- Location
- Municipal Commune of Bourne
- Pronouns
- He/Him
based on that terrible tim montgomerie graphic
R E A L I G N M E N T
Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom
1979-1989: Margaret Thatcher (Liberal)
1979 (Coalition with Nationals) def. Michael Foot (Solidarity), Willie Whitelaw (National), Enoch Powell (Freedom)
1982 (Majority) def. Michael Foot (Solidarity), Geoffrey Dickens (Freedom), Willie Whitelaw (National)
1985 (Coalition with Freedom) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Geoffrey Dickens (Freedom), Norman St John-Stevas (National)
1989-1990: Margaret Thatcher (Freedom minority)
1990-1997: John Major (Liberal)
1990 (Coalition with Nationals) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Margaret Thatcher (Freedom), Michael Heseltine (National)
1994 (Majority) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Michael Heseltine (National), Norman Tebbit (Freedom)
1997-2007: Tony Blair (Liberal)
1999 (Majority) def. Alex Salmond (Solidarity), Malcolm Rifkind (National), Norman Tebbit (Freedom)
2003 (Minority, with National confidence and supply) def. Vince Cable (Solidarity), Malcolm Rifkind (National), John Redwood (Freedom)
2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Solidarity)
2007 (Minority) def. David Cameron (National), Tony Blair (Liberal), John Redwood (Freedom)
2010-2016: David Cameron (National)
2010 (Majority) def. Gordon Brown (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), Nick Clegg (Liberal)
2014 (Majority) def. Alex Salmond (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), George Osborne (Liberal)
2016-0000: Theresa May (National)
2019 (Coalition with Freedom) def. Ted Miliband (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), David Miliband (Liberal)
Party Rundown
National - Polls for the next election are looking rough, as the Freedomites surge. Most recently the West Country Council fell to a Freedom led coalition, outpolling the Tories and leaving the Liberals in the dust. It took the Tories ninety years to get back into power, it looks like that might not last much longer
Solidarity - Looking forward to a breakthrough if Freedom splits the right vote enough, but there's been another outburst of tabloid panic over Solidarity's communist affiliates, and obviously David got his oar in. Of course that same election in the West Country showed a shocking percentage of the young voting Solidarity - no doubt helped along by all those cifs on Senatter drooling over Gordon Brown - but you know what turnout in that demographics like.
Freedom - Nigel Farage may be currently under investigation for literal crimes, but with his hands around the throat of the government, it isn't expected for that to lead anywhere. More important possibly is how many young people - possibly turned off by how mainstream youth adoration of Gordon Brown is - are joining their grandparents to moon over Margaret Thatcher.
Liberal - At least David gets them in the paper a lot, but its difficult for them to get a word in edgeways about actual issues when every single party can point at them and blame them for Britain's travails given their dominance for most of the last century.
R E A L I G N M E N T
Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom
1979-1989: Margaret Thatcher (Liberal)
1979 (Coalition with Nationals) def. Michael Foot (Solidarity), Willie Whitelaw (National), Enoch Powell (Freedom)
1982 (Majority) def. Michael Foot (Solidarity), Geoffrey Dickens (Freedom), Willie Whitelaw (National)
1985 (Coalition with Freedom) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Geoffrey Dickens (Freedom), Norman St John-Stevas (National)
1989-1990: Margaret Thatcher (Freedom minority)
1990-1997: John Major (Liberal)
1990 (Coalition with Nationals) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Margaret Thatcher (Freedom), Michael Heseltine (National)
1994 (Majority) def. Tony Benn (Solidarity), Michael Heseltine (National), Norman Tebbit (Freedom)
1997-2007: Tony Blair (Liberal)
1999 (Majority) def. Alex Salmond (Solidarity), Malcolm Rifkind (National), Norman Tebbit (Freedom)
2003 (Minority, with National confidence and supply) def. Vince Cable (Solidarity), Malcolm Rifkind (National), John Redwood (Freedom)
2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Solidarity)
2007 (Minority) def. David Cameron (National), Tony Blair (Liberal), John Redwood (Freedom)
2010-2016: David Cameron (National)
2010 (Majority) def. Gordon Brown (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), Nick Clegg (Liberal)
2014 (Majority) def. Alex Salmond (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), George Osborne (Liberal)
2016-0000: Theresa May (National)
2019 (Coalition with Freedom) def. Ted Miliband (Solidarity), Nigel Farage (Freedom), David Miliband (Liberal)
Party Rundown
National - Polls for the next election are looking rough, as the Freedomites surge. Most recently the West Country Council fell to a Freedom led coalition, outpolling the Tories and leaving the Liberals in the dust. It took the Tories ninety years to get back into power, it looks like that might not last much longer
Solidarity - Looking forward to a breakthrough if Freedom splits the right vote enough, but there's been another outburst of tabloid panic over Solidarity's communist affiliates, and obviously David got his oar in. Of course that same election in the West Country showed a shocking percentage of the young voting Solidarity - no doubt helped along by all those cifs on Senatter drooling over Gordon Brown - but you know what turnout in that demographics like.
Freedom - Nigel Farage may be currently under investigation for literal crimes, but with his hands around the throat of the government, it isn't expected for that to lead anywhere. More important possibly is how many young people - possibly turned off by how mainstream youth adoration of Gordon Brown is - are joining their grandparents to moon over Margaret Thatcher.
Liberal - At least David gets them in the paper a lot, but its difficult for them to get a word in edgeways about actual issues when every single party can point at them and blame them for Britain's travails given their dominance for most of the last century.