Yeah I read this morning that if the Yahoo polls were replicated in the election then Labour will still have to majority of seats in the House of Commons despite polling lower than the Lib Dems and Conservatives. I think they'd have something like 248 seats compared to just over 200 for the Tories and about 130 for the Lib Dems, although I can't remember the exact figures.
Hard to judge after that debate, Clegg definitley came across the best and put the Lib Dems out there as a viable alternative. I actually thought Cameron fared the worst, some of his policies were slaughtered and he didn't really answer many questions about what he would do e.g the immigration cap. What type of cap are we looking at? How would it work exactly? Whats the point in saying what you want to do if you can't back it up with a workable plan, or include at least rough figures of what we'd be looking at in terms of cuts or limits etc.
I agree with those that said considering the circumstances, Gordon Brown did well. He was always going to get the other 2 saying "you've had 13 years, why are you only suggesting this now?"
Clegg should do well again in the next debate, although I think he wants further integration within Europe, which may dent some support as there seems to be a lot of negativity towards the EU among the public. Brown's going to have to attempt to defend the indefensible in the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, and I don't think anyone's going to buy his BS when it comes to these topics. Should be interesting to see what he has to say on these issues.


Thanks:
Likes:
Dislikes: 


Reply With Quote
Bookmarks