peterinmalaga Wrote:I find it hard to feel sorry for Brown. He seems too dictatorial and he was the person who stopped the UK going for the euro, which benefits his cronies in the city and nobody else. I dislike Cameron even more profoundly, so that leaves Clegg. I doubt if Clegg will make more of a cockup than Brown has but I also doubt very much if he will get an overall majority.
I find it very easy to feel sorry for Brown. He spends his entire life climbing the greasy pole. He does the honourable thing for the party and does not stand against Blair following Smith's death, so that the more popular man with the country but not the party can will the General Election. The Tories subsequently self-destruct prior to the election, rendering his self-sacrifice unnecessary. He then has to wait years for Blair to stand aside and shortly after becoming PM, all economic hell breaks loose. He is very much the son of the Manse, with a clear moral vision of what he should do in politics, so clear that he has difficulty tolerating dissent. (Please don't confuse this with me liking Brown, I don't. I just find it very easy to feel sorry for him).
Peter, frankly a lot of people were against Britain joining the Euro, I'm not sure that Blair would have actually taken us in had Brown let him. At the moment, I glad not to be be sharing a currency with a bankrupt government.
As for cock-up. No Western government seriously saw the economic catastrophe coming, many should have but none did. Politicians of all persuasions when in government have a habit of spending money during boom years rather than saving it (its more popular with the voters). So I am not at all convinced that a different PM would prevent disastrous cock-ups.
marshlander Wrote:my hope is for a hung Parliament with the resulting muddle being forced to to push through an all-elected second chamber and serious electoral reform leading to fairer representation.
I doubt the Lib Dems have would have the muscle and the determination to force that through. There would be a lot of Labour and Tory MPs determined to ensure that their safe seats remained safe.