Jark
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- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 53,716
By which I mean: we've seen quite a number of times now that when all of the mainstream parties and candidates allow immigration to be the issue on which an election is fought, the hard right and their anti-immigration rhetoric become legitimised.
it's just happened in the Netherlands. Le Pen is far more powerful in France than many expected. Meloni has entirely changed the face of the right in Italy... in all cases immigration was allowed by all parties to become a or the key issue of the election, and voters lurched right.
we are not Europe of course. technically. polling to date has shown it is NOT the most important issue to UK voters right now, but it is the inescapable one. so my questions are:
- with Farage's Reform UK polling on 8 (and as high as 10) points nationally, the man himself eating koala dick in the jungle, the Tories continuing to double down and Labour taking at times a shockingly tough stance on immigration itself (Starmer and Reeves seem as set on reversing it as Sunak), is next year's GE going to be fought primarily on immigration?
- are we taking for granted a Labour victory?
- could the Tories and Reform form a coalition on the right?
- could Reform vastly outperform current expectations and maybe finish third?
- will the UK elect a hard-right government in 2024?
it's just happened in the Netherlands. Le Pen is far more powerful in France than many expected. Meloni has entirely changed the face of the right in Italy... in all cases immigration was allowed by all parties to become a or the key issue of the election, and voters lurched right.
we are not Europe of course. technically. polling to date has shown it is NOT the most important issue to UK voters right now, but it is the inescapable one. so my questions are:
- with Farage's Reform UK polling on 8 (and as high as 10) points nationally, the man himself eating koala dick in the jungle, the Tories continuing to double down and Labour taking at times a shockingly tough stance on immigration itself (Starmer and Reeves seem as set on reversing it as Sunak), is next year's GE going to be fought primarily on immigration?
- are we taking for granted a Labour victory?
- could the Tories and Reform form a coalition on the right?
- could Reform vastly outperform current expectations and maybe finish third?
- will the UK elect a hard-right government in 2024?