whenever they want.

  • @seanpcoon
    @seanpcoon Před 11 dny +12

    Has there ever been a political party in history that saw such an insane drop off in popularity like this before?

    • @samhayward4216
      @samhayward4216 Před 11 dny +16

      Yes, see the collapse of the governing Conservatives in Canada 1992. In the UK, 1918 saw the collapse of the Liberals, and 1931 saw the collapse of Labour, although both these cases were caused by party splitting rather than extreme unpopularity.

    • @barbthegreat586
      @barbthegreat586 Před 11 dny

      And from such majority, too. TBH, I'm surprised there haven't been major riots so far, so thieving and crap they are.

    • @cyber_rachel7427
      @cyber_rachel7427 Před 11 dny +36

      The NSDAP in Germany became quite unpopular rather quickly after 1945

    • @DebatingWombat
      @DebatingWombat Před 11 dny +3

      Yes, look at the continental European countries whose formerly important Social Democratic parties were reduced to the fringe. It even has a name: Pasokification
      Its named after the once mighty Greek PASOK, which went from getting around 40% of the vote in the 1980s, ‘90s and 2000s to around 10% in the 2010s and ‘20s. PASOK lost 30 points (or 3/4) of its vote in a single election (2012) and hasn’t really recovered since.

    • @DebatingWombat
      @DebatingWombat Před 11 dny +2

      The French Socialist Party has basically followed the Greek pattern, as has the Dutch Labour Party (although the latest general election at least gave them something of a comeback). The Czech Social Democrats even failed to cross the 5% electoral threshold in the latest general election.

  • @Robert_H.
    @Robert_H. Před 11 dny +2

    I would like to emphasize again that the Tories only need 21% of the vote to get an absolute majority in Parliament. Due to the winner-takes-it-all principle, it is enough to have more votes than the other parties in 50.1% of constituencies to win the election. And neither of the two major parties wants to change this.

  • @kimwit1307
    @kimwit1307 Před 10 dny +2

    If I were Labour I'd mostly be concerned with the tories 'poisoning the well' as it were to force Labour to introduce unpopular measures to keep the goverrnment finances afloat.

  • @Wall6ly
    @Wall6ly Před 8 dny

    8:49 Great video as always. You’ve got a small editing mistake at ~8:50, where a line is repeated.

  • @Jourifouler
    @Jourifouler Před 11 dny +4

    As a lib dem member it would he interesting to see if they ended up as the second largest party if they would still support the proportional representation.

    • @oliverleonard7730
      @oliverleonard7730 Před 11 dny +2

      Unless Conference voted to scrap the policy it will remain policy, the Lib Dems aren't like Labour or the Tories, the Lib Dems use one person, one vote so if the party votes to keep STV as their policy it will remain whether they win a majority or remain 3rd.

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 10 dny

      I wouldn't want to be a leader at conference arguing to drop PR of any form. Even Tim Farron couldn't swing that sort of vote.

  • @MazzaEliLi7406
    @MazzaEliLi7406 Před 9 dny

    Thank you.

  • @SuperJibulus
    @SuperJibulus Před 11 dny +5

    People are clearly sick of a two-party system and I don’t blame them. I don’t feel like either party (labour or conservatives) represents me, I don’t know who to vote for that I’d feel comfortable with.
    All of them are so comfortable in their political oligopoly that they all just blend into one grey mess.

    • @tulliusexmisc2191
      @tulliusexmisc2191 Před 10 dny

      You should have looked at the poll resuls in the video. In both, over 2/3 of people favoured one of the two main parties.

  • @ix7666
    @ix7666 Před 10 dny +2

    I’m not voting Tories or Labour, it’s time another party had a chance so I’ve voting green. It’s silly we are meant to feel like it’s just two parties to pick from.

  • @LOLE_Editz
    @LOLE_Editz Před 11 dny +2

    If this happens, I'd expect parliament to be taking a turn left.

  • @totalutternutter
    @totalutternutter Před 11 dny +2

    With so many MP's defecting left and right the distinctions between each party is getting more and more blurred, each party is culturally enriching the others.

  • @timolino567
    @timolino567 Před 11 dny +6

    Loving the thumbnail

  • @plgspooky
    @plgspooky Před 11 dny +4

    If tactical voting took place enmasse then that could vastly decrease the amount of tory mps

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 Před 11 dny

      That requires swaps among supporters.

  • @vicarious7858
    @vicarious7858 Před 11 dny +11

    Lib Dems as opposition would be brilliant. Considering they are more left leaning than the main two, it would be a good balance. While also helping to bring in PR and drug reform.

    • @Worldmisery
      @Worldmisery Před 11 dny

      The Liberal Democratic reform is going to achieve nothing. You are never getting mixed member proportional representation (like the system in Germany) because the House of Lords does not care about your beliefs.

