I assume that you Punshhh aren't a conservative, so I guess you are the people helping Johnson getting the conservatives to support him with those kind of remarks... if you would be a reporter.
Unless it reflects a change of opinion related to age. — Benkei
I have had a look for older graphs, I haven't found anything easy to read before 2015 so far, but it looks like this trend has been building for about a decade. Before that the split was more even between the age groups.Unless it reflects a change of opinion related to age. One way to tell is whether there are older graphs like this and if younger support for conservatives was higher there or not.
Oh also about the poll tracker, the BBC has the polltracker on their website, along with a list of all the constituencies with the share of the votes from the 2017 election. They frequently tell their viewers to go to the website and have a look. It's part of their drive to get their viewers to be more interactive. — Punshhh
Well, I could say the media has been a bit more than slightly critical of Johnson, but that is a matter of opinion. Yet do notice that both Corbyn and Johnson have picked up support for themselves.In reference to the media, it is almost entirely anti Corbyn and is only slightly critical of Johnson. It's more a case of the media not knowing how to deal with the unprecedented way the government is behaving, allowing it to get away with far more than would usually be the case. — Punshhh
I think that this deep division is happening very much everywhere. It's happening because of populism. One of the core principals of populism is to separate people to "us" and "them". Trying to search a consensus or try to search for a middle ground isn't done, it's actually intentionally avoided as "the other" is depicted to be so bad. And naturally the whole Brexit -process is a dividing cause. You could have just voted "yes" or "no" for brexit. That divides the people into two distinct categories.Also the division between leave and remain is so deep, that to a large extent it doesn't matter anymore what anyone says, or does. This is why Johnson can get away with his behaviour, which is very uncharacteristic of the behaviour of a PM in this country. — Punshhh
I would say Corbyn or the Labour party has nothing against Jews or the Jewish religion. Likely what has happened in their hatred of the international financial elite they just have been ignorant about how close their narrative comes to Hitler and anti-semitism. Because when talking about "the World being ruled by a cabal of international bankers", you have just taken out one word and that is Jewish and then you are talking exactly the same line as Adolf Hitler did.It's true that there is an anti-Semitic problem amongst members of the Labour Party, but what are they suggesting is going to happen if Corbyn forms a government in a hung parliament? — Punshhh
"the Enemy of Humanity"
That graph and this one about the referendum demonstrate how there is a deep generational divide, in which the older generation wants to give the younger generation what they don't want and then go and die of old age and leave them with the mess to clear up. — Punshhh
There is one point to be made here. That is that politicians in power do regulate and move the limits of the Overton window. Hence if it's totally acceptable of referring to an "international cabal of bankers running the World", then there's only a small step to add the J-word in front of the bankers. And these are the subtle things that then do add to anti-semitism.My point is what is it the anxious Jews making this intervention think is going to happen? — Punshhh
It is widely understood here that there is this generational divide. Personally, nearly every old person I know is a leaving Conservative supporter. While all the young people I know are the opposite.I’ve read these sort of comments before. Why do you think that’s what’s happening? Why do you think it’s true?
Punshhh — Punshhh
So... who is everyone voting for? — Evil
Boris Johnson pleaded with Trump not to wade into British politics in an interview on LBC: “It’s best when you have close friends and allies like the US and the UK … for neither side to be involved in each other’s election campaigns.” — Guardian
Trump arrives in London next week for a two-day Nato summit which will see him greeted on Tuesday evening by doctors, nurses and other NHS workers leading a protest of tens of thousands outside Buckingham Palace.
The protesters – aiming to highlight potential risks to the NHS in a future US-UK trade deal – will march from Trafalgar Square up the Mall, and gather at Canada Gate when Trump and other Nato leaders meet the Queen at a 6pm drinks reception.
It will mark the formal beginning of a short summit that has been in the diary for 18 months, but has ended up occurring at the closing stages of an election campaign, prompting jitters in No 10 – and making for Labour’s best hope of a comeback. — Guardian
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