I'll be there in 10 :)I am dropping off due to sleeping tablet , be back sometime around 4am
I'll be there in 10 :)I am dropping off due to sleeping tablet , be back sometime around 4am
fingers crossed.According to the BBC he has a 47% chance of winning. So a 53% chance of losing. Going to be close.
Funny one from earlier - a lass I know from my local Lidl lived with her mum and dad then she and her partner bought the house next door. She told me she went in to vote not knowing the system ( I know ) so produced her driving license. She hasn't changed it so the address in number 12 when she lives at number 14 and told them that was her address when asked. They concentrated so hard on the picture and her face they didn't seem to get the address discrepancy and she voted.
edit update - is that voter fraud?
Still think she'd get it. In Butlins, or BenidormWatching on Channel 4 for Maitlis, Campbell and Stewart but Jesus Christ, can someone in that studio please punch Nadine Dorries in the throat.
they are far right.Reform are not a far-right party. They're certainly a right leaning party but far-right is perhaps pushing it.
Reminds me of Sky having an inquiry into united not winning the league and how to correct it.Is this a little weird on C4, round the table with 4 parties, none of them being the one that actually looks to have won?
Reminds me of United losing and nobody interested in those that won.
Still think she'd get it. In Butlins, or Benidorm
They'll be hate fucking around 3am.mad nads v alistair campbel gonna be a fun watch
Jeremy Vine on BBC1. Fuck off.
It’s just mathematics. More parties/candidates dilute the support by offering more options for voters, but in most constituencies it’s still only a choice between two so votes that go to the other parties are effective only if they reduce one of the leading parties more than the other.40 odd % of the vote nowadays seems to earn you a fucking large majority. Laughable really.
Watching BBC because we don’t have C4 here, and one of my favourite moments thus far was Steve Baker, participating in the opening panel as the exit polls were presented, having to watch the analyst, in front of a giant screen showing the chance of winning for various candidates, being shown (and told directly), live on air, that BBC gives him <1% of holding on to his seat.