    • @jean-lucpicard5510
      @jean-lucpicard5510 Před 11 dny +1

      The same people who helped Osbornes austerity measures? Do me a favour.

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 11 dny

      @jean-lucpicard5510 the cuts that were made in 2010 were much closer to the Lib Dem manifesto than the Tories or Labour (who were very similar to each other) were promising.
      Having the Lib Dems in a coalition also saw things like the income tax threshold raised from Labour's £6,000 to £12,500 a year among many other progressive policies Labour were against or had spent years refusing to consider in office!!

  • @gdwlaw5549
    @gdwlaw5549 Před 11 dny +112

    I will never forgive the right wing fanatics. Simply ruined my life in the EU. I can’t apply for jobs that involve EU travel, my children abandoned their Erasmus studies and more importantly I can’t vote anywhere ! So please vote out the Conservatives

    • @Bulbs_Productions
      @Bulbs_Productions Před 11 dny

      I’m British but I also think leaving the EU was retarded

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Před 11 dny +11

      You can apply for jobs. Just foreign countries can choose to say no.
      You can apply for a job in USA, Australia, Panama, Pakistan, Peru....

    • @ineedmoreflavour1955
      @ineedmoreflavour1955 Před 11 dny +1

      This is so hyperbolic - don’t be so dramatic, Jesus. This is honestly a big reason why Remain lost. Europhiles are nuts.

    • @paulbo9033
      @paulbo9033 Před 11 dny

      ​@@danielwebb8402You must be a Brexiter. I can tell because from this comment it's clear that you're a bell end.

    • @captainbuggernut9565
      @captainbuggernut9565 Před 11 dny +4

      If you don't like democracy, move somewhere else.

  • @Snazzysneferu
    @Snazzysneferu Před 11 dny +1

    That would just be the icing on the cake

  • @iris.holmes
    @iris.holmes Před 11 dny +3

    So this video was not about the Lib Dems, but again on the Tories...

  • @oliverleonard7730
    @oliverleonard7730 Před 11 dny +3

    I think considering a Labour win is now a forgone conclusion it is easily possible, a lot of people don't want a 200 seat majority for Labour so if they think the Liberal Democrats could advance to 2nd place in terms of seat numbers we could see a huge shift in votes from both main parties to the Liberal Democrats. I still personally don't trust Labour or Starmer and knowing that the Conservatives are out anyway I might just go for the Liberal Democrats as at this point we have nothing to lose by voting for them since Labour have won anyway.

  • @dr.victorvs
    @dr.victorvs Před 11 dny +2

    HOPEFULLY.

  • @danielbanbury378
    @danielbanbury378 Před 11 dny +3

    I dont expect for the Tories to be pushed to 3rd Party status this Election. But the potential is there in the following election for them to drop

  • @alanyearsley9731
    @alanyearsley9731 Před 10 dny

    There's a very important fourth factor that you didn't mention: an unusually large number of voters voting tactically.

  • @TheSuperPsychoKiller
    @TheSuperPsychoKiller Před 11 dny +15

    Green Party and Lib Dems should get together and make a baby called Green Liberal Democrats (GLD) with a green liberty bird facing to the left for left wing.

    • @TheRambunctious
      @TheRambunctious Před 11 dny

      The problem is the Lib Dem’s are even more right wing than starmers labour

    • @lordhenrywotton95
      @lordhenrywotton95 Před 11 dny +7

      I think it’s more likely they might make some sort of pact. Like not to stand against one another in seats where they are 1st or 2nd placed party.

    • @zack3851
      @zack3851 Před 11 dny +2

      😂 won't it just be the Albania flag with different colour palettes

  • @huwgrossmith9555
    @huwgrossmith9555 Před 11 dny +2

    Given the council results and the fact that a lot of the seats list did not go to Labour it's a probability. That said Labour may have to enter a coalition to govern.

  • @py8554
    @py8554 Před 11 dny +1

    I surely hope so, but all these decades of frustration and disappointment teach me not to be optimistic but be cautious about this kind of paradigm shift talk.

  • @domliv77
    @domliv77 Před 8 dny

    That would be a disaster for Britain for any party to have virtually complete control like that. I sincerely hope it doesn't materialise !

  • @FoxyUkeFox
    @FoxyUkeFox Před 7 dny

    "Things can still get worse for the Tories" is a truly poetic phrase with no equal.

  • @michaelgreen1515
    @michaelgreen1515 Před 10 dny

    People often forget that in the Westminster System HM's Official opposition is a significant as who are MH Government in shaping the which laws pass and how, and which ammendments get put onto bills and which don't.

  • @riccardo-964
    @riccardo-964 Před 11 dny +1

    It would be GRAND!

  • @patrickwitek
    @patrickwitek Před 11 dny +2

    I have no idea how Farage manages to finesse the British public every time, then leave when he's f'ed everything up without taking any responsibility and yet people still view him as someone worth listening to.

    • @Worldmisery
      @Worldmisery Před 11 dny

      Because Nigel Farage is just like the British public, nationalistic, arrogant and stupid. I'm actually expecting him to knock out the Tories and make Reform the 2 largest party... if our election ever happens and our dictators stop delaying our elections because they're neo-feudalist oligarchs.

  • @liampriestman4090
    @liampriestman4090 Před 10 dny

    Hilarious that the tories try to blame rishi sunak for the poor performance like they didn't just have 4 failed prime ministers in a row

  • @lexico69
    @lexico69 Před 11 dny +4

    Are these seats all in England. I suspect that the SnP may still take a large number of seats in Scotland where the voting trends are different

    • @notinuse3872
      @notinuse3872 Před 11 dny +9

      The SNP is collapsing in polling in Scotland

    • @jamescole1314
      @jamescole1314 Před 11 dny +3

      Currently the SNP will be 2nd in Scotland with between 15 and 25 seats according to most Scottish polling.
      It depends whether John Swinney can turn around the SNPs declining support. But as he's appointed the Tartan Tory Kate Forbes as his deputy it might prove more challenging than SNP supporters would hope

    • @lexico69
      @lexico69 Před 11 dny +1

      @@jamescole1314 that won’t happen at the election. The pro Indy is still sitting between 45-52%. When it comes to election time that may be the deciding factor for Westminster seats. Giving the fact that the pro Union vote will be split between Labour, Lib Dem and con that is why so many seats go to the SNP.

    • @lexico69
      @lexico69 Před 11 dny +2

      @@notinuse3872 SNP may be out of favour but the Pro Indy support isn’t. And for the last decade that is what Scotland has voted on.

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 Před 11 dny

      The Highlands might return to their classic lib dem vote

  • @maia_key
    @maia_key Před 10 dny

    As an aussie with an interest in psephology, it confuses me so much that the UK still uses first-past-the-post and not preferential voting

  • @dianeirvine7624
    @dianeirvine7624 Před 10 dny +1

    After 4 years of labour - I guarantee you’ll vote for anyone .

  • @user-dt9cd8yr1l
    @user-dt9cd8yr1l Před 11 dny

    Hey your end clip seems to be glitching

  • @Unhinged_Salmon
    @Unhinged_Salmon Před 11 dny +4

    I wish

  • @thethreerailwayengines825

    Since coalition governments can be a thing, can there be a coalition opposition? For example, if some combination of Lib Dems + SNP + Green was greater than the number of Tory seats, could the Lib Dems/SNP/Green form a coalition opposition?

  • @blackroseangel123
    @blackroseangel123 Před 7 dny

    Having the Tories completely out of politics and not even in opposition would be such an amazing turn for Britain. We could advance so quickly without them holding us back

  • @Ivy64_
    @Ivy64_ Před 10 dny

    on polling day my local Lib dem MP went around my entire village to remind people to vote. This came after a hand written letter address to my house a couple weeks prior.
    pretty cool.
    My local tory candidate had a red flyer sent out with the tory logo buried at the bottom on the back of it.
    take a guess who's more popular here

  • @Chris-rp9df
    @Chris-rp9df Před 11 dny +1

    No mention of tactical voting

  • @phill2065
    @phill2065 Před 11 dny +1

    I’m not interested in politics, I vote Liberal Democrat

  • @mappingshaman5280
    @mappingshaman5280 Před 11 dny +1

    It's time for south africa. Labour will be the ANC, Starmer will be zuma, Galloway's party will be the EFF.

  • @GonzoTehGreat
    @GonzoTehGreat Před 3 hodinami

    I can see the Lib Dems gaining seats via tactical voting, but not enough to become a significant party, much less replace the Conservatives.

  • @joshuachapman247
    @joshuachapman247 Před 10 dny

    Thanks for talking about the lib dems, I have not heard anyone cover them.

  • @KestrelTown
    @KestrelTown Před 8 dny

    A December/January election would be a disaster. It would look weak and cowardly, Sunak would be hated for interfering with everyone’s Christmas, it would be coincide with the seasonal NHS crisis, and the Conservatives would be asking a predominantly older volunteer force of activists to go campaign for them in the deep, dark cold of winter.

  • @lugano1999
    @lugano1999 Před 10 dny

    You failed to take into account what is going to be a major factor in the GE: tactical voting, That is something that can absoluely decimate them.

