I can't get over Sunak's wife hovering in the background like she's haunting him.
@distinctdipole6 ай бұрын
She's pissed they're not already in CA
@jennivamp56 ай бұрын
Right?! 😂 She looks like the spectre of death come to reap his soul! Shame there isn't much of one to collect
@MichaelSmith-ij2ut6 ай бұрын
She's like a ghost from Bly Manor
@pastyman0016 ай бұрын
Yes I thought the same. The Ghost at the end of a long feast
@IronpenWorldbuilding6 ай бұрын
4:40 him wobbling around a pole shouting “vote liberal democrat” is hilarious
@polishraspberries6 ай бұрын
The bungee jumping was actually a metaphor for people who never voted Libdem to vote Libdem in the election as he hadn't ever bungee jamped in his life before with him trying to use that to get people onboad to vote Libdem! Davey said it himself in an interview.
@user-df1ns1ob8y6 ай бұрын
@@polishraspberriesSome may say their election strategy is silly and unserious, but it makes the party as a whole extremely likeable. Ed Davey just seems like your fun uncle.
@SallyBlumCGN6 ай бұрын
@@user-df1ns1ob8y He seems like the mentally challenged uncle.
@jeffgilmour11076 ай бұрын
Seriously, their extra million in short money should just go to more stunts ;)
@BlazinBlz6 ай бұрын
@@jeffgilmour1107 this fr next election I expect Ed Davey doing a sick wheelie over a jump with all this funding
@henrikthomas2006 ай бұрын
Ed Davies campaign was fantastic. Good luck to him, and his son! He seems like such a loving father and decent human being!
@bob12348816 ай бұрын
Yes. I really hope they can become the main opposition party. Let's work to get rid of the tories once and for all.
@jeromefitzroy6 ай бұрын
Well it was unconventional
@IAMMARTICUS14706 ай бұрын
His campaign was a brilliant piece of political satire. Made a complete mockery of our electoral system by refusing to campaign and going on a water sports holiday instead.
@CS_____6 ай бұрын
@@IAMMARTICUS1470having fun while campaigning is hardly refusing to campaign, it was more a commentary on how drab the politics of his opponents can be
@ronan52286 ай бұрын
The Lib Dems definitely campaigned really hard in the seats they thought they could win.
@cathallynch16 ай бұрын
Ed Davey is by far the most 'normal' leader we've seen in how human he is. You can really picture him as a Dad and a genuine bloke.
@0w784g6 ай бұрын
Only if you think the theatrics he performs are somehow genuine. I'm sure the people who suffered when he didn't bother looking into the post office scandal are thrilled.
@anthonyplayter29816 ай бұрын
We don't need a father figure as a leader. Post office scandal.
@20quid6 ай бұрын
@@0w784g I'm sorry but the right wing smears have failed.
@SirSX36 ай бұрын
Lol it's funny to see leftists simping for a right wing party
@darthollie6 ай бұрын
Not being contrary but that's literally what they try to do, all politicians wanna seem like "One of us".
@tlongie60556 ай бұрын
I voted Lib Dem for the first time this election as they were the anti-Tory tactical vote. It worked! For the first time since 1906, we have a non Tory MP in Stratford upon Avon and possibly more importantly, our new MP is LOCAL. 😁
@dhfconst6 ай бұрын
Congratz.
@GamerFavor6 ай бұрын
Democracy is so beautiful, isn't it?
@quizkraftstudio6 ай бұрын
Exactly, the system is a joke. You should be able to vote for who you actually want to win
@davidbean69736 ай бұрын
Well done Stratford! Hopefully we can eventually change to a proportional system so that tactical voting won’t be as necessary... But I don’t see it changing anytime soon.
@ryanfleshbourne35476 ай бұрын
@@craigewen7542 choosing to tactical vote literally is democracy lmao
@screwnacorn6 ай бұрын
Ed Davies is such a Dad.
@Banter076 ай бұрын
In a good way
@ChickenNugNugz26 ай бұрын
He is the daddiest dad to have ever dad. I can imagine Ed has top tier dad jokes.
@guybrushthreepwood3626 ай бұрын
WAIT, Short money is named after a guy named Short! What are you going to tell me next? The House of Commons is named after Jimmy Commons?
@distinctdipole6 ай бұрын
The Commons is named after commoners, y'know, us plebs. However, the Barnett Formula (for devolved adminstration budgets) is a temporary measure (1978) named after Joel Bernett.
@glyngreen5386 ай бұрын
Sandwiches are named after the Earl of Sandwich.
@guybrushthreepwood3626 ай бұрын
@@glyngreen538 I thought you were messing with me but that seems to check out; Next we are going to find out that Land's End is named after Arkhan Land
@Neddyfram6 ай бұрын
General Elections were invented by Harry General.
@Kevc006 ай бұрын
@@guybrushthreepwood362 the Emperor's real name is Jimmy Space, and they are his Space Marines
@Kj16V6 ай бұрын
THIS. THIS is what gives me hope for the future: The Lib Dems with a voice, holding Labour to account and making sure they keep to their promises of making Britain better for it's people.
