Is May calling on Corbyn to go the only time she's been right about anything, ever?
Winckle wrote:Mystical Ninja Starring Danmon wrote:Winckle wrote:I wish you weren't so needlessly agressive in your posting.
Winckle wrote:No they can't be right, every smug Lib won't shut the strawberry float up about being the party of remain.
A vote for Labour is a vote for Brexit. The party is led by someone who has made it clear they want to leave the EU and they've been deliberately evasive on their stance on a second referendum should they gain power. There's every chance a Labour government under Corbyn would take us out of the EU, a move that would only benefit the very richest in society, immediately contradicting their "for the many not the few" rhetoric. If you're OK with that, then fine, but you can't get arsey when folk rightfully point out that a vote for Labour as things currently stand is a vote that enables the enactment of Tory policy.
You could barely fit a cigarette paper between Labour's brexit policy and the Lib Dem policy. They both seek a second referendum on the issue. Labour want to negotiate their own deal if in government and put it to a referendum. Personally, I am unconvinced a second referendum would result in a remain victory.
I voted remain, I don't want Brexit. Labour has done everything it can to prevent a no deal Brexit whilst still trying to respect the wishes of those who voted for Brexit.
That comment about comparing Labour and the LD policies on Brexit is simply not grounded in reality, that's partisan delusion talking. Supporting a political party is not the same as supporting a football team. You cannot seriously believe, having applied logic, that statement to be true.
If you don't want Brexit it does not make sense to vote for Labour as things stand now. That is as simple as it can be put.
Yes, a vote for Labour might mean a Labour government as opposed to a Conservative government, and you might think that is a good thing. Under usual circumstances I would 100% agree. But what is the point in a Labour government if it enacts a Tory policy? And a Tory policy so staggeringly harmful that it cripples the economy to an extent that it becomes practically impossible to enact any of Labour's other party positions?