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Adam Collyer's avatar

Absolutely right, David.

I think that the importance of one consequence of that Brexit vote is not generally recognised. It broke the Conservative Party.

David Cameron's resignation the morning after the vote cheered me almost more than the vote itself. Sure, Boris Johnson became Prime Minister eventually, after the Theresa May fiasco. But the squabbles within the Conservative Party over Brexit, which ultimately led to their crushing defeat in 2024, showed them to be hopelessly infiltrated by careerist hacks and social democrats, and to be much more interested in power than in any principle.

The hope for the British Centre-Right is that the Conservatives can go on fading, and be replaced by Reform. That will be a hard struggle, but I wish us good fortune in the wars to come!

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Stuffysays's avatar

They are going to need to find a British version of Trump - someone from outside the political establishment. That won't be easy because they'd have to become a politician, get elected as an MP, build up a network, be effective within the party. Trump is a president not a prime minister - he's not first amongst equals is he? He's the capo di tutti capi. We don't have one of those - we have an emasculated monarchy as our capo!

I also think our system discourages mavericks and independently-minded people - it promotes conformists and people happy to work within the system. The civil service needs major reforms to get it back to being politically neutral but how's that going to happen when it has become more powerful that the politicians? The whole shebang simply drains the life out of anyone who tries to change it. Let's be honest, Nigel Farage is really just an establishment figure who doesn't mind saying "wrong" things. Would he really make any difference if he became PM? (which won't happen as long as the Right won't work together).

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