The left-wing Guardian newspaper is normally about as much use for accurate information as a one legged footballer would be as a goalscorer in an FA Cup Final at Wembley. It’s the sort of organ that makes good cat litter tray liner but ain’t good for much else. But, if this story from the Guardian, which I was alerted to by Maven Politic ( @Maven_Politic ) on the minds.com platform, is to be believed, then Labour are truly looking at a political bloodbath of epic proportions. For those of us who’ve seen our areas ruined and our families endangered by Labour’s economic incompetence, lunatic immigration policies, Islamopandering and obsession with social engineering, this bloodbath can’t come quick enough.
The Guardian is stating that so many formerly safe or safe-ish Labour seats are at risk that it’s now worth the Tories making the effort to unseat these Red destroyers. Buoyed up by the remarkable unpopularity of Comrade Corbyn and his band of Leftist mental patients, seats where the Conservatives would previously never stood a chance in, now look like winnable targets.
Here’s part of the Guardian story which was published yesterday the 26th April.
The Guardian said:
Conservative campaigners are planning to target high-profile Labour MPs, some with large majorities, in the hope of unseating current and former shadow ministers including Liz Kendall, Tom Watson and Vernon Coaker.
Labour is set to send resources for election battles in seats that the party would normally consider to be safe, including campaigns to shore up MPs who have majorities of more than 10,000.
Kendall, a former Labour leadership candidate who is well regarded by the party’s right wing, has a majority of just over 7,000 in her Leicester West constituency, but local Tories say they are hopeful of taking the seat.
Conservatives also said they were optimistic about unseating Nottingham MPs Lilian Greenwood, a former shadow transport secretary, and Coaker, the former schools minister.
“It’s going to be a bloodbath and Labour know it,” one Conservative MP said. “We’re going after people like Liz Kendall, and I think we’ll give her a good run. Lilian Greenwood, Vernon Coaker will be gone as well. Tom Watson is in a bit of trouble as well because he’s got a big Ukip vote [which may go Conservative].”
Another Midlands Tory MP said: “We are going to do very well in the east Midlands and the question is how well. Vernon Coaker is going to have to work very hard to keep that seat, even though he’s been there 20 years. In the West Midlands, we’re going to do even better.”
Read the rest of this Guardian piece by visiting the link below:
If there’s any truth in this story then it looks like brilliant news for Britain. For far too long Labour have had safe seats in the Midlands and the North where people traditionally voted Labour and they continued to vote Labour even though Labour’s policies were hurting individuals and communities. It appears that voters are at last recognising that Labour’s policies, which are dominated by the views of the southern English Middle Class Left, are doing them no good whatsoever. Labour’s performance when last in government which brought economic chaos, open door immigration policies, a horrific policy by Labour local government to cover up Islamic Rape Gangs along with the ‘Corbyn factor’ are forcing people to realise that Labour is not for them. Labour might now be the ‘Islam Party’ in all but name, but they are no longer the party for the British working classes.
I know of voters in areas such as the North East where voting Labour is a way of life, who are saying things like: ‘I’ll vote Tory this time, I might have to scrub myself afterwards, but I can’t vote Labour’. Labour whether they are in national or local government have terribly let down the British people with their policies, their corruption and their ineptitude and they really deserve to be politically punished for this.
Let us hope that the Guardian article is correct and that this is the election that makes Labour into a mere unpleasant footnote in British political history.