http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/andrew-gilligan-it-was-not-the-standard-wot-won-it-for-boris-821013.html
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 12:50 (eighteen years ago)
this guy seems douchey sorry friends
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 12:55 (eighteen years ago)
Good news. Perhaps BJ will give him a job? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7385370.stm
― Ned Trifle II, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 13:02 (eighteen years ago)
Got to love the way middle class liberals automatically assume everyone who votes BNP is working class. Arseholes.
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 13:08 (eighteen years ago)
The part of London where the B*P got the biggest share of the vote is possibly the poorest though, TomD.
Hari still a cunt, for now and always, of course.
― Venga, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 13:58 (eighteen years ago)
Funny but Barnbrook and Griffin don't seem too working class to me. I'm guessing that if they had the money to campaign in middle class areas as vigorously and intensively as they do in poorer areas they would get plenty of votes there too.
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:04 (eighteen years ago)
The BNP vote is pretty much uniformly working class though Tom D, and it always has been. There's a reason the BNP break through in Bradford and not Harrogate.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:06 (eighteen years ago)
You mean the fact that everyone in Harrogate is white and the BNP don't bother campaigning there?
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:08 (eighteen years ago)
If you're middle class and racist, you vote UKIP not BNP.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:08 (eighteen years ago)
Plus qf 70s trade unionists wearing "Enoch Was Right" badges.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:09 (eighteen years ago)
You vote Tory surely? (xp)
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:09 (eighteen years ago)
OK then, devil's advocate: what are the main differences between the thought processes of someone who votes UKIP and BNP? Try to answer without "there are no thought processes at play" zinging.
Bonus points for incorporating the English Democrats into your answer.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:12 (eighteen years ago)
Funny but Barnbrook and Griffin don't seem too working class to me.
Barnbrook is. Griffin isn't.
Obviously, there are many, many petit bourgeois small business types who harbour fascist ideas (not a coincidence that Thatcher was the grocer's daughter) and many of these work at the heart of the BNP's electoral organisation but it can't be denied that there are larger groups of "ethnic" population in poorer areas, and so the BNP are going to target those areas. Not much point campaigning about an "immigrant threat" in Esher where there is nary a black or Asian face to be seen.
― Venga, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:15 (eighteen years ago)
UKIP bit of a one-trick pony isn't it?
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:16 (eighteen years ago)
xpost Dom
UKIP put more emphasis on an anti-Europe position rather than an anti-immigration/ straight out racist stance.
― Venga, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:16 (eighteen years ago)
UKIP also struck me, tbh, as more of a checks-and-balance party on the Conservatives, ie "Go back to your 90s position on Europe and lose part of your vote to us".
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:17 (eighteen years ago)
I need to pay more attention to UK politics
― Curt1s Stephens, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:18 (eighteen years ago)
I was wondering why Darrell Hammond was all over the news lately
― Curt1s Stephens, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:19 (eighteen years ago)
One reason why it may be hard for 'us' to judge why people vote for these parties, and who votes for them, is that 'we' don't know anyone that does. I don't, anyway. So it is all hearsay and via media reports or, at best, electoral stat breakdowns.
Come to think of it, don't think I know any Tory voters either. Well, one or two at most.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:20 (eighteen years ago)
My O-level art teacher back in the 80s was a BNP candidate :(
― Stevie T, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:23 (eighteen years ago)
Barnbrook is a former arts teacher as well... time to cut this subject off the curriculum, says I.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:24 (eighteen years ago)
One reason why it may be hard for 'us' to judge why people vote for these parties, and who votes for them, is that 'we' don't know anyone that does.
Half the people at my work to thread.
Art teachers are always cunts.
― Raw Patrick, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:26 (eighteen years ago)
Worst belting I ever got was from an art teacher, sadistic bastard ... ha ha, corporal punishment, never did me no harm *twitch* *twitch*
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:28 (eighteen years ago)
My school art teacher was a beautiful Welsh girl who drove a clapped-out mini. She would never have voted BNP. Or Tory. Or done anything I could possibly disagree with.
