Burnham allies plan cross-party council to stop a Reform UK government
Senior figures from the progressive parties will form a new group to discuss how the "progressive majority" can stop Reform winning the next election, including discussing electoral pacts.
Allies of Andy Burnham will form a new "council" of cross-party figures to discuss working together to stop a Reform UK government.
The "council for the progressive majority" is being instigated by Compass, a centre-left thinktank whose founder Neal Lawson is an influential supporter of the Greater Manchester mayor.
The council will be comprised of two leading figures from each of the progressive parties in the UK - Labour, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, the SNP and Plaid Cymru.
Blimey. Establishment stooges on a power trip, aiming to slam the door on plebs who might prefer the type of democracy where voting makes a difference.
Sorry chaps, stick your mark on the voting paper and clear off.

4 comments:
"The council will be comprised of two leading figures from each of the progressive parties in the UK - Labour, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, the SNP and Plaid Cymru."
From observation there is nobody as authoritarian as a Progressive who sees their control slipping away. Luckily we can now identify which parties in the UK are progressive and avoid them. Avoid them hard.
DJ - let's hope a significant number of voters look at it like that. Enough to shake things up at least.
Their arrogance reminds me of the attitude they had over the Brexit vote - 'you voted the wrong way with insufficient information and we have to put you right'.
Tammly - good point, effectively that's what they are saying now to people who even consider voting Reform.
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