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United Kingdom
Related: About this forumJust 0.13 per cent of the population voted for Boris Johnson
According to analysis from Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University, party members who supported Boris Johnson are even more ideologically unrepresentative of British voters than their other Conservative members. Some 85 per cent of Johnson's supporters are keen on a no-deal Brexit (this fell to 37 per cent among Hunt supporters). Though one in five Tory grassroots members would like to see less emphasis on climate change in public debate, this figure rises to one in four among Johnson supporters (the figure was around one in ten for Hunt supporters).
Its the first time since the days of rotten or pocket boroughs, before the 1832 Reform Act, when politicians could use boroughs with very small electorates to gain undue influence in the houses of parliament, that only a few thousand people have wielded such extraordinary power.
Its the first time since the days of rotten or pocket boroughs, before the 1832 Reform Act, when politicians could use boroughs with very small electorates to gain undue influence in the houses of parliament, that only a few thousand people have wielded such extraordinary power.
https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2019/07/just-013-cent-population-voted-boris-johnson
Yay Democracy *rolls eye*
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Just 0.13 per cent of the population voted for Boris Johnson (Original Post)
Soph0571
Jul 2019
OP
Ohiogal
(34,631 posts)1. Minority rule......
"Love it or Leave It" they tell us.....
How in the hell does this happen?
The King of Prussia
(744 posts)2. What percentage of the population
voted for Jim Callaghan to become PM, or Gordon Brown?
Denzil_DC
(7,941 posts)4. Any number of wrongs don't make a right:
But we'll now have had two in a row (granted May squeaked back into the premiership when she called her ill-fated snap election in between times) at a particular crunch point in the UK's history, rivalled only by Lloyd George's and Churchill's terms.
From what I could decipher from his hyperactive speech to the 1922 Committee today, Johnson's claiming a mandate for a no deal Brexit.
Let him put that to the test if he dare.
Soph0571
(9,685 posts)6. He will dare and I predict a riot, or two...
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)3. What bothers me more...
Is the total lack of judgement on the part of that 0.13% of the population. Putting ideological purity far ahead of any other concerns and wilfully ignoring the reality of how the project to leave the EU has been progressing in the real world.
Denzil_DC
(7,941 posts)5. As with Trump, it seems there's always a quote:
Soph0571
(9,685 posts)7. I did a graphic a while back on the nasty shit he has said
Could not find it. But that is a good one for right now. I think an election in Autumn will be inevitable. Early or late autumn depends on when he tries to push through a no deal
muriel_volestrangler
(102,478 posts)8. Perhaps the most unpopular PM at the start of his term ever
YouGov say he has a 31% favourable, 58% unfavourable rating, compared to May's 48% favourable, 36% unfavourable at her start.
Brown, also coming in without a general election, had a plus 7 percent approval rating in July 2007.
I expect Cameron and Blair, coming in after winning general elections, were OK; they can't possibly have been down at -27%. Not sure if such polls were taken when Major started, or if they'd be available on the net.
Brown, also coming in without a general election, had a plus 7 percent approval rating in July 2007.
I expect Cameron and Blair, coming in after winning general elections, were OK; they can't possibly have been down at -27%. Not sure if such polls were taken when Major started, or if they'd be available on the net.