CyclopsRock
Member
For me personally it's the last election and the £8 billion of uncosted welfare cuts. And the fact that while the Tories immediately began backpedalling on a whole load of other campaign promises, that was one of the few lines in the sand they wouldn't go back across.
I have sympathy for people who swallowed Cameron's idea of a modern, fairly liberal, business-friendly (European) Tory party, and I'd completely understand the sort of person for whom Corbyn is just too left-wing, but... basically people try to get out of it and say "well, it was the least worst option" or "I couldn't vote for Miliband", and that isn't good enough for me. If you vote FOR a party you should be able to justify that.
This isn't personally targeted at you, by the way, I'm just putting out there why people slip into it.
Have you ever voted for a party ever then? I mean I can't think of that many people who liked New Labours massive increase in health spending *and* their increase of the surveillance state, or benefitted from Sure Start whilst also being very on board with bombing Iraq. Fundamentally you can only cast your vote once and it's non-descriminatory; if you think the benefits outweigh the drawbacks (to a larger extent than the other parties) then you're doing yourself out of representation on those benefits by not voting.