Does anybody here take the Greens seriously?

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Their policies are broadly the same. Polanski is pretty clear - he has hijacked aspects of the populist playbook because he is media savvy; he knowns this is the only way to cut through. Now the GPEW have about 2 million members, have tripled their vote share. The gap is closing between them and Reform currently because the Reform vote is falling. Greens are up about 10%, Reform have dropped about 10%.

Where is your criticism that Reform have no real policies, just shouty messages designed to inculcate fear? Even the most superficial study of what Reform exist for should cause concern in a thinking person.

Yougov's polling shows that the real battle is no longer a class war, it is between people who work, and people who are collecting pension.

The workforce wants a better deal. Reform are not the answer to this.
Reform are much much worse. I don't think the choice is binary.

On your last point, if that's where the political battle lies, it is a populist one, because that's not where many of the problems lie.
 

Psamathe

Guru
Worth noting (as I previously pointed out) how and what Green Party "policy" is.
Polanski does not decide Green Party policy. He might express views on subjects but he does not decided Party policy.
Green Party policy is set by the membership who can introduce policies to be voted on at conference.
Manifesto and Political Program are taken from policies decided (and voted on) at Conference.
 
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Worth noting (as I previously pointed out) how and what Green Party "policy" is.
Polanski does not decide Green Party policy. He might express views on subjects but he does not decided Party policy.
Green Party policy is set by the membership who can introduce policies to be voted on at conference.
Manifesto and Political Program are taken from policies decided (and voted on) at Conference.

So he can just spout any old crap? Great.
 

monkers

Shaman
Reform are much much worse. I don't think the choice is binary.

On your last point, if that's where the political battle lies, it is a populist one, because that's not where many of the problems lie.

Central to the division is the wealth gap - people are becoming increasingly aware of the reason because they are feeling it, and because the explanations from multiple sources are telling them - all being amplified by Polanski.

We need to become less dependent on models of growth and more focused profits of keeping profits within the economy rather than languishing in offshore accounts in tax havens.
 
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Central to the division is the wealth gap - people are becoming increasingly aware of the reason because they are feeling it, and because the explanations from multiple sources are telling them - all being amplified by Polanski.

We need to become less dependent on models of growth and more focused profits of keeping profits within the economy rather than languishing in offshore accounts in tax havens.
Most people think the wealth gap is somewhere other than it is. For starters it seems to be associated with salary, not wealth. And there's this misconception that wealth means there's money sloshing around a family, which as discussed above often isn't the case.
 

monkers

Shaman
Most people think the wealth gap is somewhere other than it is. For starters it seems to be associated with salary, not wealth. And there's this misconception that wealth means there's money sloshing around a family, which as discussed above often isn't the case.

The top 1% have more wealth than the bottom 70% combined. That gives you a good measure of where it is - and that situation is said to be worsening. Child poverty and pensioner poverty rates are increasing.

Despite this, an extrapolation of Yougov data shows that if only men over the age of 65 were to vote, they'd be 480 Reform MPs in parliament. They'd be only 2 Green MPs.

This is the reverse of if only women age 18 to 49 were to vote - they'd vote Green.
 
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The top 1% have more wealth than the bottom 70% combined. That gives you a good measure of where it is - and that situation is said to be worsening. Child poverty and pensioner poverty rates are increasing.

Despite this, an extrapolation of Yougov data shows that if only men over the age of 65 were to vote, they'd be 480 Reform MPs in parliament. They'd be only 2 Green MPs.

This is the reverse of if only women age 18 to 49 were to vote - they'd vote Green.
Sure, providing you are talking about wealth not income. But the data always skews when there's no upper limit. Even in the top 1% there is a top 1%.

It is also quite easy to be in the top, say 20% of income and top 1% of wealth and vice versa.
 

CXRAndy

Epic Member
"Every man is entitled, if he can, to arrange his affairs so that the tax attaching under the appropriate Acts is less than it otherwise would be."
 
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