Country set for ‘filthy election’ after ‘scaremongering’ leaflet circulates Dublin, says TD
Government must impose 'a rent freeze', Micheál Martin tells DáilMr Martin was commenting on the latest figures on rent increases which he said had especially hit young people. He said rents in certain parts of Dublin had increased by 125pc over the past nine years and similar levels of increases happened in Cork, Limerick and Galway.
There is little doubt that Britain is facing a seismic choice over its future in the December 12 We’re only two weeks into the campaign and lots could and will change, but so far this is the meh election
In Great Britain , most electors are enrolled during the course of the annual canvass, which electoral registration officers are obliged to conduct every year between August and November.[23] Canvass
© Handout / Reuters Editor’s note: The opinions in this article are the author’s, as published by our content partner, and do not represent the views of MSN or Microsoft.
It is the most important vote of our lives, the host of the first live TV debate of Britain’s general campaign said. And for once, it wasn’t pure hyperbole.
There is little doubt that Britain is facing a seismic choice over its future in the December 12 poll—not just whether and how to leave the European Union, but also on the even more fundamental question of what type of country it wishes to be. Does it want Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s somewhat hazy but largely centrist vision of mid-Atlantic capitalism, or the opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn’s socialism? On the line is almost everything that has been a hallmark of Britain’s political consensus in the post–Margaret Thatcher era: from Britain’s relationship with Europe to Scotland’s future in the United Kingdom, the role of government in the economy, and even the “special relationship” with the United States.
Fine Gael candidate says some asylum seekers need to be 'deprogrammed' of potential ISIS links
A Fine Gael by-election candidate has got herself in hot water over comments about the need for some asylum seekers coming to Ireland to be "deprogrammed." Verona Murphy, a candidate in the Wexford by-election on November 29 said some of these people "carry angst" and may have been "infiltrated by ISIS". Verona Murphy, a candidate in the Wexford by-election on November 29 said some of these people "carry angst" and may have been "infiltrated by ISIS".
Britain ’ s Meh Election . Today at 10:53 AM www.theatlantic.com. 0 0 0 0. The two biggest pieces of disinformation in the UK election have come from the governmentToday at 7:53 AMwww.cnn.com.
This is a list of United Kingdom general elections ( elections for the UK House of Commons) since the first in 1802. The members of the 1801–1802 Parliament had been elected to the former Parliament
And yet, to all of this the country appears to be shrugging its shoulders with an almost comically British cynicism. We’re only two weeks into the campaign and lots could and will change, but so far this is the meh election, the If I really must election—the Oh for God’s sake election. It is a contest between two unpopular men offering visions for the future that the public already seems to have agreed are dishonest. (One questioner at the debate received his own round of applause by asking how voters could trust either of them.)
Johnson says he will “get Brexit done.” If he wins a parliamentary majority, it’s true that Britain will leave the EU. But to create what kind of economic model, we do not know. The pitch is essentially this: Enough with the toe-dipping uncertainty of whether to take the plunge. What we’ll do once we’re in the water is not so important, because we’re getting too chilly standing here in the cold waiting. Corbyn, meanwhile, is suggesting another referendum to decide whether to jump, or whether it might be best to go back to the warmth of the changing rooms and put our clothes on. Of course, he has not said which of these choices he himself supports (and declined to do so when pressed during the debate).
Leaked Russian interference report raises UK vote questions
Leaked Russian interference report raises UK vote questionsThe Sunday Times says the report from Parliament’s intelligence committee concludes that Russian interference may have affected Britain’s 2016 Brexit referendum, though the impact was “unquantifiable.
The 1768 British general election returned members to serve in the House of Commons of the 13th Parliament of Great Britain to be held, after the merger of the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland in 1707.
The British Election Study. Explaining Britain ' s electoral behaviour for over 50 years. About the British Election Study. Meet the BES team.
