Rascal
El Presidente
I think mate you are looking at it from a party political perspective where as my intention was to look at it from an individual MPs perspective. By that I mean say are Lisa Nandy and Rees-Mogg both in Parliament with the best of intentions. I do honestly believe that they both believe they are there to do good. Now whilst I may fundamentally disagree with both of them on issues and they may be following party guidance as part of collective responsibility that does not change their intentions on entering Parliament. They may have to support what I would consider awful and odious legislation, yet still retain their good intentions. Obviously though the question becomes what are good intentions and the only answer I have to that is the ballot box.So, let me ask you, @Rascal , is the statement that I make that 'both parties are basically the same' the same or different than your outlook?
If they are different, doesn't it mean that the individual politician, ultimately following party lines, has to come under the banner that gets your goat?
If they are the same, does it not become an inherent truth, then?
If a copper is 'well-meaning' to you in person, but still beats you back at a peaceful protest, what does that say, in general?
Which takes me back to one of my original concerns, thinking that MPs are all the same is a threat to Democracy and the best way to measure any MPs intentions is through an election and if we begin to consider MPs as being all the same I worry that affects voter turnout, it de-legitimises mandates and support for Parliament falls further. That could create a vacuum and authoritarians exploit vacuums.