Reform, and the death of the Tory Party

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secretsqirrel

Über Member
I wonder why Reform are less popular in Scotland? Is immigration seen as less of an issue? Are they seen as anti-Scottish? Is it just that Reform are the protest vote option in England whereas the SNP play that role in Scotland (Plaid doing similar to a lesser extent in Wales)? I guess Scotland were much more pro-EU too.

Reform don’t like devolution, they see it as a DOGE opportunity, and have threatened to abolish the Welsh parliament before now.
 
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First Aspect

Legendary Member
Scottish elections constituency vote share
SNP: 38.2%
Labour: 19.2%
Reform: 15.8%
Scottish Greens: 2.3%
Conservatives: 11.8%
LibDem: 11.4%

I find this interesting. The greens are grossly over represented in Holyrood, and the fptp total for independence supporting parties is 40.5%.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
I wonder why Reform are less popular in Scotland? Is immigration seen as less of an issue? Are they seen as anti-Scottish? Is it just that Reform are the protest vote option in England whereas the SNP play that role in Scotland (Plaid doing similar to a lesser extent in Wales)? I guess Scotland were much more pro-EU too.

It still bemuses me why Reform did well in Wales, when all indicators are that they don't give a stuff for anywhere apart from England.
 

First Aspect

Legendary Member
It still bemuses me why Reform did well in Wales, when all indicators are that they don't give a stuff for anywhere apart from England.

It is silver bullet voting. Wales is split evenly between hard left and hard right. Neither have the solution, but both have the votes because of a decade of Brexit, pandemic and war, for which incumbents all around the world are being punished.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
The new system probably helped although they did well on vote share too..

I suppose it's just another example of the snake oil salesmanship of Reform, who are masters of tapping into people's gullibility so they overlook that they are being played by rich English nationalists who despite their supporters as losers (and Welsh losers in Wales, so even worse).
 
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Mr Celine

Senior Member
Reform are a very English focussed party, so the average Scot probably detests them as a result

We detest condescending people who don't live here telling us how they think we should be running our country.

I'm amazed reform got as many votes as they did after Offord boasting about how many houses, cars and boats he has.
 
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Xipe Totec

Something nasty in the woodshed
I wonder why Reform are less popular in Scotland? Is immigration seen as less of an issue? Are they seen as anti-Scottish? Is it just that Reform are the protest vote option in England whereas the SNP play that role in Scotland (Plaid doing similar to a lesser extent in Wales)? I guess Scotland were much more pro-EU too.

Reform are a hard-right English Nationalist/Nativist party and openly hostile to devolution. It seems much of their electoral support has simply switched from Tory, or broadly consists of the 'staunch' Unionists who've traditionally voted Tory for decades, as well as disaffected unaligned/unengaged folk persuaded by the constant 'not-the-SNP' media rhetoric and the relentlessly dismal performance of Labour under Starmer.

I'm not sure the SNP can be reasonably dismissed as the 'protest vote option' when they're poised to start their fifth consecutive term in government, tbh. :smile:
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
Dammit, I agree with Badenoch

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