We've got this weird kind of situation at the moment, for the next couple of years at least, where Cameron is technically Boris's superior, but Boris has much more power than Cameron.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:28 (eighteen years ago)
Like me and you on ILX, Matt.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:29 (eighteen years ago)
which (on ilx) is which?
Interesting about art teachers. Mine were on the left.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:38 (eighteen years ago)
It's true I suppose what DC says - though I'm not certain that BJ does have more power. A big budget, true. But Cameron (hey, same initials as DC) is still in charge of the whole party, all the MPs; and is in effect the head of Conservative Britain - all the voters, all the councils, activists, sympathizers etc.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:39 (eighteen years ago)
There's a lot of right wing people posting comments on the internet.
― Free Peace Sweet!, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:41 (eighteen years ago)
Cameron will be pulling Boris's strings. He ain't gonna let the little fucker do anything that isn't Tory HQ approved.
― Pete W, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:43 (eighteen years ago)
It's not Cameron, it's Lynette Crosbie, who I am now convinced is an actual full-scale Machiavelli/Alastair Campbell style political genius by managing to get Boris through the entire campaign without him declaring war on Guam or something.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:43 (eighteen years ago)
*Lynton Crosby
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:44 (eighteen years ago)
I was thinking of the wife from One Foot In The Grave
FAKE BORIS.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:45 (eighteen years ago)
What I'm going to miss most about Ken is that he was one of the few impressions that Rory Bremner can still do.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:46 (eighteen years ago)
That's not what I'm going to miss most.
Not even sure I've seen that impression.
It's true, though, that RB's routines often seem to become people that the audience nervously doesn't really recognize. And his US accents are poor, except perhaps for Bill Clinton.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:48 (eighteen years ago)
But yeah, obviously Tory central office is going to be much more hands-on with Boris than Labour were with Ken. I get the opinion Ken was pretty much left to get on with it because he was already seen as disconnected from the government, Cameron's got a brand identity to protect.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:49 (eighteen years ago)
Seen as disconnected by the government or by voters?
― Zoe Espera, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:54 (eighteen years ago)
(Impossible to answer, praps. I'm just wondering aloud.)
No-one's managed Cameron yet, I know he's bland but he can't be that difficult to impersonate
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 14:59 (eighteen years ago)
F'real, every time I see Bremner doing Cameron I think he's doing Melvyn Bragg.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:02 (eighteen years ago)
Can't believe he's still doing John Cole, 95 years after he retired.
Oh hang on, he's trying to do Boris.
― Dingbod Kesterson, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:27 (eighteen years ago)
John Cale? What's his Lou like?
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:28 (eighteen years ago)
I never knew until about a year ago that Lucas and Walliams' hilarious "Lou and Andy" skits are based on Lou Reed and Andy Warhol.
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:37 (eighteen years ago)
First manifesto promise broken: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard-mayor/article-23482560-details/Tube+unions+say+no+to+a+no-strike+deal/article.do
This isn't going well, and it's only day three.
― James Mitchell, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:40 (eighteen years ago)
also Dom, think at least one of them is gay.
― blueski, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:45 (eighteen years ago)
Still no word on whether pigs have flown yet tho (xp)
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:45 (eighteen years ago)
The very idea of Boris trying to deal with the RMT is hilarious. But then again my commute doesn't involve me having to get the Tube - brace yourselves for a lot of strike action :/
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:48 (eighteen years ago)
he wants to make a no strike deal or something according to his pledges
― ken c, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:58 (eighteen years ago)
I was wondering about this before the election, as the standard was running scare-posters about possible strikes - could the unions make Boris's life a misery, if they so wanted?
― stevie, Tuesday, 6 May 2008 15:59 (eighteen years ago)
How can you possibly justify a no-strike deal? It's nonsense.
― Tom D., Tuesday, 6 May 2008 16:09 (eighteen years ago)