The
UK Labour Party forgot, “Thou shalt not steal.” But Brits remembered
the 10 Commandments.
by
Christopher Woodford, Reformed Socialist
(Don't miss the fascinating discussion on how to vote responsibly in the comment section below. Click on comments)
|
Watching Election Results from the Local Pub
in Southampton, England:
Christopher Woodford
On Twitter, he can be found @Crimbo51 |
I love
elections. I always
book the day off work after a General Election because I'm up all night
watching the results unfold. Since 1992 the outcome has been predictable by
using calculations based on the earliest results and exit polls. This year May
8 was no different, but the early revelations were shocking.
It was 1
a.m., May 9, and a sudden flash of hope came to me: “YES!”
In that
moment I allowed myself to believe we might escape Labour Leader and would-be
Prime Minister "Red" Ed Miliband and his ”Borrow against Tomorrow” policies.
Our grandchildren might escape the Labour party sell-out of their future for
short-term popularity. We might be able to continue the delicate Conservative
repair of our economy, destroyed by Labour British Prime Ministers Tony Blair and
Gordon Brown from 1997-2010 in profligate leftist spending excesses. Goodbye
European Union. Sorry, Greece, you will have to pay your own debt.
|
Dear Chief Secretary, I'm afraid there is no money. |
When the
Labour party left office in 2010, the Treasury minister Liam Byrne, left a note
on his cleared desk for his Conservative successor:
I'm
afraid there is no money.
Kind
regards and good luck. Liam
Before May 8, my
country (England) had steeled itself for more acts of leftist lunacy. We
remembered when Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown stopped tax relief
on pension providers in his first budget in 1997, effectively robbing £118
billion ($183 billion) from pensioners. It meant that many older people would
have to rely on welfare. Their own savings were stolen!
Also
from1999 to 2002 the same Chancellor sold 400 tons of British gold reserves at
one fifth of its value.
Now at 1
a.m., I realized we might be spared disaster.
|
Infamous and "unsinkable" RMS Titanic departed from the
City of Southampton, England, where Christopher Woodford lives,
five days before it sank on April 15, 1912 in the North Atlantic Ocean
with the loss of over 1500 lives. |
Until
this magical moment, all the pundits predicted that another coalition
government either between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, or, God forbid, Labour and the Scottish Nationalist Party, was inevitable. The
shock on various faces in the TV studio was a joy to behold. British
Conservatives won a majority – 331 seats – five seats more than necessary to
form a majority administration, and to govern without a coalition or formal
agreement with other parties.
So why
did the left-leaning BBC and Guardian get it so wrong? Why did Obama campaign
consultant David Axelrod – after being paid $500,000 by Labour to provide a strategy
of economic populism -- get it so wrong?
Maybe it
was because the Tory Party Conservatives were getting it right! “Let’s not
throw away our progress!”
The
English and Welsh voters clearly witnessed the Conservatives fixing the economy
with prudent policies not designed solely to foster popularity. As the right-leaning Daily Mail put it, “Middle England rose
up to humiliate the pollsters and save the nation from Red Ed.”
The hard-left SNP (Scottish National Party) were the game changers in this election. The pro-same sex marriage party swept aside all opposition in Scotland, which has always been a Labour
stronghold. Labour will never get Scotland back again. Everyone expected the
SNP to do well, but they took 56 of 59 seats! In the long term, this may lead
to Scottish independence. Northern Ireland as always, elected its patchwork
quilt of MPs based on local interests.
The other
wild card in the election was UKIP (United Kingdom Independence Party), the
far-right anti-immigration party. They polled nearly 4,000,000 votes
nationwide, nearly 10% of the electorate, but, thanks to our “first past the
post” system they took only 1 seat. The UKIP believes in controlling our
borders and not adding to the national debt. Like many Brits, Americans and
Canadians, they feel successive governments have not represented the will of
the British people.
Of
course, now they have joined the Liberals in whining for Proportional
Representation. PR produces weak governments and removes the ability of the
electorate to stand the political spectrum on its head every few years; Europe
runs like this. Many have forgotten there was a nationwide vote held on
Thursday 5 May 2011 on this very PR issue, and it was rejected. Game, set and
match.
UK
Independence Party is a ”one trick pony” standing on the anti-EU ticket. Its
candidates were a motley bunch of extreme characters who, if they established a
power base, may have turned nasty, even Nazi.
|
Conservative Ranil Jayawardena |
RobertBlay, UKIP candidate for North East Hampshire, when it was mentioned to him
that his rival Conservative Ranil Jayawardena could one day be the first Asian
PM said, "If this lad turns up to be our Prime Minister I will personally
put a bullet in him. That’s how strong I feel about it. I won’t have this
f***** as our Prime Minister. I absolutely loathe him.” His comments were clearly
based on Jayawardena’s ethnic origins.
So, how
long would it be before peaceful, harmonious Britain is plunged into ethnic
cleansing. I have a half-Thai grandson, born in the UK and holder of a British
passport. Would they
|
Chris Woodford's beloved
half-Thai grandson |
say about my grandson, ''His eyes
are the wrong shape. He has to go''?
Quite a
few of those I spoke to who supported UKIP were people who give more thought to
football and reality TV than to politics.
The Liberal
Democrat party was wiped out simply for getting into bed with the Conservatives
after the 2010 election. Good. They are a pro-EU, tax and spend, removal of
freedoms party, favoring an increase in income taxes, protecting the Education
budget and wasting money guarding against climate change.
