bluethrunthru
Well-Known Member
Agreed.
If she's denied her thumping majority she'll face all of the above and more. At the beginning of this election she was more popular than her party, is that still the case? And remember how it was Labour voters who supposedly would have to hold their noses to vote for Corbyn, how many Tories are having to do that now with May?
And even if post election she's still inclined to avoid hard Brexit what kind of deal could she possibly negotiate? She's been shown up as spineless and incompetent, a wobbler, barely in control of her cabinet let alone her government.
This election has not united the country and its outcome will expose the UK as even more divided than before. May will end up in government but not in power, with her position in jeopardy the moment she makes the slightest concession.
She's utterly screwed.
As I have been saying for a while now the likely winner will be the loser. Corbyn will not perform as badly as predicted and will therefore survive at Labour. May's 200 seat majority predicted on the day of the announcement won't materialise - she could actually be no better off. At which point the knives will be out in the Tory party