I study politics at Strathclyde University and I will personally lobby for the undertaking of a study on Count Binface's popularity in London to be started!
Please anyone that knows how to do these sort of thing let's get Binface elected to parliament. It's now the only answer because it doesn't ever matter who you vote for the government always get in.If Count Binface actually got elected it would be the message that really really really needs sending Guy Fawkes being another.
@@cantin8697hahahaha all the people that voted for Brexit now realise once again they got lied to by the scumbags and it's actually breath taking to listen to them moan they were lied 2.😂
I wonder after 2 runs at this, if Binface came up with more serious (not by my standard but by typical uk government standard) policies or even just steal the labour party's, would Count Binface get more votes? I actually think there is a place for Binface in British Politics and would love to have someone a bit more blunt and someone not tied to a party at least in the house of commons, it would be really refreshing to have someone say what they genuinely think all the time in U.K. politics.
Please stand for parliament Count. At this point Binface is the only thing that makes sense. To all those that think a vote for Binface would be a wasted vote aint been paying attention. If voting changed anything it would be illegal.Imagine binface taking his seat
I had so many of my friends from across the political spectrum despairing, saying they didn't know who to vote for. To each one, my response of 'Binface?' was met, not with laughter but with disappointment that they only had one vote, and if they had two they would have put a tick in the binface box.
This is one of the many things that makes Britain great: satire. A dying art in an increasingly absurd political landscape. Nobody does satire like the Brits, and perhaps the Irish.
The croissant based policy platform is clearly a winner with the voting public, but I feel that a biscuit base agenda might garner even wider support. Especially if it’s a flapjack.
44% of 40% is 17.6% which is the total amount of Londoners who voted for the Labour Party, when you consider that the majority of those votes were more about voting against the Tory party you come to realise that Sadiq Khan did not win the election, he just lost the least.