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Energy Secretary Chris Huhne suggests the Yes to alternative vote campaign has lost, just hours before the referendum result is due in. Mr Huhne - one the most vocal Yes campaigners - told the BBC that "if the boxes are anything like what I've seen it doesn't look good for the Yes cause". Polls suggest voters will reject a switch from first-past-the-post, to AV where candidates are ranked in order of preference. The result is expected around 2000 BST.
Energy Secretary Chris Huhne suggests the Yes to alternative vote campaign has lost, just hours before the referendum result is due in.
Mr Huhne - one the most vocal Yes campaigners - told the BBC that "if the boxes are anything like what I've seen it doesn't look good for the Yes cause".
Polls suggest voters will reject a switch from first-past-the-post, to AV where candidates are ranked in order of preference.
The result is expected around 2000 BST.
In fact, if it weren't for the No2AV adverts, nobody would even have known there was a referendum going on. And people were getting overpaid good money to run this sort of nonsense, whose side were they really on ?
And to cap it all, these supposedly professional campaigners seemed shocked to discover that tories (and David Blunkett) tell lies to achieve their ends, again and again and again. It's as TBG wrote in his diary
1. Reduce arguments to trite dog-whistle talking points - such as flip-flopper, tax-and-spend, "soft on defence", and so on. 2. Lie. Repeatedly, in public, with no moral consistency in their talking points. If you accept that the purpose of politics is power, not integrity, neither of these becomes shocking.
2. Lie. Repeatedly, in public, with no moral consistency in their talking points.
If you accept that the purpose of politics is power, not integrity, neither of these becomes shocking.
Do they not pay attention ? Gah !!
I have to say I was disappointed that Labour seemed so half-hearted about campaigning. A bit of Ed Miliband here, a bit of Eddie Izzard there. But a poll reveals that 60% of Labour voters didn't know that Labour were in favour of reform, largely cos the only labour politicians we saw campaigning were John Reid, David Blunkett and Margaret Beckett, all of whom were on the No side.
If Labour really wanted AV to win, then they didn't really give much of a sign. keep to the Fen Causeway
Still I would have expected English Labour MPs to be more active on encouraging a yes vote, even though there was no party line as such.
Saw a comment on twitter that has been retweeted massively - "32% of people vote for AV and that's a rejection. 35% of people vote for the Tories and that's a 5 year mandate"
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