@robo30076 ай бұрын
Yesss, and hopefully the Greens and pro-Palestine independents will do the same!
@therealbaylee6 ай бұрын
@@robo3007 you are genuinely evil
@oliverleonard77306 ай бұрын
@@robo3007 The independents are just a joke really, most of them will lose their seats next time.
@rationalroundhead67396 ай бұрын
@@robo3007 The greens need to get their act together first. They only won 4 seats this election, despite coming second in a further 48, and they won't win many more while they're still openly in conflict with themselves on such basic points of their platform as **building green energy infrastructure.**
@trey-nm5bx6 ай бұрын
As if they’ll change anything.
@thrasherthrash89876 ай бұрын
The Lib Dems’ first step should be to try and outshine the tories as opposition. Currently, the conservatives are embroiled in factional infighting, which is a golden opportunity to supersede them in terms of holding the new government to account. The next step is to consolidate the gains. Keeping these new seats is essential for further success. This could be done by promoting tactical voting even more than they are. That is, if we don’t get some electoral reform (which Labour should go for as well for more long term chances at forming future governments). We’ll see. The libdems are my personal favourite party so I wish to see them thrive.
@gunorijssel79876 ай бұрын
"The Lib Dems’ first step should be to try and outshine the tories as opposition." Shouldn't be quite THAT difficult, if you'd ask me!!!
@evonne_o6 ай бұрын
@@gunorijssel7987I agree. 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@michaelgreen15156 ай бұрын
The tactics they have to fight most now will be against the Greens and Reform. However in many areas their vote was built on a solid base of experience of good councillors.
@SirWhig-esq.6 ай бұрын
Further the number of seats until the position of official opposition is acquired.
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
I don’t see them replacing Labour though. Imo, there’s always going to a left-wing bloc and a right-wing bloc. The Lib Dems can’t be the opposition to Labour while also being on the left.
@jacobconcannon46776 ай бұрын
@@gameofender4463we trying to replace the tories not labour
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
@@jacobconcannon4677 Except you can’t while being on the opposite side of the political spectrum. That’s like trying to replace the Republicans with the Greens. That’s not how it works. The Tories are the largest right-wing party. The only party they’d change to is probably Reform. As there’s always going to be a big party on both the right and the left. TLDR, the Lib Dems share the same ground/base as Labour. As they’re the most ideologically aligned. Meaning any LD gains would come from Labour loses.
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
@@jacobconcannon4677 That’s not how it works. You’re not looking at it properly. The Lib Dems are too similar to Labour. Tory voters are very unlikely to switch to a party that’s ideologically different to them. So any gains the Lib Dems make would come from Labour, not the Tories.
@thysupremematrix43276 ай бұрын
@@gameofender4463Thats not necessarily true. Many tory voters vote lib dems when they are dissatisfied with labour, and if they are not far right wing enough to vote reform
@irnbru54966 ай бұрын
Lib Dem won my vote purely on policy also my area “Surrey” was NEVER going to go Labour even if I wanted it to so Lib Dem winning made me So So happy
@michealbrennan81076 ай бұрын
Hopefully the lib dems could come 2nd next election
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
They can’t. It’s incredibly unlikely they’d replace Labour.
@Charlstonn6 ай бұрын
@@gameofender4463 I think they mean the tories.
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
@@Charlstonn I know, but what I’m saying is that since the Lib Dems share the same political ground as Labour. Any gains for the Lib Dems would come from Labour losing ground. TLDR, your average Tory voter isn’t going to switch to a left-wing party. They’re going to vote for who’s more like them. And that’s Reform. So, they can’t replace the Tories as they’re not on the same “team” as the Tories, only Reform is. Meaning that the only other party that can realistically affect/convince Tory voters is Reform.
@thysupremematrix43276 ай бұрын
@@gameofender4463Not necessarily true. Many centre right tory voters do not like reform so they may vote lib dem
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
@@thysupremematrix4327 Or not vote at all. Put it this way, if the Tories disbanded or really declined substantially. The vast majority would go to Reform.
@DuckSwagington6 ай бұрын
Ed Davies ran an absolutely fantastic campaign. It felt genuinely human and down to earth. If I wasn't voting Labour to get my local Tory MP out, I would've 100% voted for him.
@TonksMoriarty6 ай бұрын
I do hope you'll cover the Lib Dems far more now, and Reform far less.
@OliverRPendle6 ай бұрын
The Lib Dems increased their vote share by roughly 0.7%, and were 2 points behind Reform. FPTP worked well for the Lib Dems, very well, and you may not like Reform but they make up a bigger proportion of the vote share despite losing to FPTP
@2Links6 ай бұрын
@@OliverRPendleThink the point of the comment is that historically they've focused on parties with more seats eather than according to vote share, by focusing disproportionately on the Tories and Labour. Or at least that's how I interpreted it, it's hard to tell.
@user-df1ns1ob8y6 ай бұрын
@@OliverRPendleI wouldn’t say FPTP worked well for them. They got 12% of votes and 11% of seats.
