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Election Results: European Parliament Elections In Uk (Ukip In First Place?)
BBC News ^
| 5/25/2014
| BBC
Posted on 05/25/2014 9:21:09 AM PDT by Nextrush
click here to read article
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I have to be away most of the evening so I set this up for Freepers to discuss the European Parliament election results in the UK and the rise of UKIP.
1
posted on
05/25/2014 9:21:09 AM PDT
by
Nextrush
To: Nextrush
Actual title: Most of EU votes in election finale
Wonder how it got changed like that, with all those caps and stuff?
To: Nextrush
Strange. Has Europe not co-opted the American vote stealing apparatus? Or were the numbers so badly not in the commies favor they couldn’t even rig it?
3
posted on
05/25/2014 9:23:58 AM PDT
by
riri
(Plannedopolis-look it up. It's how the elites plan for US to live.)
To: humblegunner
I wanted to focus on UKIP in the UK because UKIP’s rise against the Uniparty over there is the big story today.....
Something needs to be done about the Uniparty in this country.
4
posted on
05/25/2014 9:27:16 AM PDT
by
Nextrush
(AFFORDABLE CARE ACT=HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY BAILOUT ACT)
To: riri
Geert Wilders party in the Netherlands has lost according to en exit poll from the main Dutch news broadcaster (NOS).
“The Telegraph” in the UK says it’s because Wilders linked himself to Marine Le Pen and the National Front in France instead of Nigel Farage and UKIP.
5
posted on
05/25/2014 9:34:39 AM PDT
by
Nextrush
(AFFORDABLE CARE ACT=HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY BAILOUT ACT)
To: Nextrush
In regard to Ukip, literally thousands of tweets this week about UKIP being “fascists and Racists”, and how UNBELIEVEIVABLE! it is that anyone would vote for “Fascists and racists”.
And that is just in English.
That smacks of an OFA-style coordinated campaign by the twitter bots.
6
posted on
05/25/2014 9:38:02 AM PDT
by
tcrlaf
(Q)
To: Nextrush
UK Independence party (Ukip)'s "
Nigel Farage had been expected to grab between 75 and 100 extra councillors at best, but added nearly 130. Labour MPs and activists, who had tried largely to ignore Ukip's impending arrival as the fourth party in British politics, veered between admitting that it had been hit and that Ed Miliband had to do better, and trying to dismiss Ukip as still so small as to be largely irrelevant."
Sounds like what the GOP does to the TEA Party
7
posted on
05/25/2014 9:39:22 AM PDT
by
icwhatudo
(Low taxes and less spending in Sodom and Gomorrah is not my idea of a conservative victory)
To: Nextrush
From a
Guardian article:"The alarm bells are ringing ever more loudly. When factory supervisor Peter Smyth, 60, from Rainham, Essex, voted for Ukip, it was the first time he had voted since he backed Margaret Thatcher in the 80s. "The older you get the more you realise politics is just a game show. Ukip seem more direct, less bullshit, more real," he said. "I'll be voting Ukip next year not because I want them in government but because I want to scare the government."
8
posted on
05/25/2014 9:40:51 AM PDT
by
icwhatudo
(Low taxes and less spending in Sodom and Gomorrah is not my idea of a conservative victory)
To: Nextrush
I am constantly amazed that there seem to be no candidates who, once elected, are so disgusted with the system that they resign and spill the beans. The rewards for staying must be stupendous, and/or the punishment for resigning must be terrible.
To: icwhatudo
From same article above:
Ben Middleton, 30, who is unemployed, said: "I voted Ukip yesterday. The country's full. I reckon there's 10,000 immigrants in Rotherham way more than they admit there is." Hope the same thing happens here to the rinos
10
posted on
05/25/2014 9:42:12 AM PDT
by
icwhatudo
(Low taxes and less spending in Sodom and Gomorrah is not my idea of a conservative victory)
To: icwhatudo
That guy has finally figured it out.
The talk of major differences between the major political parties is a show. They all do the same thing.
The D’s and R’s all wanted “healthcare reform” to make everyone buy higher priced coverage to bailout insurers and hospitals.