Another
factor in this election was that for the first time, the electorate and
opposition parties knew the date of the election years in advance thanks to the
Fixed-Term Parliaments Act 2011. Five years always was the maximum term a
government could stay in power, but in all previous elections, the Prime
Minister could and would choose a date and spring it upon the nation. The
certainty of the date of this election altered the predictability of the 2015
outcome. There was time to ponder!
The
Conservatives took 331 seats. It is a slim majority, but it means they don't
have to rely on the support of spoilers like the Liberal Democrats as they have
for the past five years. Now they can renegotiate our EU relationship and put
it to the people in a referendum. They can tighten the noose on benefit
scroungers. They can continue with the “austerity” package that has benefited
the economy. Unemployment is falling and UK economic growth is faster than our
Group of Seven partners, including the world’s richest industrialized countries:
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United States and Canada.
Britain
is again a net exporter of cars. Critics say the manufacturing companies are
foreign, but it is a sign of confidence in our economy and national stability
that these worldwide companies wish to be based here. A myriad industries are
thriving and traffic is bad both morning and evening everywhere. That means
that people are working.
The
Labour Party and its leader, “Red” Ed Miliband, would have sold our
souls to the EU. Germany and France would have made us the cash cow for the
Greek debt. France would have redoubled its policy of shunting the refugees of
the world to Calais and moving them across the English Channel.
A
minority Labour administration – ably assisted by the left-wing Scottish
National Party -- would have been no different.
Where do
we go from here?
The EU
referendum will be worth watching. Maybe we can stay in if we can work out some
kind of two-tier, arms-length membership. After all, when we joined in 1973, it
was a free trade bloc of nine nations, not an undemocratic Soviet style super
state.
The 2016
U.S. Presidential election is of huge interest to us. The outcome matters
greatly to the UK. Let's not forget David Axelrod, who was hired to advise the
UK Labour Party campaign. I expect his $500,000 fee came from the weekly
union subscriptions of millions of British workers.
Will the
American People confound the pollsters and return a Conservative President? The
outcome of our elections certainly rocked the assumptions of the Hilary Clinton
|
Hillary Clinton: We imagine she said,
"The Conservatives in England did
what!?!" |
Campaign for President. It's in American hands to look at the possible
outcomes and decide as the UK electorate did, but they must vote with their
heads.
The USA
has a straight fight between two major parties. The
only thing that could muddy the waters is if early primary states, which allow
Democrats and Independents to pick Republican candidates, choose a weak conservative. Then – as in
the last election – some conservatives could decide in fury to sit out the election, guaranteeing a liberal choice.
Will the U.S. watch through the night to view a future
unfolding which restores the values of individual enterprise and freedom, the
values which the founding fathers intended?
Or, will
they see the new day dawn under an administration that feels it necessary to
micro-manage their lives and keep one hand in their pockets.
It has
long been said in Britain that what America does follows here. Let's hope the
USA follows Britain this time.
|
Sign in United Kingdom before the May 8 election |
And a
final sinister point to show that even the victorious Tory Party are not all
sweetness and light. I was listening to a program on BBC Radio, which was doing
a post mortem on the election. A representative of the BBC's election coverage
was repeatedly asked if it was true that his team had been threatened by senior
Conservatives in the lead up to the election. The poor man used hundreds of
words to cleverly avoid saying “Yes” or “No.”
So, pick
the devil you know. Perhaps it's just a matter of picking the least damaging
devil. He can be identified as the one who doesn't want to tax and spend the
peoples' money. If the devil is dressed like Robin Hood, look out! Robin Hood
supported Richard the Lionheart and he taxed England dry to pay his ransom.
Sounds familiar.
See fascinating discussion on how to vote responsibly in comment section below!
The United
Kingdom prides itself on having multiple political parties, which form changing
coalitions over time.
Conservatives
(Tory): UK Center-Right political party believes in more limited
government, low taxes, European Union under our terms through an in and out referendum and growth through free private enterprise. Currently largest party
in the UK with 331 seats.
Labour:
UK Center-Left political party. It was born of the trade union movement and
socialist political parties of the 19th century. It is the second
largest party, and has more recently backed down from its stance in favor of common
ownership of the means of production. In favor of big government, high taxes, pro-EU, 232 seats.
Liberal
Democrat: UK Centrist Party, pro-EU, tax and spend, removal of freedoms party,
favoring an increase in income taxes, protecting the Education budget and
guarding against climate change. They were the Tories’ coalition partners
2010-2015. They used to be a large liberal party, but Labour eclipsed them in
the 1920s. They now have 8 seats, down from 57!
SNP: Left-wing Scottish Nationalists. Supports same-sex marriage, progressive
taxation, government housing, unilateral nuclear disarmament, lowering the
voting age to 16. Stands for Scotland's interests only, pro-EU, 56 seats.
UKIP: U K Independence Party is against UK involvement in the European Union. The
UKIP believes in controlling UK borders and not adding to the national debt.
Like many Brits, Americans and Canadians, they feel successive governments have
not represented the will of the British people. 1 seat.
Green: Stands for the environment. Tree huggers, 1 seat
Sinn
Fein: Irish Republicans. Stands for Northern Ireland to reunite with Republic of Ireland. They never take up their London seats as they will not take the oath of allegiance. 5 seats.
UUP/DUP: 13 seats between several small parties.
Stands for Northern Ireland to stay in UK (N. Ireland British Loyalists)
Plaid
Cymru: Welsh Nationalist Party stands for independent Wales with close links to Scottish Nationalists. 3 seats
Independent MPS (1 seat)
Speaker of the House of Commons, doesn't vote unless it's a dead heat, and then will usually vote with the government -- 1 seat.