Do you know who you are voting for?
Well, I know who I'm not voting for, haha.
Everything that David Cameron seems to say seems to have positive connotations for England, but negative connotations for Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. His plans to cut the number of MPs may be a good idea for over-populated England, but it will make a huge difference everywhere else, and will reduce Scotland to 50 MPs (which is significant despite the lower population, since there are probably a few constituencies in Scotland that are the size of Wales).
Besides, Margaret Thatcher was so evil that her uncyclopedia page redirects to Satan.
I've now officially taken two quizzes to find out which party would be the best for me. The one that Storm linked to. And another one that I feel gives better representation depending on which part of the country you happen to be in: here.
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The results I recieved from voteforpolicies:
Labour: 33%
Green Party: 33%
Conservatives: 22%
BNP: 11%
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The results I recieved from votematch:
Scottish Green Party: 72%
Scottish National Party (SNP): 54%
Scottish Labour: 54%
Liberal Democrats: 54%
UK Independence Party (UKIP): 52%
British National Party (BNP): 33%
Conservative Party: 30%
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Looks like I'm a total rascist, haha, but ironically all of the policies I agree with for the racist parties seem to have nothing to do with immigration. So that's okay.
It's sort of weird that I'm getting such high results from the green party, since I've never even considered voting for them.
Becasue of the way British politics work (a system that does need a reform, but not the kind the Tories want) I'm probably going to vote either Labour or SNP. Despite Nick Clegg's successes, he won't be becoming Prime Minister, and nobody ever votes green.
Even though the SNP won't be coming into power, the more seats the SNP has, the more support Scotland gets.
Who knows, the SNP might even convince Westminster to follow Holyrood and get tuition fees abolished. I feel sorry for students who don't live in Scotland who need to pay the ridiculous £3000+ in England and £1200 in Scotland, all because they haven't lived in Scotland for a number of years (although luckily EU students also recieve free tuition in Scotland, just not English, Welsh or N. Irish).
How do you feel about the political campaigns this year?
I've hated every moment of it. Nick Clegg does well in the debates and suddenly everyone wants to vote for him. Samantha Cameron announces that she is coincidentally pregnant. Alex Salmond and the leader of Plaid complain that they don't get to be in a debate where most of the questions don't affect them due to devolution.
It's kind of schoolyard-ish. This is the point where I almost refer to Eton and then don't.
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