  • @turcsanyiferenc2091
    @turcsanyiferenc2091 Před 10 dny

    The question is not LibDems overtaking Sunak but the Tories. The Tories just change the fall guy (PM) but the decision makers remain the same. People start to see this through. It is not enough to swap the PM and then reshuffle the cabinet but everyone keeps milking the ordinary people's money (taxes) and tell lies, break laws.

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 Před 10 dny

    It doesn't matter who the conservative leader is; the people are fed up with them!!!

  • @theotherandrew5540
    @theotherandrew5540 Před 11 dny +7

    Don’t underestimate the LibDems. With Starmer offering nothing more than Tory-lite and his blunder over the Gaza massacre, the LibDems are the best alternative to the Tories, the truly Nasti party.

    • @quintuscrinis8032
      @quintuscrinis8032 Před 11 dny

      Look how many seats they came a close 2nd in last time round.

  • @Lando-kx6so
    @Lando-kx6so Před 11 dny

    0:54 * insert Usher "watch this" meme here *

  • @sol2746
    @sol2746 Před 9 dny

    They sided with the Tories in the coalition,which was disgusting.

  • @JallenMeodia
    @JallenMeodia Před 8 dny

    He has said we will have a GE "at some point in the latter half of the year". You know, some point, not like it's important.

  • @brookechang4942
    @brookechang4942 Před 10 dny

    If the American right is any indication, responding to being perceived as a "divided party" by booting their leader will be exactly what happens.

  • @gavinsmith9564
    @gavinsmith9564 Před 11 dny +7

    Lib Dems need to shout about their Pro EU policy, there is nearly a super majority for Rejoining in the country, offer a proper choice from the pro Brexit Conservatives and Labour parties.

    • @jamiedodger1235
      @jamiedodger1235 Před 10 dny +1

      Rejoining right now woukd be counterproductive, as we would have very little negotiating power and would likely make our situation even worse. We need to stay out of the EU for at least 10 years before considering rejoining

    • @sean.butterworth
      @sean.butterworth Před 10 dny

      Before Brexit, Britain had favoured nation status in the EU, including not being part of the Eurozone. Rejoining won’t bring with it those same concessions. More likely, Britain’s status will be akin to that of Spain or Portugal. I reckon rejoining is inevitable, but Europe will not make it easy next time round

  • @mericet39
    @mericet39 Před 10 dny +1

    It's a shame Maggie isn't still around to see this

    • @catmonarchist8920
      @catmonarchist8920 Před 4 dny

      She said Blair was her greatest achievement and Starmer is to his right so she'd be thrilled

  • @Andrew-pd6ey
    @Andrew-pd6ey Před 11 dny +1

    A big part of replacing Sunak would be who to replace with. I don't think Tory party members would be comfortable with not voting for the new leader, another leader with no mandate from the party members would crush its support, at the same time there are no unifying figures so maybe it would stop them falling in polls, possibly a small uptick. The best the Tories could hope for is not becoming completely irrelevent when the are replaced in Government. At the same time, I'm sure people will have a combination of amnesia and buyer's remorse in 3-15 years time again and the Tories will seem appealing to voters again which is probably what the party is counting on at this point.
    Don't want Labour to win, but I think this country isn't going to change at all until the old ways die, bring on the Lib Dem opposition.

  • @2dradon2
    @2dradon2 Před 10 dny

    I became a lib dem member this year. Even if they don't win, I can be happy voting for who I want rather than stopping who I don't want.

  • @20quid
    @20quid Před 10 dny

    It's almost impossible just because of how FPTP works, but it would be amazing if it did happen.

  • @jackayers4955
    @jackayers4955 Před 11 dny

    (Sees thumbnail.) I understood that reference.

  • @MichaelTavares
    @MichaelTavares Před 11 dny +1

    Maybe we’ll see the Tories get behind electoral reform, proportional representation!

  • @paullarne
    @paullarne Před 11 dny +1

    Starmer is not liked at all and we have no idea what his policies will be. There's a real chance he will do more of a Kinnock 92 than a Blair 97. Especially if the election is conducted in January with Trump as President-elect :)

  • @tt-ew7rx
    @tt-ew7rx Před 11 dny

    "Whenever he attempts to appear down to earth he seems to struggle a little" - understatement of the year? The real threat would be if tactical voting becomes a widespread practice and that will certainly raise the LD numbers.

  • @syleshwhycantileavethisbla802

    This would be the absolute best case scenario for this country. 5 whole years without the Tories even as the opposition party. Things might actually improve!

  • @jsdcool3401
    @jsdcool3401 Před 10 dny

    It always confuses me that "reform" is a far right part. Like that seems like the opposite of what the right wants to do

  • @timtranslates
    @timtranslates Před 2 dny

    I think we all know that Reform won't actually stand in every constituency. Expect withdrawals of candidates in seats where the Tories stand a chance of winning.