© Reuters Prime Minister Boris Johnson looks out over the sea during a General Election campaign trail stop in Saltburn-by-the-Sea. All elections are different, but looking back it’s hard to think of a recent one quite as different as this. As an adult, either watching or covering British general elections, only two have ushered in a decisively different change of philosophy: Tony Blair’s first victory, in 1997, when he led Labour on a platform of heavy investment in public services without changing the fundamentals of the economy, and David Cameron’s in 2010, when the Conservatives imposed sweeping spending cuts to tackle a widening budget deficit after the financial crisis. Blair’s was carried through with broad popular enthusiasm, winning multiple landslide victories, while Cameron’s was supported only grudgingly, and required him to form an electoral pact with the smaller Liberal Democrats to govern at all. Other than those two, the other elections of my adult life were essentially battles over tweaks to the consensus—whether to increase spending a little slower than Labour before 2010, or to reduce spending a little less drastically than the Tories thereafter.
Teenagers among hundreds who had at least six abortions in UK
Five teenagers were among hundreds of women who had at least their sixth abortion in Britain last year, Sky News has learnt. Data for England, Wales and Scotland also shows more than 140 women had at least their eighth termination in 2018 - an increase of more than a quarter over the previous two years.Anti-abortion campaigners said the figures were "extremely alarming" and suggested that recent law changes allowing early abortion pills to be taken at home had contributed to an increase in repeat terminations.
The 1796 British general election returned members to serve in the 18th and last House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain . They were summoned before the Union of Great Britain and Ireland on 1 January 1801.
Britain ' s ' meh ' election (Atlantic). The remote polar bear town rapidly losing its famous residents (Mashable). Share this story About sharing.
The most recent election, in 2017, between Theresa May and Corbyn held out the prospect of being game-changing but fell short. At first, a groundswell of support for May looked like it might hand her a Blair-style majority to enact Brexit and change the country. Over the course of the campaign, however, Corbyn turned the tables in one of the most remarkable results in modern British political history. In the end, faced with two leaders offering ambiguous answers on the most fundamental question of the day—Brexit—the country returned an ambiguous answer of its own: a hung Parliament in which no one had a majority to govern. For the past two and a half years, Britain has been limping on from that indecisive blow, unable to decide whether to jump.
© Getty Today, for the first time in my adult life, both parties are offering enormous change: Johnson, with his proposal for a “hard” Brexit, ripping the U.K. from its place in the European single market and customs union within a year; Corbyn, in return, with a plan for the sweeping socialization of Britain’s economy, the imposition of a four-day workweek, and a complete reimagining of Britain’s role in the world.
How you rated Jeremy Corbyn and Boris Johnson in the ITV General Election leaders debate
It was their first head to head of the election campaign 2019The pair have clashed in the Commons since Mr Johnson took over as Prime Minister, but this time, it was on a prime time slot on ITV .
The 1715 British general election returned members to serve in the House of Commons of the 5th Parliament of Great Britain to be held, after the merger of the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland in 1707.
General Elections ( elections to the UK Parliament) usually take place every 5 years. be resident at an address in the UK (or a British citizen living abroad who has been registered to vote in the UK in
What is remarkable, so far at least, is that faced with these two radical—and radically different—policy platforms, the country has remained so seemingly phlegmatic. While Johnson has a clear lead in the early opinion polls (as May did in 2017), there has yet to be any obvious counter-swell of support. Labour is ticking up in some surveys and may yet confound its critics, but whereas May’s popularity started high and then plummeted in the campaign, the public already has an ambivalent view of Johnson and an awful view of Corbyn.
There has yet to be a real saturation in coverage or even any significant instances of anger among the electorate. Figures published this week showed that almost a third of under 25s have not registered to vote, and that a quarter of 25-to-34-year-olds haven’t, either. Voter registration is, in fact, down in almost every age group compared with European Parliament elections in 2014 and has remained largely static compared with 2015.
Johnson has suffered some heckling when out campaigning, yes, and there has been lots of election coverage in the broadcast and print media. The overriding reaction has been one of cynicism if anything, though. This was on display in the debate between Johnson and Corbyn, when the audience responded to pledges and promises from both men not with outrage but mocking laughter: to Corbyn’s notion of a cost-free four-day working week and to Johnson’s claim that getting Brexit done will solve everything.
FG figures want 'ticking timebomb' Murphy to lose amid anti-immigrant fears
FG figures want 'ticking timebomb' Murphy to lose amid anti-immigrant fearsTaoiseach Leo Varadkar's party is anxiously awaiting the by-election impact of the controversy over Ms Murphy's anti-immigrant comments, which have been described as racist.
LONDON — The general election next month, Britain ’ s fourth national vote in as many years, will be a moment of reckoning for one of the world’s oldest democracies.
