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Chatting to folk about the results last night I think the UKIP bandwagon is rolling ,popular and and will get bigger.
Guess that is why Mark Reckless was so prominent in Wales on this campaign . This might be a SNP type moment for Wales ??
Five years of being represented by Neil Hamilton (I can't see him being in Cardiff Bay that often), Mark Reckless and the others and this will be UKIP's best ever showing in the Welsh Assembly. To be honest, I don't even know how UKIP fit into the assembly. Their main policies centre around the EU and immigration - neither of which are devolved matters. Their other policy is that the Welsh Assembly is unnecessary, to a degree I agree but I think we have to accept it is here for the rest of our lifetimes and beyond.
Plaid came close in Blaenau Gwent, from 64%, Labour were down to 38%. It's a shame (from my perspective, because Alun Davies is a completely arrogant individual who knows he will win his seat in an area where people vote Labour on principle) because the Labour vote in Blaenau Gwent was split between Plaid and UKIP. I think people were voting anti-Labour in Blaenau Gwent for a number of reasons - not sure why 3,000 saw UKIP as being someone to represent an area that is on its knees economically. Plaid seemed to be a good fit and will not get as close again.
I mean in terms of momentum, if you look at their progression UKIP has made its both a steep and quick rise, in a short window, they are making an impact in Wales,and people do get aboard bandwagons.
Who would have thought the SNP would power Scotland and the Tories push for second spot withinthe Scottish bed rock that was once a huge Labour stronghold . ? Never say never, not my choice of politics but something is afoot Holmes:
sherlock:
An answer to the original post ... what have Labour or Plaid done for (most of) Wales? The tories should never have seats here (well done Cardiff North for that at least). I don't know where the idea that UKIP are a racist party comes from (glorified Tories maybe)? That's just scaremongering. Isn't there a Muslim on their S.E Wales team?
There are a lot of people who don't agree with previous/current governments' open-door policy, especially legitimate overseas British visa holders who have to jump through hoops to get here ... yet ECONOMIC migrants can get in no hassle if they make enough noise and garner sympathy from the press. Some on this board can pretend to be wishy-washy liberal hug and embrace everyone/anything types (and, sure, that would be a perfect world) but the real world isn't like that.
The UK and US actually mock the word 'democracy' when media, MPs and social media groups pressure people who to vote for.
In addition, I do believe UKIP will oppose (the wastage of our tax money) Labour's plans to increase WAG seats from 60 to 100.
For a change I guess, I think people have had enough of the norm and perhaps they see UKIP as that and someone who might shout a bit loader in the Assembly chamber debates , it all smacks of disillusioned voters not knowing what to vote , as the old two party thing is now very tired .
Cant wait to see the demographics on the in and out vote, as that directly opposes the UKIP mantra.
The are a few people who do that but the majority tend to say that you are blaming the wrong people for the problems that this country faces. Your response here just suggests that you aren't willing to engage with sensible arguments.
It's easy to blame immigration for everything. That is why Farage appears like a credible politician to so many people.
RACIST !!!!!
They'll certainly shake up the senedd if they find shale gas underneath it.
Why do you never see a well educated UKIP voter? You see them for labour, Tory, green, libdem, plaid but the only people who speak out as Tory voters seem to be the less well educated of society just as you always did with BNP. Same for the majority of people who stand for election as part of UKIP.
To me I'm hoping most people who do vote for them vote as a protest vote rather than because they want to see them get in. I just can't feel comfortable with a party with policies like UKIPs, a right wing agenda and excessive nationalism; it doesn't often end up as a palatable mix.
Indeed. But surely it has to be a major problem for Plaid that, despite once again the vote for Labour and the Tories going down, they haven't capitalised. There seems to be a notion that Plaid are the party that would benefit from a drop in the vote for the main parties, but again that simply hasn't happened. My opinion has long been that Wales needs a middle of the road party that is free of the stereotypes that bog Plaid down would be a success. After this election my view is strengthened.
A lot of generalisations are based in fact I'm afraid. Their policies outside of leave the EU aren't well thought out enough and outside of a their policies why would anyone vote for them other than nationalistic tub thumping?
Do welsh people want a privatised NHS?
Do Welsh people want less tax on the richest members of society
Do Welsh people want a party who scrap the "stressful" SAT exams but replace them with grammar school entry exams which aren't apparenlry stressful?
The vote has gone down, but they had enough of a gap that it didn't matter. Another collapse of this magnitude would lead to a big loss of seats. Labour are still polling at 35%, which in FPTP terms is enough to win (generally). They are also going to lose votes because of the tuition fee policy, or the fact that now they're in they have to implement one that wasn't in the manifesto.
You are doing it again. Welsh people aren't one individual, each and every one is different. Some will be happy enough with a private NHS some won't, some happier with the rich people paying less tax other won't be. You can see the problem here with generalising people can't you?
As for the AT exams, anything that helps people learn to spell "apparently" gets my vote.