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Comment by iso1631

2 days ago

It's a problem with pretty much anyone. Things are bad from a fundamental structural failings for decades, elect new person, don't see immediate turn-around, they're massively unpopular.

The only way out of this is if you successfully blame $marginalised_group for the peoples problems. Or spend decades undoing the damage, but nobody ever gets decades in power.

It's because he was elected with a historically low % of the vote. Few wanted him at the election, few want him now.

  • Most don't want any of the options presented to them. Almost all the parties don't really serve the electorate, so a large number of people are abstaining.

    I appreciate this in an anecdotal but I've spoken to quite a few people I know in my family, that saw it as their civil duty to vote and they told all told me some variation of "there is nobody worth voting for", "I don't think it matters who I vote for".

    • There are good options I think for most people. I did not like labors party policy, so I voted for the Lib Dems in a large labour area, did it achieve anything for them? No, did I do my civil duty?

      I am sure many green voters felt the same way for many years and now they stand a decent chance of getting many seats!

      1 reply →

Some of it is deliberately attempting to appeal to Reform voters, in ways which have infuriated Labour supporters while not winning any Reform support.