quote:
Originally posted by Garage Joe:
So Danjay. Do you think that the usual grumpy moaning suspects on here would prefer a return to the left wing style of Eden, MacMillan, Wilson, Callaghan etc. Would they prefer to take even more power away from government and let the evil capitalists run the lot? Or something else? I can't work it out.
Lots of people vote for a change of government if the current government has chossed enough of them off during their tenure. In some ways, that's not too bad as a regular change of government limits the extent of the damage each government does. Lots of people simply vote as their parents voted, or how they normally vote, irrespective of the changes governments introduce.
I'd prefer people to look at themes. What themes does, say, a Labour government pursue? Are they consistent in what they do or are they populist and a bit incoherent? What political philosophy do they come from? What do they stand for? Who do they naturally favour in the competition of interests?
By observation, the majority here over the last few months are people with quite limited incomes. The vocal ones anyway. Their interests lie in getting more money, whether through lower taxes or more state benefits. For those who are not working for various reasons, I expect they want a large state if they vote for themselves and live for the moment. If they vote for longer term prosperity then I expected they ought to vote for a small state and a private market economy.
Some of them will remember what it was like when Keynesian economics failed in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s. Supply side support, wage freezes, the industrial relations carnage, wild inflation, large national debts, national crises, and so on.