@OliverRPendle6 ай бұрын
@@2Links I think that's part of the problem, the constant focus on seats over vote share perpetuates FPTP which emboldens the 2-party system. Lib Dems only got seats because of the collapse of the Tory Vote, to focus on them now because they happen to have a hugely disproportionate number of seats to their actual number of votes would be counterintuitive
@2Links6 ай бұрын
@@OliverRPendle Yeah, how I read the original comment they're saying "if you're going to continue covering according to seats, at least cover Lib Dem more than Reform now". Definitely agree that media coverage plays into it. Reform does deserve its fair share (although personally I do think they've been getting a decent amount recently). Greens are probably covered too little as well, even though they have a much smaller vote share.
@reecefraser55216 ай бұрын
You know you are part of the media, right? You don't need the excuse of a party getting more seats to give them more / equal coverage, you could just do it
@distinctdipole6 ай бұрын
This. The rabid press frothing at anything Fartage did while *ignoring* longstanding, established and productive parties was disgusting. TLDR not as bad as some but they were all guilty of it.
@0w784g6 ай бұрын
@@distinctdipole You sound obsessed with Farage. Perhaps if you spent less time looking him up you'd get less recommendations about him in your feed. 😂
@wattieiscute6 ай бұрын
Farage party is the renamed UKIP party, it's not new. @@distinctdipole Farage is a despicable human and I am glad some media is covering him as so, yet the right wing media hails him, hey ho.
@distinctdipole6 ай бұрын
@@0w784g Obessed how? And certainly haven't been looking him up. He's been unavoidable.
@ilovejesusandilovegod88036 ай бұрын
In a better world, ed Davies would be prime minister 😭
@oscarmike34826 ай бұрын
Having a pint with? I'm sure he's great. Dealing with serious PM shit? Absolutely not.
@John_Long_1016 ай бұрын
4:24 "I LIBOODABOODAAAA"
@Arksimon2k6 ай бұрын
Translate to English "LOVE ME" What?? Lol.
@JustKevH6 ай бұрын
This has a translate option on it that translates to LOVE ME 🤣🤣🤣
@marilynlucero93636 ай бұрын
LMAO love that translation xD
@monkeyboy84246 ай бұрын
Ed Davey's plan of making a fool of himself while performing stunts specifically designed to make him look foolish was masterful.
@herbivorethecarnivore84476 ай бұрын
I voted Lib Dem since they seem like the only party that's actually remotely different or wants to _do_ something. Labour is just a wet noodle party whose only platform is "Tory Bad" and vague ideas about "Change". Plus Ed Davey looks like he gives great hugs.
@jonleibow36046 ай бұрын
Drinking game: read through comments, take a shot every time you see someone point out that Menzies is pronounced incorrectly
@TheWebstaff6 ай бұрын
A rise to power!!!!!!!! Come on Ed!
@stephenfarthing38196 ай бұрын
I'm a voice for caution! I am a Liberal Democrat supporter and I wouldn't be in favour of the idea of a coalition with any political party. I see something else is that the Conservatives are likely to schism. I would tend to suspect that the Liberal Democrats will overtake them as the main national opposition party. In the next 6 months. It's likely that I will fully return to the Liberal Democrats by the 1st December of this year! I'm just awaiting developments that I have firmly suspected are likely to be extraordinary and better for all of us in the longer term.
@bestrafung27546 ай бұрын
I'm not a Lib Dem voter, I actually voted for the Greens, but I do hope the Lib Dems can overtake the Tories someday. We need someone other than the main 2 parties in opposition and Ed Davey comes across as a good bloke who actually cares, especially regarding his son. I think that unless the Tories stop this infighting and actually get a leader who's electable or at least popular enough, the Lib Dems could at least be very close to becoming the party of opposition one day if not actually becoming that. However, it'll sadly take a long time due to the broken FPTP system, but I of course could be wrong. I thought the Tories would retain about 150 seats and Labour would win around 350, so I was definitely a bit far off there lol.
@Steviebond26 ай бұрын
What now? Well, I think it depend on who becomes Tory leader. If they go with one of the obvious far right MPs, LibDems will have a chance of becoming the main opposition in a few years time.
@fordia6 ай бұрын
It will probably not come up again, but Menzies Campbell is pronounced MING-iss (or Ming for short)
@MS-tg6hc6 ай бұрын
They tend to make a lot of mistakes like that. These guys are pretty ignorant for wannabe journalists.
@wildfire92805 ай бұрын
@@MS-tg6hc “Wannabe” journalism is greatly preferable to most “journalism” most know of.
@sameedahmad-ly7zc6 ай бұрын
Go swimming and other water activities and win 72 seats. Nice way of campaigning. 😂
@glyngreen5386 ай бұрын
It’s pretty brave considering how toxic and polluted our water ways are these days (partly what he was trying to link / highlight with it too).
@goldboy1506 ай бұрын
Few notes: “Menzies” Campbell is pronounced “Minnis”. He’s usually referred to by his nickname “Ming Campbell” though. Second: the uptick in Lib Dem seats isn’t “just about 4x”. Whether you take actual seats won in 2019 (11), notional seats on new boundaries (8) or seats after by election wins (15) - the lib dem performance of 72 outstrips 4x. Indeed, based on notional seats, they’ve won 9x the seats they had before. Lastly, this is opinion but I think the Lib Dems goal will be to become the opposition rather than join another coalition. Junior coalition partners historically get tagged with all the negatives and none of the positives and hence suffer come election time. I highly doubt they want another dose of 2015 having had to work so hard to come back again. The lib dems are generally really successful in holding their seats once they have them - what did them in was joining a government. What they will want is to make more gains in Tory areas and hopefully overtake the Tories into second. If and when they manage to do that, it’s a paradigm shift wherein the lib dems can campaign legitimately at an election to be the government.
@merlumili6 ай бұрын
I agree. The move here is definitely to work towards becoming the opposition to a Labour government (if they don't fumble this and win again)
@goldboy1506 ай бұрын
@@merlumili the other thing we can speculate about is how the lib dems will manage the changes in popularity of the two main parties going forward. For instance, we know they can be successful in combination with a popular Labour Party and an unpopular Tory party (1997,2024). We know they can be successful with an unpopular Labour Party and an unpopular Tory party (2005). What we don’t yet know is how they would fair with an unpopular Labour Party and a popular Tory party (because coalition had ruined their chances when this was the scenario). The scary labour leader definitely screws the lib dems when labour is in opposition - but isn’t a factor when labour is in power. However, I’m not certain we will be testing this any time soon as the Tories look like they might go through a couple of William Hague’s and Michael Howard’s again before coming to their senses - and given the difference in numbers between the Tories and lib dems now as compared to 1997 - that might just be enough time of the Tories looking like wing nuts for the lib dems to usurp them.
@TheBreadthatcausedLesMis6 ай бұрын
@@goldboy150 On your final point, It definitely looks like the Tories wil lbe going further right and go all in on the culture war anti-woke rhetoric in terms of its leader and direction to try and hoover up reform votes rather than going more to the centre to try and hoover up labour. Which could lead to the remaining moderate tory vote (if they even still exist) going to the Lib Dems.
@wildfire92805 ай бұрын
Coincidentally, I think an exception to that would be the Liberals and Labour Party once or twice in the early 1900s.
@goldboy1505 ай бұрын
@@wildfire9280 an exception to what? Too much has been said in this thread for me to know precisely what you’re referring to. Let me know and I’ll address it
@Cheesemax5956 ай бұрын
There’s so much footage of him working out lol
@Arksimon2k6 ай бұрын
Push for more membermship (I just rejoined) keep fighting for bi election seats and increase their campaining into more seats. It might be hard to unseat Labour, especially in areas where the Tory vote shote is so close, but I don't think Lib Dems can settle with only claiming Tory seats, when they could easily swing back should Labour not do well. I'd love to see them become main opposition in the future at any rate.
@stephenhodgson35066 ай бұрын
I think it is now critical for those new Lib Dem MP's that they work hard for their constituents. Some or many may have gained their seat as a result of tactical voting so they need to keep that in mind and work with their local councillors to show those that voted for them, no matter the reason, that they made a wise choice. It will be interesting to see how many of the seats they have won that they can hold onto in the next election because the 'get the Tories out' sentiment will be gone next time.
@merlumili6 ай бұрын
Yeah. If they can't manage to switch some labour voters into lib dem voters, they'll have wasted a great opportunity to grow and be a real candidate for opposition
@angelicdespot27356 ай бұрын
I do wish this 'Kingmaker' talk would remind everyone that in 2010 Labour+Lib Dems combined still had no parliamentary majority!
@dramotarker13526 ай бұрын
Despite this, they had a majority of the votes together (52%). Obviously, we can't know how people would have voted in a system where individual people are represented instead of regions. Still, if such a system was in use, and a majority of people thought they were the party that represented them best, then they would indeed have had an parliamentary majority :)
@tulliusexmisc21916 ай бұрын
That's true, but they were close enough that a coalition would have been feasible, albeit with a tiny majority like much of the later 1970's. With reasonable incentives, it is very likely the SDLP MPs would have joined a coalition with their longtime Labour allies, especially with the Lib Dems onboard too. Getting the SNP to join would have been harder, but surely achievable, e.g. in exchange for a referendum on Scottish independence. That would have made 258 Labour + 57 Lib Dem + 3 SDLP + 6 SNP = 324. Excluding 5 Sinn Fein and the Speaker, that would give a majority of 4. It's understandable the Lib Dems chose Cameron as Plan A, with a working majority and no other partners to worry about. But they definitely had an alternative, and that gave them a stronger hand in negotiations.
@grimaffiliations36716 ай бұрын
Theyll be a very positive influence
@tsarnicholasii87256 ай бұрын
The future seems bright!
@ukropcrimeariver6 ай бұрын
Actually dark, really dark. If you wannt me to say colored.
@klausjack87316 ай бұрын
Just commenting here, waiting for the replies.
@belstar11286 ай бұрын
in the uk ? no
@ChrisInTheNorth6 ай бұрын
2005, the number of seats went up from 50something to 61 The Main policy gains in the Coalition related to lowering tax bands and money for poorer students in schools. The Electoral reform policy was bungled and I don't even remember the health board elections
@mikethebloodthirsty6 ай бұрын
Meanwhile in reality the world these politicians created was that England became pretty much the only country on Europe to force THEIR OWN CHILDREN to come out of university with 50 grand debts. If that doesn't tell you the nature of the rulers we've had then nothing will, I believe Blair was a intrinsic part of that initialive... And the Lib Dems did nothing to moderate it.
@Clone6836 ай бұрын
I just hope in 2029 they dont end up going into a coalition with the Tories again, it nearly destroyed the party last time
@fordia6 ай бұрын
and the time before (WW2 coalition of 1940-45) where they nearly disappeared after, and the time before that (WW1 coalition of 1916-18 government) when they split into 2, then 3, parties and stopped being a party of government.....getting into government with the Conservatives has never worked well for the Liberals/LibDems!
@royw-g31206 ай бұрын
The other choices would have been to prop up Gordon Brown (who was wildly unpopular) or chicken out of government altogether. Both worse choices than going with Cameron , who they did agree with on most social issues it was that government that brought in gay marriage for example.
@RedXlV6 ай бұрын
@@royw-g3120 Nah, they should've just propped up Labour but on the condition that Brown step down as PM in favor of...anybody else.
@TheBreadthatcausedLesMis6 ай бұрын
Given the direction the Tories have gone. The current Tories are no where near the likes of the Cameron era. The Cameron Era was much more centre-right than now. So we are definitely never going to work with the Tories. Especially given how the Lib Dems are probably one of the most Pro-EU and Trans positive parties and the Tories look to be going all in on the whole Culture War Anti-Woke stuff.
@muhdhanif10486 ай бұрын
They can try confidence and supply agreement.
@AlekWheeler6 ай бұрын
Honestly whomever created this Lib Dem campaign is a genius.
@benknowles96336 ай бұрын
You give us content and we give you our time
@taukid4216 ай бұрын
Lib Dems, as not one of the 2 biggest parties, should first fight to change the terrible voting system away from the FPTP, so you can have more than 2 parties without the spoiler effect.
@thisisplana6 ай бұрын
I continue to wonder which party appeals to Classical Liberals. While the Lib Dems are positioned as moderates, they also appear to inhabit the center-left politically, operating far more as Social Democrats than as Liberals.
@CountScarlioni6 ай бұрын
The Liberals abandoned their laissez-faire (or what would now be called "libertarian") origins a long time ago. But then in the UK that kind of "Let the market do as it likes" ideology has a very dark history, being blamed for the extreme poverty much highlighted in Charles Dickens' novels and in the horrific mass starvations laissez-faire ideology caused in the Irish potato famine of the 1840s. Traditionally, Tories were the party of ancient continuity. They served the aristocracy, the country gents and the landed classes. The Whigs (proto-Liberals) were the party of merchants, entrepreneurs and empire builders. As Britain's electoral franchise (for men) widened out by degrees between the 1830s and the 1880s, the middle class and even some working class voices began to have their say in politics. Since the Tories had less to offer these "new money" voters, the Liberals proclaimed themselves the party of the common people. In order to chase down more new-franchise votes, the Liberals began to build ever-more progressive policies aimed at attracting them. That's how they ended up being about liberalism but not about libertarianism. When Labour emerged in the 20th century, that popular working class support evaporated from under them. The current Liberal Democrats are a merger of the old Liberal Party that survived as a hollowed out ruin (and I think still survives in small enclaves), and the 1980s political rebels, the "Social Democratic Party" (of whom my Dad was a member!) which broke away from the right wing of Labour. They combined forces, planting their flag on the hybridist centre ground. Their ticket has been to offer a capitalist free-market economy often distrusted by the left, but with a strong social conscience, often lacking in the right.
@belstar11286 ай бұрын
none at least not in the uk
@Historia.Magistra.Vitae.6 ай бұрын
There are no (Classical) Liberal parties in the UK... considering the history of the country, I doubt it would be particularly popular to advocate limited government and the complete abolition of Monarchy. Most of the European countries are too socialist for us (Classical) Liberals.
@wildfire92805 ай бұрын
@@Historia.Magistra.Vitae. Very _liberal_ use of socialism there.
@wildfire92805 ай бұрын
@@CountScarlioni That hybridism you’re describing sounds a lot like Georgism. And wouldn’t you know, coincidentally, the their once official (now unofficial) anthem is a Georgist protest song. Odd they didn’t campaign on reviving that with arguably the best time for it to strike a chord.
@TribalmonkeyS6 ай бұрын
I hope they push cannabis legalisation together with Greens and SNP. There must be about 100 sympathetic labour MPs that would vote with them
@leehallam93656 ай бұрын
That extra profile creates a problem for the Lib Dems. Up to the Coalition they were a centre party pulling support equally from right and left. Polling of supporters then suggested no strong second preference between the two main parties. That changed and now they are firmly a left of centre party whose positions are difficult to seperate from Labour's main stream. That means that they no longer seek to be the king maker party holding the balance of power, which means they struggle to win ex Tory defectors, that is what has limited growth in their voter base. Its their skill in focused campaigns and encouraging tactical voting that has boosted their seat numbers. The big question is how will they adapt to opposing a Labour Government? Will they just act as a rubber stamp and appear pointless? Or will they attack them hoping to win unsettled voters to their right in greater numbers than they upset Labour supporters who lent them their vote this time.
@kendrickpi6 ай бұрын
Had forgotten about the voting reform referendum, the lack of ground work and story telling than as know is disappointing! FPTP, which is the biggest bully in the playground, isn’t the best form of governance. We need adults in government AND the citizens/voters.
@Whataboutism-o8j6 ай бұрын
their seat share is still below their voter share even in their best case scenerio in 2024
@Left-is-right-81926 ай бұрын
I ended up voting for them. It was between them and greens, but I’m more centre leaning. I didn’t vote Labour because they were more negative on EU membership discussion. Think how much better the U.K. would be though if clegg had created a government with Labour. Thanks.
@LordDoof6 ай бұрын
Why can't more people campaign like Ed Davies? Guy's hilarious without being a crass or mean sort of entertaining.
@xander10526 ай бұрын
If Labour loses their majority, which I expect they do, Ed Davey gets to fix our system for once and for all alongside Keir.
@mithlond786 ай бұрын
Ed davey might be the happiest politician
@theconqueringram52956 ай бұрын
If they keep this up, they may become the official opposition.
@tutacat6 ай бұрын
3:30 The voice inflexion for the second part here (and partifularly saying the amount) sounded a bit like following on from the previous, as if if it was contrasting or adding to the first count, when it is completely separate (votes v elected seats)
@beastbbq53746 ай бұрын
Could you please do the estimated short money total for Reform as they got about 5 million votes but 5 seats? Just wondering what their total seats, votes and overall would be (higher or lower than the lib-dems?)
@gameofender44636 ай бұрын
I think Reform got over four million votes and the third highest number of votes overall. They were apparently 2nd place in nearly 100 seats.
@osgur96366 ай бұрын
4 seats and 4.1million votes means they'll get around 997k pounds in money
@bobmcgod52146 ай бұрын
@osgur9636 they got 5 seats though.
@CashelOConnolly6 ай бұрын
Been to the post office recently,Ed😡
@Wesllyn_6 ай бұрын
God damn I got here quick and it’s 4 Am (I’m American)
@saahiliyer116 ай бұрын
Central Time?
@Poseiden26 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this genuinely informative piece. The funding model is particularly enlightening - it'll be interesting to see how the extra £2.4 million will assist the LD's, as well as being able to chair a couple of committees.
@aleccoates90946 ай бұрын
As the second biggest opposition they also get 3 opposition days per parliamentary session, which let them set the parliamentary agenda for the day.
@El-Burrito6 ай бұрын
Not actually a lib dem, but as long as they have the best chance to beat a Tory in my constituency I'll keep voting for them
@walterfillingham6 ай бұрын
They did very well in the Highlands winning both giant seats. The Highlands have always traditionally been Lib Dem
@mikaelsza6 ай бұрын
Short Money... Not too little money! It's named by a someone called Short 😂 British Comedy
@classbot12376 ай бұрын
The mic sounds worst
@DaDunge6 ай бұрын
Not much I imagine, they had this time to overtake the tories, they failed to do so.
@English_Dawn6 ай бұрын
All parties have geographic strengths, the LibDems make the most of theirs and despite FPTP, can gain. For-the-record the natural foe of ReformUK is Labour, not the Conservatives as inferred.
@thedoye12396 ай бұрын
Labour are not currently the Reform opposition? It's the Tories, as the number of Labour voters who would swing all the way to Reform while skipping the Tories is very low as they are on completely different sides of the political spectrum. (Labour centre left, Reform far right)
@in5linesofcodeorless5526 ай бұрын
Labour and reform may be more different than tories and reform. But this means that reform takes votes off the tories not labour
@English_Dawn6 ай бұрын
@@thedoye1239 Thank you for your answer but I slightly disagree. Tories are merely a nuisance, collateral damage, to ReformUK. 1). The Tories have incompatible sections. Two thirds of the parliamentary party have left social conservatism behind and are effectively neo-liberal. The remaining parliamentary party and the bulk of the membership are social conservatives very similar, small "c" conservatives as ReformUK who have taken up the vacuum left by the Conservative Parliamentarians. 2). ReformUK are centre right not "far" right. If "far" right means loving their country and trying to preserve it is "far" right then 98% of the country is "far" right. It is an adolescent form of abuse by the left, including some elements of the main steam media, to decry people they don't agree with and are unable to debate with. 3). ReformUK came second to Labour in 98 seats. ReformUK is THE challenger to Labour, not the Tories, in those seats. Those seats tend to be non-metropolitan England. Any by-elections outside metropolitan England will be instructive. Existentially the Tories will have to look for a way forward. Do they become LibDem Lite or go back to being socially conservative again? If the former, geographically they won't be much of a problem for ReformUK. If the latter they could be a problem for ReformUK, probably not geographically but I see the neo-lib 2/3rds winning for the future of conservatism. Thank you for your interest.
@English_Dawn6 ай бұрын
@@in5linesofcodeorless552 Thank you, yes currently but medium term Labour is the quarry. The Tories are in a mess as to their future. Do they carry on on their neo-liberal path or do they return to being socially conservative again? My guess is the former. That leaves an open-goal for ReformUK to park on the centre-right ground left behind. One third of the Conservative Parliamentary MP's and practically all members are social conservatives and they have a dilemma. Do they fight a losing battle and stay in the Conservative Party controlled by the neo-liberal {2/3rd} or join ReformUK? ReformUK second only to Labour in 98 constituencies. This is non-metropolitan England and will be interesting following any by-elections in eventualities where it could be a straight fight, ReformUK and Labour. Much obliged for your thoughts.
@Joker-yw9hl6 ай бұрын
Agreed. Reform may be right-wing but people keep forgetting that they're taking votes away from would-be Labour voters, I.e., the working class right who are concerned about immigration and cultural erosion
@ibzbebo6 ай бұрын
Mistake 4:03, read out as 7.7 when it is written as 6.7
@bl_nderscore6 ай бұрын
Its pronounced "ming-us" not "men-zees"
@razabadass6 ай бұрын
Thanks
@LordWalsallian6 ай бұрын
I wonder whether they’ll still campaign for Proportional Representation now they’ve actually benefitted from FPTP? Now that they have the numbers to pressure Labour for it, will they do so?
@JulianCooke-yn5lh6 күн бұрын
What now? Disappearance into woke obscurity. Oh, and a paddling pool for Ed to play in over Christmas.
@maxresdefault_6 ай бұрын
After campaigning for voting system reform, I hope they continue pushing for it, despite benefiting massively from the current system in this particular election
@boop536 ай бұрын
what if the centrists tories join the liberal democrats and the centre right tories merge with reform
@benh7156 ай бұрын
Fun fact of the day, and don’t ask me why, but Menzies Campbell’s first name is pronounce “mingiss.”
@armintargaryen92166 ай бұрын
As a non-British person, I always assumed LibDem was right-wing, or centre-right at least. Colour me surprised to discover they are actually considered centre-left. Seems that I was applying my home country biases unknowingly. But how come they don't turn out redundant with the centrist New Labour, specially under Starmer? I don't really understand
@lightsout62926 ай бұрын
They are historically both centre left or right depending on their leader and state of the nations politics. They actually took seats from the Conservatives this time; moderate Conservatives and the moderate left are usually who vote for them. They do very well at local elections, too.
@lightsout62926 ай бұрын
If either of the main parties falter, it's usually them the middle of the electorate turn too
@Joeshapiro76 ай бұрын
My understanding is that the Liberal Democrats tend to be more socially liberal and more supportive of a stronger relationship with Europe then Labour.
@quintuscrinis6 ай бұрын
0:43 musleading graph - they only got 11 seats in 2019 so more than quadrupled. Almost a septupling! Even if you take the 15 they had at dissolution, that is closer to a quintupling than quadrupling.
@Evemeister126 ай бұрын
Ed Davey does all the wacky stunts like boris johnson once did, but minus the malevolence and two-facedness of the latter
@armando36996 ай бұрын
Menzies is pronounced ‘ming-iss’ by the way
@iGamezRo6 ай бұрын
Playing kingmaker is what made their 9 year downfall. Maybe they should just wait or at max make a confidence and supply agreement with whomever would be the largest party.
@VGCKenny6 ай бұрын
I'm an American, and I'm just now learning about Short Money. On the one hand, it seems ridiculous that any party gets money allocated to it from the House of Commons instead of that money being used for things that benefit people, at also benefits bigger parties. On the other hand though, this is probably money that smaller parties would not have if it wasn't given to them, meaning that Labour and the Tories would become even bigger and more obviously the two main parties with any smaller parties becoming even less significant. And as much as I am sure where I am politically, I do think the US could do with smaller parties, and that both the US and UK should move towards Ranked Choice voting to host many different viewpoints and give people a choice without having to sacrifice their needs by electing an ideological opponent All in all, Short Money feels like putting duct tape on something that you should probably call the plumber for but it seems to be holding up for now.
@TrevorSturman6 ай бұрын
3:57 - Estimated Tory money ending in 666? ITS A SIGN 🤣
@TheGerkuman6 ай бұрын
Small pronunciation correction: Menzies is pronounced Ming-is. (The z isn't really a z but a replacement for the 'yogh' (ȝ), similar to how the y in ye old is really 'thorn' (þ), and thus should be pronounced 'th'.)
@altariamotives166 ай бұрын
The fact that they won the most seats ever just by staying out of it and letting everyone else destroy themselves says a lot about the state of British politics
@fateenshareef87166 ай бұрын
Their biggest problem has been institutionalizing their gains. They need to clearly define themselves on the political spectrum and see truly what causes they are closer to. Definitive policies will help them be more than just a tactical or protest vote party. Going into coalition with the Tories and ditching university fees was the worst thing they unleashed on themselves.
@soton5teve6 ай бұрын
2nd* largest party of local councillor's
@1990SammieJ6 ай бұрын
In hindsight, a coalition with Labour would have been less suicidal
@PsychoSavager2896 ай бұрын
Menzies Campbell's name is pronounced "Mingis" or "Ming" for short, not "menses".
@GhostNameless6 ай бұрын
Prepare to pay high taxes. HAHAHAHA!
@lukeorlando48146 ай бұрын
Voting Lib Dem started as a tactical vote and the more I looked the more I realised I wish they could have made opposition. Alas tories still won here.
@frankiemia6 ай бұрын
Menzies is pronounced Mingis. Hence his abbreviated name being “Ming” Campbell.
@NeonVisual6 ай бұрын
I like Ed and may vote for them in 2029
@JackChurchill1016 ай бұрын
Does anyone know what the liberals actually are? What differentiates them in terms of ethos or direction? Feels like people only vote for them to avoid the grumpy bloat of labour and the small state callousness of conservatives. Like a safe place to dump a protest vote, and still feel like "you're engaging".
@polsalaprat47266 ай бұрын
TLDR has a video on their manifesto,in some things they are leftier than labour
@socire726 ай бұрын
Yeah I know. Their problem is no one knows about what they stand for.
@thedoye12396 ай бұрын
The Lib dems stand left on social issues, like proportional voting, lowering voting age, saving the environment, helping care workers and funding the NHS. On economics' they want to fund more social programs and increase spending (They say without major tax increases). Also the Liberal party is a different party which used to be the opposition to the Tories in the early 1900's before the Labour party got big. The Liberal party then merged with another party to become the Liberal Democrats. (Although some Liberal candidates still exist)
@DomWood6 ай бұрын
it's kinda complicated, but they are different - they're generally further 'left' than labour, but that's largely 'cause labour's a big tent movement focused on big tent movements like unions (and by extent more generalised ideology) than because they libs are intensely left in british political tradition - they do after all manage to take seats from tories. the libs do have something of a 400 year tradition to their politics, too - hell, you can draw a straight line from them to the _roundheads_ and the 'centrist' levellers, even the proto-socialist movements like the diggers. the tories, labour and the libs are all similar products of the same mongrel intermingling of people who can find common ground on general ideas, but the internal politics vary WILDLY, so they both overlap and diverge in strange ways, the divisions between them are created in particular ways, etc. libs aren't a wasted vote, they're an established party with a solid support base - they ruined their rep over the coalition, rightly, but their political tradition is one many voters actually prefer - abundantly clear in this result.
@olsenfernandes36346 ай бұрын
You should read their manifesto. Because they don't have to care about the far left or right they end up with the best policies. Unfortunately, their marketing is very very bad if it exists at all.
@oliverleonard77306 ай бұрын
The next target has to be overtaking the Tories and becoming the official opposition the difficulty is that the Lib Dems only came 2nd in 25 seats they'd need to gain a few seats from 3rd place to make significant gains.
@CrowArchLane6 ай бұрын
Minor FYI @1:42 that the name 'Menzies' is pronounced 'Ming-iss' as its scottish
@321chaza6 ай бұрын
It’s pronounced ‘Ming’. Like Starmer’s ming vase strategy.
@portuguesespinningplate6 ай бұрын
Reform better
@michaelgreen15156 ай бұрын
I suspect experience will make their King making more like the DUP's than Cleggie's?
@Ganjor4206 ай бұрын
lol those last two parties got each 4 seats with 200k and almost 2 million votes 😅 can this even be considered a democracy?
@rolandrothwell4840Ай бұрын
The Liberal Democrats will hold the Labour Government to account. They are a sensible, practical party who should replace the Conservatives as the opposition
@bestrafung27546 ай бұрын
Could you do a video about the rise of the Green Party? They only have 4 seats but would probably have way more with proportional representation. The party gained almost 2 million votes and have been growing a lot, including the membership. It could be interesting and you've already spoken a lot about the Liberal Democrats and Reform UK.
@kamranrachlin27696 ай бұрын
Is there any reason you didn’t include reform in the short money graph? Just a really weird editorial choice
@debbiemckeown76266 ай бұрын
I think if Conservatives fail to elect a new leader that can unite the party and they keep fighting they could challenge for being the official opposition if they keep up the momentum they gained recently.
@aaronjones89056 ай бұрын
It would be helpful to lay out what the real differences between the Lib Dems and Labour are.
@eddiecalderone6 ай бұрын
😂
@Anti_Immigration6 ай бұрын
It makes me cry. European countries are selling their culture, history, and everything our ancestors stood for. I think it is too late to stop migration. Europe chose death.
@ThomasBoyd-lo9si6 ай бұрын
That £3519119 for 72 Liberal Democrats MP's yes for 5 years House of Commons Parliament Thomas.
@evonne_o6 ай бұрын
Would love Ed to use his now found fame to promote the Lib Dems to people especially those from thr Tories especially when their party is falling apart as the alternative to Labour.
@Snookbone6 ай бұрын
It's a shame you didn't do due diligence on the pronunciation of Menzies Campbell's name.