The United Kingdom general elections overview is an overview of United Kingdom general election results since 1922. The 1922 election was the first election in the new United Kingdom of Great
Right now, it feels more like 2015, when Cameron plodded toward a surprising majority after a lackluster campaign, than a rerun of 2017, when the country was set alight in a seven-week festival that saw Corbyn come from nowhere to deny the Conservatives a majority. In 2015, the lethargy was so overwhelming that Cameron was forced to address it, insisting he felt “bloody lively” and really did care about winning.
Gallery: Leave vs Remain - Brexit reveals a divided UK (Photos)
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With the UK's withdrawal from the European Union (EU) experiencing various political complications, the country has seen increasing public discontent from both Leave and Remain supporters alike. Amidst a general air of uncertainty and ongoing frustration at the government's inability to mobilize a smooth withdrawal from the European bloc, demonstrators on both sides of the political spectrum have taken to the streets to give voice to their discontent. We look at some of the recent protests in pictures.
(Pictured) Anti-Brexit protesters take part in a 'Together for the Final Say' rally in Parliament Square as hundreds of thousands of people marched through central London to demand a public vote on the outcome of Brexit on Oct. 19 in London, England.
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Anti-Brexit demonstrators gather after taking part in a "People's Vote" protest march calling for another referendum on Britain's EU membership, in Parliament Square in London, England on Oct. 19.
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A pro-Brexit supporter sports dollar sign sunglasses amid huge anti-Brexit demonstrations across the city in London, England on Oct. 19.
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Demonstrators hold placards and EU and Union flags as they take part in a march by the People's Vote organisation in central London on Oct. 19, calling for a final say in a second referendum on Brexit.
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Protesters cheer during the People's Vote Rally in Parliament Square on Oct. 19 in London, England.
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Brexit supporters stand against a Union Jack while anti-Brexit protests took place across the capital, in London, England, on Oct. 19.
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A man walks past a 'Stop Brexit' placard fixed to railings on Abingdon Street outside the Houses of Parliament in London, England on Oct. 17.
What the papers say – November 25
The Conservatives’ manifesto leads Monday’s papers.The Guardian says the battle lines over public spending for the election have been drawn after the Prime Minister “set out a Conservative plan to spend just £2.9bn more a year against the £83bn outlined by Jeremy Corbyn”.
The 2015 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday, 7 May 2015 to elect 650 members to the House of Commons. It was the first general election at the end of a fixed-term Parliament.
The 1710 British general election produced a landslide victory for the Tories in the wake of the prosecution of Henry Sacheverell and the collapse of the previous Whig government led by Godolphin
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Anti-Brexit protesters demonstrate outside the Houses of Parliament as MPs return to their duties after prorogation was quashed by the Supreme Court judges on Sept. 25 in London, England.
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Brexit supporters protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London, England on Oct. 1.
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Anti-Brexit protesters demonstrate outside the Houses of Parliament on Sept. 25 in London, England.
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A pro-remain campaigner protests on Brighton Beach on day one of the Labour Party conference on Sept. 22 in Brighton, England.
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Pro-Brexit demonstrators wave the Union flag and hold placards outside the Supreme Court in central London, England, on the second day of the hearing into the decision by the government to prorogue parliament on Sept. 18.
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A man wearing an EU Flag hat plays drums in support of anti-Brexit protesters from a "Stop the Coup" protest outside Downing Street in central London, England on Aug. 31.
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Pro-Brexit demonstrators protest outside the Houses of Parliament in Westminster in London, England on Sept. 9.
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Liberal Democrat MP Ed Davey poses with Steve Bray of the Stand of Defiance European Movement (SODEM) and pro-remain protesters outside Parliament in London, England on Sept. 9.
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Pro-Brexit protesters hold placards aloft near the Houses of Parliament in central London, England on Sept. 5, 2019.
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An anti-Brexit protestor releases colored smoke outside the Houses of Parliament in London, England on Aug. 28.
The British public 'couldn't spell Pinocchio if they tried,' Boris Johnson's father Stanley says
He was answering a message on the Victoria Derbyshire that called his son Pinocchio , the character in a children's character that has become synonymous with lying.Asked about the viewers comments, he said: "That requires a degree of literacy, which I think the great British public doesn’t necessarily have."'That requires a degree of literacy'Stanley Johnson criticised the viewer who called his son a liar. (Photo: BBC)The presenter asked: "What do you mean by that?" He responded: "I'm not gonna get into that.
