Brexit and the driver shortage

Juddian:

Winseer:

Juddian:

Well, at the next election - I’m not afraid of Corbyn any more. As it stands, in any “early election” - I’ll be voting UKIP if Brexit isn’t completed by that point.
If it IS completed, I’ll vote for the party that did that.

That means having voted Libdem more often than for any other party - I can safely say that there is a 0% chance I’ll be voting Libdem then! :stuck_out_tongue:

Exactly this, we aint afraid of Corby because May and her EU supporting accolytes aren’t really much different.

Personally i haven’t voted for any of the main three parties for decades, long ago i realised none of them represented me nor any of the working class.

I’d intended to not vote in national elections any more because its become increasingly pointless, an act where we no longer vote FOR something, but increasingly its about voting for the least worse of the useless on offer, or increasingly for many voters, the scraps from the table they might receive from whichever crew of bought and paid traitors end up at the winner’s banquet.
Not sure about voting next time, like you if the tories get rid of May and put a conservative in number 10 who fulfills the pledge they made, i might even be tempted to give them my vote, but that seems increasingly unlikely, as does UKIP allowing in ex BNP/EDL members, so chances are i’ll sit the next GE out like i did the last.

No one worth a vote? well i can’t be arsed wasting even two minutes drawing a hampton and two plums on the ballot, they weren’t worth the effort.

When I was still at school, I imagined being “none of the above” like yourself as an adult in the years to come.

When my first election to take part in came along - I was informed that “if you don’t vote, you can’t moan if nothing changes”.
so ever since then - I ALWAYS vote and ALWAYS moan when nothing changes.
Indeed, “Brexit” was the first time in my life I thought I’d “won” - in that I’d voted for a change… that has yet to be implemented over two years hence. :imp:

I always vote in political elections, but have yet to help get a new candidate in the seat in question. :frowning:
My quiet acceptance of “losing yet again” or “my vote didn’t make a difference this time” turns into anger when I see how Remain voters have behaved after losing in 2016, and the more extreme Labour voters have behaved since losing last year.

Perhaps the biggest reason that the Right in politics has been on the back foot in our lifetimes - is that “We let them do to us, what we would never dream of doing to them.”

Perhaps that now needs to change. :neutral_face: