cromwell wrote:So Farage did well, as expected.
I was expecting for the Tories to do badly but maybe not as badly as they did! Which way are they going to jump now?
As in my first post back, the Tories did better than I expected them to do. I would have been happy if they lost every single seat. But, I suppose, we have to remember that there are Tory Remain constituencies.
I think that the Tories are beginning to remember Project Fear. There have been endless lines of Drivel about how people didn't vote for "No Deal" in the referendum because it was not on the ballot paper.
It is Time to Remember that Project Fear was all about No Deal. It was all about consequences and impact and how the UK would do badly when it left and that the only way to avoid "consequences" was to not vote Leave in the first place.
In the end the people voted Leave despite Project Fear. In short they accepted the consequences and still voted to leave.
It is about time that MP's start looking at the other side of the equation. Had May simply triggered A50 on day 1, without any angst or suffering or court cases (as was her right), then worked through the 2 years, leaving with No Deal when the EU did what they have done; we would now be
nearly 2 years out of the EU and the consequences would be well known, mitigation in hand and an election still a year in the distance.
May has, single handedly, dismantled the Tory vote, voter confidence in the ability of the Tories to execute the will of the people and pushed the Tories to an election less than one year after we leave the EU. Having an election in the middle of the consequences of leaving the EU is the worst possible thing any party could do.
If there were any doubt. Any doubt at all, that revoking A50 would have a positive effect and no consequences, then Labour and the Tories just found out that there isn't and what the true price will be. Farage as head of the third largest party in the UK with KingMaker power over the Coalition which must ensue afterwards.
So whoever leads the Tories might as well go for it. Because the only way they have even the slightest hope of dismantling the Brexit party vote is to exit the EU without a deal in October and face the consequences; whilst surfing the totally obvious opportunities.
There is only one candidate, presented so far to the Tory leadership contest, even mildly capable of doing that.