The 1708 British general election was the first general election to be held after the Acts of Union had united the Parliaments of England and Scotland. The election saw the Whigs finally gain a majority in the House of Commons
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Protestors from the European Movement in Scotland hold a walking vigil on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland on Aug. 28.
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Pro-Brexit protesters at the Churchill statue in Westminster Square in London, England on Aug. 31.
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An anti-Brexit protester reacts during a protest outside Downing Street in London, England on Aug. 28.
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Brexit protesters outside Westminster in London, England on Aug. 28.
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A pro-Brexit activist, with legs covered in sun cream on a scorching day in London, England, holds a 'We Voted Leave' board outside the Houses of Parliament on July 24.
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A young British anti-Brexit protester advises his fellow supporters to disobey police attempts to remove them from Parliament Square in London, England on Aug. 28.
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Pro-EU supporters protest outside the Houses of Parliament on Aug. 28 in London, England.
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Pro-Brexit supporters walk through London, England on Aug. 29.
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A demonstrator waves an EU flag and Union Jack in front of a line of police officers outside Downing Street in London, England on Aug. 28.
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A pro-Brexit campaigner wears the Union flag colours and holds placards as he demonstrates near the Houses of Parliament in central London, England on April 3.
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Pro-EU demonstrators hold placards and EU flags as they protest outside the Houses of Parliament on April 10 in London, England.
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People walk past EU and Union flags outside the Houses of Parliament in London, England on April 1.
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British politician Nigel Farage takes the stage to speak at a rally at Parliament Square after the final leg of the "March to Leave" in London on March 29.
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Anti-Brexit supporters protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London, England on April 1.
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A pro-Brexit protester holds a sign at a demonstration outside the Houses of Parliament on March 29.
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A far-right protester is detained by police during a pro-Brexit demonstration near the Houses of Parliament in London, England, on March 29.
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A man dressed as Darth Vader poses with a Union Jack near a pro-Brexit demonstration at Parliament Square in London on March 29.
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A young girl waves the European Flag in Green Park, London, during the Put It To The People March on March 23.
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Former UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage takes part in the "March to Leave" walk in Mansfield, England, on March 23.
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People hold up placards and European Union flags as they pass Trafalgar Square on a march and rally organised by the pro-European People's Vote campaign for a second EU referendum in central London on March 23.
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Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage addresses marchers from the top of a bus at the start of the 'March to Leave' walk from the village of Linby to Beeston, Nottinghamshire on March 23 in Mansfield.
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EU supporters, calling on the government to give Britons a vote on the final Brexit deal, participate in the 'People's Vote' march in central London on March 23.
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People gather in Linby for the 'March to Leave' walk on March 23.
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EU supporters participate in the 'People's Vote' march in central London, England on March 23.
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Pro-Brexit marchers in the village of Linby on March 23.
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People gather to take part in the 'Put It To The People' march on March 23 in London, England.
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'March to Leave' protesters set off from Linby village in Nottinghamshire towards London, England. The 14-day march began in Sunderland on March 16 and will end in the capital on March 29, where a mass rally will take place on Parliament Square.
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Protesters take part in the 'Put It To The People' march on Whitehall on March 23 in London, England.
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Nigel Farage reacts as he arrives at the end of the first leg of the March to Leave campaign on March 16 in Hartlepool, England.
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Pro-Brexit and anti-Brexit protesters hold flags as they demonstrate outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 14 as members debate a motion on whether to seek a delay to Britain's exit from the EU.
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Anti-Brexit protesters demonstrate outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 13.
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Pro-Brexit protesters demonstrate outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 13.
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Anti-Brexit demonstrators protest in the rain ahead of the meaningful vote in Parliament in London on March 12.
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Anti-Brexit protester Steve Bray stands holding placards draped in a composite if the EU and Union flag outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 4.
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Pro-Brexit activists march outside the Houses of Parliament in central London on Feb. 27.
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An anti-Brexit activist from the pressure group Our Future, Our Choice (OFOC) signs the campaign bus before a photocall in central London on Feb. 27.
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An anti-Brexit protester wearing a European Union flag cap, flies European and Union flags outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Feb. 21.
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A remain in the European Union supporter and member of the "Our Future, Our Choice" (OFOC) young people against Brexit organisation campaigning for a People's Vote second referendum on Britain's EU membership poses for photographs after taking part in a protest against a blindfold Brexit on Parliament Square opposite the Houses of Parliament in London, England on Feb. 14.
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A man stands near a 'Leave Means Leave' banner as pro-Brexit activists demonstrate outside of the Houses of Parliament in central London on Feb. 14.
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Caroline Lucas MP speaks during an anti-Brexit protest outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Feb. 13.
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Pro-Brexit activists hold placards and wave Union flags as they demonstrate outside of the Houses of Parliament in London on Jan. 29.
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A pro-Brexit activist (L) holding a placard and wearing a union flag-themed shirt talks with an anti-Brexit demonstrator holding an EU flagas they protest near the Houses of Parliament in London on Jan. 29.
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The Border Communities Against Brexit group hold an anti-Brexit protest on Jan. 26 in Louth, Ireland.
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There are factors affecting this, including the timing of this vote. Britain is holding its first December election since 1923, and that has practical implications: The sun is rising later and setting earlier, and it is harder to campaign vigorously outside in the cold. Corbyn, for example, has been holding rallies in drab indoor halls rather than in sunny outdoor stadiums and riverfronts like 2017, when the vote was held in June. And there is also the political exhaustion brought on by Brexit. In one sense, Johnson’s whole campaign is built around this notion, in his pledge—repeated over and over again in the TV debate, even after it began to elicit groans of complaint—that he would “get Brexit done.”
For the past few weeks, as Johnson and Corbyn have taken their campaigns to the country, voters have appeared more interested in Prince Andrew and the Jeffrey Epstein scandal or even the comings and goings of Premier League soccer managers. Maybe, after three years of Brexit debates and still no firm decision, they just want to talk about anything else. My friends and family have gone from being worked up about Brexit to uninterested in the daily wranglings of the campaign. Does the country feel the same way? Last night’s TV debate was watched by 6 million people, a substantial number. Yet the reality show that followed it, I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here, has consistently been hitting viewership figures of 10 million.
One could expand this notable British lethargy back a decade or more. Given the size of its financial sector, Britain suffered more than most in the 2007–08 global economic crash. Its banks were nationalized by the state, sending public borrowing through the roof. The country then voted in a Conservative government, which sought to reduce this by spending less on public services. The middle classes saw their children’s university fees (which are heavily regulated by the government) triple, hospital waiting times grow, and their wages stagnate. In response, there was barely any serious mass demonstration. And in 2015, the Conservatives increased the number of seats they held in Parliament.
We all know what then happened the following year. Was the Brexit vote Britain’s way of protesting? Whatever the answer, Britain now appears back to passive cynicism. The anthropologist Kate Fox, in her book Watching the English, suggested that the underlying rule in all English conversation is “the proscription of ‘earnestness.’” Much better to mock. It’s what this country does best, perhaps.
Gallery: The ups and downs of the campaign trail (Photos)
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Prime Minister Boris Johnson looks through stacked washing machine door parts during his general election campaign visit to Ebac manufacturing plant in Newton Aycliffe, England on Nov. 20.
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Nicola Sturgeon joins Dundee East candidate Stewart Hosie at at The Quay in Dundee, Scotland on Nov. 20.
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Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid of the Conservative Party during a visit to Nanaksar Gurdwara in Coventry, England on Nov. 19 while on the campaign trail ahead of the U.K. general election.
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(Left to right) Green Party Co-Leader Jonathan Bartley, Deputy leader Amelia Womack and Co-Leader Sian Berry at the Observatory of London Wetlands Centre in London, England on Nov. 19 for the launch of the Green Party manifesto for the 2019 U.K. general election.
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Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson reacts as she gets off the bus outside Cafe Amisha during her general election campaign tour in London, England on Nov. 16.
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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson of the Conservative Party eats a candy stick that reads "Back Boris" during a general election campaign trail stop at Coronation Candy in Blackpool, England, on Nov. 15.
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Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie poses with Stanley, a golden eagle, during a visit to Elite Falconry in Cluny, Kirkcaldy, Scotland, on Nov. 16.
