Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
- Messages
- 22,155
I think it will all depend on how Labour governs. They seem centrist and only a bit left which could prove OK if they stick closer to the center. But after 4 years time, when people start to get grumpy as people are want to do when they discover the government can't just wave a magic wand and make all their problems go away. Labour may start to swing farther left at that point. Borrow and spend deficit financing is the strategy left wing parties usually default to. That tends to lead to recession and a poor economy which makes voters move back the other way.
Conservatives and Reform will have to work things out over the next 4 years as they can't afford to split the vote. But they might need one more election loss to learn that lesson. A traditional long time party like the UK Conservatives will be stubborn and refuse to co-operate until they really see the writing on the wall vis-a-vis their future chances with a right wing vote split. And who knows, Labour might do a decent job and earn a second term regardless.
Why does it matter? What "implications"?I was watching a little bit of UK election nigh and one kinda obvious argument popped out:
Labor won in UK but the fact of the matter is that all of our key allies and trade partners are trending right or even heavily to the right. What means that the party may find itself isolated in years down the road. In other words that evidently has numerous implications on what will be happening at home. Since the right is evidently strengthening both in Europe and North America.
Why does it matter? What "implications"?
The UK has always had awkward relationship with the rest of Europe. From a selfish point of view, Trump re-election would be a much easier relationship as he is a lot more pro-Britain than Biden.