Poll
Question: How do you intend to vote?  (Voting closed: Thursday, May 23, 2019, 16:00:47)
Conservatives - 4 (4.4%)
Labour - 6 (6.7%)
LibDem - 30 (33.3%)
Brexit Party - 23 (25.6%)
Change UK - 2 (2.2%)
UKIP - 1 (1.1%)
SNP - 0 (0%)
Green - 15 (16.7%)
Plaid Cymru - 1 (1.1%)
Not Voting - 8 (8.9%)
Total Voters: 80

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Author Topic: European Elections 23rd May  (Read 32730 times)
jayohaitchenn
Wielder of the BANHAMMER

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« Reply #105 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 20:39:36 »


Cheers.
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Legends-Lounge

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« Reply #106 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:02:17 »

Hammer time.
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chalkies_shorts

« Reply #107 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:23:10 »

Swindon 36% brexit
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Private Fraser

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« Reply #108 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:36:59 »

The Swindon figures according to BBC Wilts:

https://twitter.com/bbcwiltshire/status/1132760817898852353?s=21

Swindon #EUelections results:
Brexit Party 19,126
Lib Dem 9,511
Lab 7,838
Green 6,861
Con 5,550
UKIP 2,115
« Last Edit: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:52:10 by Private Fraser » Logged
Arriba

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« Reply #109 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:55:08 »

Brexiters will claim victory when it's anything but. The remain vote is split via various parties and the town is divided on brexit. This election does fuck all good for anyone
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chalkies_shorts

« Reply #110 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 21:58:57 »

Brexiters will claim victory when it's anything but. The remain vote is split via various parties and the town is divided on brexit. This election does fuck all good for anyone
Early days yet. Brexiteers may not claim victory but it may prove that people are not overwhelmingly remain as claimed.
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Arriba

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« Reply #111 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 22:01:10 »

Early days yet. Brexiteers may not claim victory but it may prove that people are not overwhelmingly remain as claimed.

I'm referring to Swindon but think it will be similar nationally. I think it's split now much like when we had the initial referendum.
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Bogus Dave
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« Reply #112 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 22:01:33 »

But it overwhelmingly proves there is no mandate for a hard brexit
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Things get better but they never get good
pauld
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« Reply #113 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 22:28:37 »

I'm referring to Swindon but think it will be similar nationally. I think it's split now much like when we had the initial referendum.
Yep. Slight increase for Brexit, but mainly due to impatience rather than ideology I suspect. Good to see SRK's extreme hard right UKIP getting a complete pasting, polling even lower than the Tories. Their leader Batten has lost his own seat
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RobertT

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« Reply #114 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 23:06:45 »

Looks to me like it might pave the way for a shit or bust referendum - the Brexit Party didn't get enough, in my mind, to force Hard Brexit through,  Equally though, it gained more than UKIP lost, so people can't say that a sizable part of the country didn't really mean Hard Brexit.

Libs Dems and Greens did quite well, so maybe the final resolution is No deal or fuck it all and just stay.
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Legends-Lounge

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« Reply #115 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 23:44:25 »

 Cheesy Pint Cheesy Pint that is not Guinness. Varadkar can fuck off, punching above his weight with the Frogs & Krauts with their hands up his arse.
« Last Edit: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 23:47:05 by Legends-Lounge » Logged
RobertT

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« Reply #116 on: Sunday, May 26, 2019, 23:48:41 »

I was all for allowing a Hard Brexit and certainly not for another vote to happen, however, the Conservative drop off is significant given it didn't all go to Brexit.  Muddies the waters  but I think we can't faff about thinking some sort of in/out deal is possible.  It's all or nothing now.  If the Rories had held some vote  I'd have said just get on with it, but was surprised to see Lib Dems and Greens pick-up as much as they did.
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Combe Up

« Reply #117 on: Monday, May 27, 2019, 04:52:28 »

We have now had the people's vote. No more spin from you anti-democateers please. The people have spoken, not in an opinion poll, but in cold, hard votes. We leave the EU asap. OK?
« Last Edit: Monday, May 27, 2019, 04:56:27 by Combe Up » Logged
Nemo
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« Reply #118 on: Monday, May 27, 2019, 05:45:51 »

On the currently announced results (missing Scotland and NI):

Hard Brexit (BXP + UKIP) 36.8%
Remain (LD + GRN + CHUK) 37.0%
May's Deal (Con) 8.8%
Soft Brexit (Lab) 14.6%

Pretty tough to draw anything conclusive from that, other than that one way or the other a lot of people are going to be very cross.
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Audrey

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« Reply #119 on: Monday, May 27, 2019, 06:05:42 »

The problem remains, though. That result wouldn’t be repeated in a GE. It’s nonsense for anyone to think to hold a GE on whether to exit, soft exit or no exit - that should be a referendum.

Voting for the Lib Dem’s in a GE just because you want to register a stay vote is ridiculous.

How long can it go on before parliament comes to the only sane way out of this impasse.
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