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First Minister of Scotland and leader of Scotland National Party (SNP) Nicola Sturgeon holds Arbroath smokies, a type of smoked haddock, with Dave Doogan, SNP candidate for Angus, while meeting voters and activists in Arbroath, Scotland, on Nov. 16.
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Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn wears a pair of knitted gloves with "Pick Pam", referring to Glasgow North Labour candidate Pam Duncan-Glancy, written on them as he visits a community centre in Glasgow, Scotland on Nov. 13.
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Boris Johnson (L), accompanied by London Electric Vehicle Company (LEVC) CEO Joerg Hofmann (C), looks at the chassis of an electric taxi during a general election campaign visit to the LEVC in Coventry, England, on Nov. 13.
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Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage eats fish and chips from Whitehaven Fish Bar Takeaway Restaurant after attending an election campaign event in Workington, England, on Nov. 6.
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Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage (R) wears boxing gloves as he poses with British boxer Dereck Chisora during a visit to the Gator ABC Boxing Club in Ilford, east London, England, on Nov. 13.
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Nicola Sturgeon (R), accompanied by Edinburgh West candidate Sarah Masson, tries her hand at woodworking in Edinburgh, Scotland, on Nov. 13.
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Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson visits the boxing gym Total Boxer, which offers training to young people as a means of keeping them away from violence, during a general election campaign trail in London on Nov. 13.
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Boris Johnson sits in an electric taxi during his general election campaign visit to the London Electric Vehicle Company in Coventry on Nov. 13.
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Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn attends a rally in Blackpool, England, on Nov. 12.
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SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon during a visit to Blossom Tree Children's Nursery in Gilmerton, Edinburgh, on Nov. 12.
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Scottish Green Party co-leader Lorna Slater (back, C), Scottish parliamentary group co-leader Alison Johnstone (R) and the party's general election candidates for the six Edinburgh Westminster constituencies pose for photographs as they campaign on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh on Nov. 12.
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SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon at Inchgarth Community Centre in Aberdeen, Scotland, on Nov. 11.
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Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn during a visit to the Scrap Creative Reuse Arts Project in Farsley, England, while on the general election campaign trail, on Nov. 9.
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Liberal Democrats' leader Jo Swinson (C) plays with children at the Battersea Arts Centre in Lavender Hill, London, on Nov. 9.
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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson pours tea as he meets staff and nurses during a visit to King's Mill Hospital in Sutton-in-Ashfield, England, on Nov. 8.
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Boris Johnson participates in a school art lesson making clay figures, as he talks with school teachers during a general election campaign visit to George Spencer Academy in Stapleford, near Nottinghamshire, England, on Nov. 8.
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Boris Johnson speaks with school teachers during a campaign visit to George Spencer Academy in Stapleford on Nov. 8.
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Liberal Democrats' leader Jo Swinson (C) during a visit to Free Rangers Nursery while on the general election campaign trail in Midsomer Norton, Somerset, England, on Nov. 7.
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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson helps quality control workers during a visit to the Tayto Castle crisp factory in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, on Nov. 7.
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Leader of the Liberal Democrats, Jo Swinson (C), attends an election campaign event in Golders Green in London on Nov. 6.
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Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn (R) poses for a photo with Labour candidate for Crewe and Nantwich, Laura Smith, whilst on the general election campaign trail in Crewe, England, on Nov. 6.
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Leader of the SNP Nicola Sturgeon (C) plays a guitar as she visits Dalkeith Community Hub with Owen Thompson (standing), SNP election candidate for Midlothian, in Dalkeith, Scotland, on Nov. 5.
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Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage attends an election campaign event at Bolsover Boxing Club in England on Nov. 5.
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Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn (C) sits with Labour Parliamentary candidate for Gloucester, Fran Boait (L), and poses for a selfie as he joins a local campaign launch event in Gloucester, England, on Nov. 2.
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The British public 'couldn't spell Pinocchio if they tried,' Boris Johnson's father Stanley says .
He was answering a message on the Victoria Derbyshire that called his son Pinocchio , the character in a children's character that has become synonymous with lying.Asked about the viewers comments, he said: "That requires a degree of literacy, which I think the great British public doesn’t necessarily have."'That requires a degree of literacy'Stanley Johnson criticised the viewer who called his son a liar. (Photo: BBC)The presenter asked: "What do you mean by that?" He responded: "I'm not gonna get into that.