Ratters
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Re: Can Farage win as the anti-establishment candidate when his only opponent is a man with a dustbin on
I think you are right if we were focussing solely on the constituency of Clacton. I imagine many will be frustrated by the time of the second by-election and Farage will win comfortably. But I think … (View Post)2 -
Re: Can Farage win as the anti-establishment candidate when his only opponent is a man with a dustbin on
He is guilty. Of taking a £5m personal gift from an offshore crypto billionaire. For most people, that is dodgy and unacceptable regardless of whether it was properly declared. The investigation is j… (View Post)1 -
Re: It’s a bold strategy. Let’s see if it pays off for Nigel Farage – politicalbetting.com
I mean, while I would vote tactically for the Tories in such a by-election, I'd be far more enthusiastic in my support for Count Binface as if he/she was the primary opponent. (View Post)2 -
Re: It’s a bold strategy. Let’s see if it pays off for Nigel Farage – politicalbetting.com
If Burnham has any sense he'll be setting his own agenda once PM and not let the by election dominate things. Dismiss it as Farage trying to escape parliamentary scrutiny and otherwise ignore. (View Post)2 -
Re: It’s a bold strategy. Let’s see if it pays off for Nigel Farage – politicalbetting.com
The optimal scenario is: 1) No unity candidate but Labour and Lib Dems field paper candidates and don't bother campaigning other than to attack Farage. They can't win. 2) Tories have a sens… (View Post)2