I'm holding out on a Liberal Democrat/Labour coalition, but that's looking unlikely as, of course, Labour got less votes therefore have less legitimacy. The talks are now on about a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition, which seems just as unlikely as the policies of those two pearty are so removed from one another.
It's strange. This was seen as a bad run for Lib Dems, considering their sudden rise in fame, but now we see that, with the Conservatives not achieving an overall majority, they actually have a key role to play.
Hmmmm...if the Cons get in, we're screwed. They want to raise tuition fees for University (on Question Time they said "why do you expect the rest of the country to pay for your higher education", basically saying "f**k off poor people and work in McDonalds") and they're coming down harshly on the Public Sector. The Public Sector is the one that earns the least (teachers, NHS etc.), and they're being come down on harshly to solve a problem (the deficit) that the Private sector caused. They want to cut 15,000 teachers from schools, but reduce class sizes. Firstly, both my parents are teachers so that's detrimental, and secondly, how the hell they expect to reduce class sizes (i.e. more, smaller classes) and cut the number of teachers indicates that they haven't done GCSE maths.
;P
I'm holding out on a Liberal Democrat/Labour coalition, but that's looking unlikely as, of course, Labour got less votes therefore have less legitimacy. The talks are now on about a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition, which seems just as unlikely as the policies of those two pearty are so removed from one another.
It's strange. This was seen as a bad run for Lib Dems, considering their sudden rise in fame, but now we see that, with the Conservatives not achieving an overall majority, they actually have a key role to play.
Hmmmm...if the Cons get in, we're screwed. They want to raise tuition fees for University (on Question Time they said "why do you expect the rest of the country to pay for your higher education", basically saying "f**k off poor people and work in McDonalds") and they're coming down harshly on the Public Sector. The Public Sector is the one that earns the least (teachers, NHS etc.), and they're being come down on harshly to solve a problem (the deficit) that the Private sector caused. They want to cut 15,000 teachers from schools, but reduce class sizes. Firstly, both my parents are teachers so that's detrimental, and secondly, how the hell they expect to reduce class sizes (i.e. more, smaller classes) and cut the number of teachers indicates that they haven't done GCSE maths.
Oh, we're DOOOOOOOMED!!
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