Romney did it first in MA, then Obama nationwide. The debate Republicans fuel with their emotions is one to modify Obamacare. Statements most of them make about getting rid of it mask their ultimate intention to keep Obamacare in modified form.
“You must realize that it’s all compromise...and the problems are so overrated”
-Petula Clark-”Don’t Sleep In The Subway”-1967
11
posted on
05/25/2014 10:03:20 AM PDT
by
Nextrush
(AFFORDABLE CARE ACT=HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY BAILOUT ACT)
To: Nextrush
Ed Milliband can't believe his luck.He's about ready to climax in his pants for the very same reason that Billy Bob did when he realized that Perot was polling at 20% of the vote.
To: Nextrush
Many of the people in England have woken up to the fact that all the major parties including the one that calls itself "Conservative" have been selling them out to the European Union and letting the immigration faucet go wide open.Sounds familiar.
To: Gay State Conservative
Milliband is being criticized for running a bad campaign because UKIP is now taking Labour voters into its camp.
Perot pulled out of the campaign deliberately for a time in 1992 to tamp his vote totals down so he wouldn’t win. He was in to help Clinton.
Farage and UKIP are playing no such game. They are in it to win and might do that today beating all the other parties, not allowing Labour to win.
14
posted on
05/25/2014 10:13:15 AM PDT
by
Nextrush
(AFFORDABLE CARE ACT=HEALTHCARE= INDUSTRY BAILOUT ACT)
To: Nextrush
Interesting and suggestive. It appears that in Europe, of which America is culturally a part of, that there is an ongoing abandonment of the traditional political parties. Indeed there is a reasonable argument to the effect that the traditional parties have abandoned the people. The party professionals have turned into a bunch of lying, greedy, drunken, drugged, overfed perverts who will do anything to promote their personal wealth and well being at the expense of the general welfare.
Please excuse a personal remark, but after 54 years a registered Republican I registered as an Independent a few months ago. Have others done the same? It appears to me that the Republican party has left Americanism and has become a party of self seeking degenerates.
15
posted on
05/25/2014 10:23:25 AM PDT
by
AEMILIUS PAULUS
(It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
To: AEMILIUS PAULUS
I can see one reason for staying in the Republican party. That would be that if an excellent and believable constitutional conservative is up for nomination, vote for that person in the primary. But if a RINO sellout gets the nomination, don't bother voting in the election.
It's important that constitutional conservatives get as high a percentage of votes as possible.
16
posted on
05/25/2014 10:29:17 AM PDT
by
grania
To: grania
In my state I can vote for any candidate even as an Independent. At least in the primary and final election.
17
posted on
05/25/2014 10:36:52 AM PDT
by
AEMILIUS PAULUS
(It is a shame that when these people give a riot)
To: AEMILIUS PAULUS
Please excuse a personal remark, but after 54 years a registered Republican I registered as an Independent a few months ago. Have others done the same? It appears to me that the Republican party has left Americanism and has become a party of self seeking degenerates.I voted Republican since my first Presidential election in 1988, and Romney will be my last GOP vote. I left the Republican't Party after the McCain cluster flop and am now a registered non-affiliated independent. The American political system is as rigged and scripted as a WWE wrestling match.
18
posted on
05/25/2014 10:37:19 AM PDT
by
EricT.
(Everything not forbidden is compulsory.)
To: grania
I can see one reason for staying in the Republican party. That would be that if an excellent and believable constitutional conservative is up for nomination, vote for that person in the primary. Keep dreaming. Reagan was an anomaly and the Ruling Class Uniparty has taken careful steps to keep that from ever happening again.
19
posted on
05/25/2014 10:39:05 AM PDT
by
EricT.
(Everything not forbidden is compulsory.)
To: grania
Is there an option to ‘spoil’ your ballot paper in a US election like there is in a British one? The trouble with not voting is that the pollies assume it is because you were too lazy. At least if you turn up and write ‘fu’ or ‘none of the above’ you are conveying a clear message that you don’t believe that any of the candidates deserved your vote.
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