Some thoughts on the recent British elections.

So far, and I’m writing this before the last of the results, including that of the Police and Crime Commissioners, are in. This has been a mixed bag of results. Some of the results are good and some are bad.

Let’s start with the bad shall we. Well it seems that London’s City Hall has got the terrorist and jihad supporting Saracen that the Labour/Islam alliance wanted. Zac Goldsmith, despite being a more honourable man and a candidate, unlike Sadiq Khan, not tainted by long associations with some pretty nasty Islamic individuals and causes, lost his bid to become London’s Mayor.

I predict that Sadiq Khan’s tenure as Mayor will be one in which non-Muslims in London will come under even more pressure than they are already. Expect more Islamopandering and maybe a crack down on those who say such truths as ‘Islam is NOT a religion of peace and here’s why…..’ This result makes me even more depressed that the people who I begged to leave London because I could see the way it was going, didn’t believe me and get out. With the slightly short-arsed Saracen Khan in the Mayoral chair, those who are fighting to keep their areas relatively free of the ‘religion of rape and murder’ are going to have a bit of a struggle on their hands.

On the subject of London, those who told me that those opposed to Saracen Khan should vote UKIP have been proved wrong. London, because of the flight of old style Londoner’s and their replacement by immigrants, is not really fertile ground for UKIP, and my advice that people to vote Goldsmith as that was a more realistic choice, proved correct.

Now we move onto both the slightly better news and the good news. Unfortunately Jeremy ‘Steptoe’ Corbyn’s Labour party did not lose as many councillors as it should have done, or was predicted to have done. As usual, in some places low turnouts, dodgy voting practises and the gormless and bovine multigenerational Labour voters ensured that although Labour dropped a number of councillors (29), it was not as bad as Labour feared. Maybe if more opponents of the Labour Party had bothered to get off of their arses not only would Labour have taken an even bigger hit than they did, but also Londoners may not have had to wake up to the appalling prospect of ‘Saracen Khan’ ruling over them. This backs up what I said in a recent article about the importance of voting. Those who stayed at home and voted for the ‘Apathy Party’ are partially responsible for Labour’s Islamist mayor, and that fact that Labour didn’t get the electoral kicking that they deserved.

There was a certain amount of good news from the country of Scotland which although it re-elected the SNP, a party seen by some as a party of over- narrow nationalism, expensive socialist knobwittery, intrusive policies and unfree speech, at least the Labour party got trounced. There are now more Conservative party MSP’s at Holyrood than Labour, and the Scottish National Party can only rule as a minority government or with help from MSP’s of other parties.

To the Principality of Wales now where there was some other interesting news; Again Labour have lost their majority in the Welsh Assembly and the chamber is now also ‘no overall control’. It was also in Wales that UKIP made a great breakthrough with 7 new representatives to go to the Sened at Cardiff. One of the electoral maps I saw was a depressing read though. It showed that large parts of South Wales continue to support Labour even though it’s Muslims, rather than ordinary Welsh workers in places like the Valleys, that Labour care about these days. One South Wales Labour seat was however taken by Plaid Cymru – The Party of Wales, which is good news as it’s one less Labour wrecker in a position of power. One day I hope, the people of South Wales, or indeed anywhere that Labour benefit from the moronic multigenerational Labour vote, will wake up and realise that voting Labour for generation after generation hasn’t really helped them much. At least in Rhonnda the voters saw the light and elected the Plaid candidate and not another Labour one.

As regards Northern Ireland, their results have not yet come in at the time of writing. At present very few of the seats have been counted and the final results are not expected to come until later tonight.

It has, at least for me, been a bit of a ‘pick and mix’ of an election. Some of it was good, such as Labour getting trounced in Scotland and losing control in Wales. Some of it was very good news such as seeing UKIP make the breakthrough there and coming second in some very safe Labour council wards in the country of England. The worst news is of course Saracen Khan getting the mayoralty in London, that is going to have long term negative implications. The people (along with the fraudulent Islamic postal voters) voted Labour in London and as predicted they’ve been landed with an Islamist supporting sack of shit who will do little to help the entirety of Londoners.

Now these elections are out of the way, it’s time for the big one. That is the referendum on whether or not the UK once again becomes a proud independent nation facing the world, or remains a member of an EU that is rapidly going down the road of economic collapse and Islam inspired civil unrest.

Onward to June 23rd. Let’s make this day in June Britain’s Independence Day.