Miliband told the audience he 'couldn't be clearer' that there would be no deal between the two parties
There will be no Labour government if it involves a coalition or a deal with SNP, Ed Miliband said during last night’s special edition of leaders’ Question Time.
Miliband told the audience he “couldn’t be clearer” there would be no deal between the two parties.
But was he right to do so? Does this see off Tory attacks about the SNP ‘holding the country to ransom’? Or will it just make governing in the likely event of a hung parliament even harder?
27 Responses to “VOTE: Was Ed Miliband right to rule out any formal deal with the SNP?”
Janet T-Tremaine
Hit the nail on the head !!! Good on you…
Leon Wolfeson
I said it was in their long term interests. And it is.
Which is demonstrated by their two-tier MP scheme, which divides.
JAMES MCGIBBON
Labour and the SNP are capitalist parties. Right, left or centre hardly apply.
JAMES MCGIBBON
It is the same old story with the SNP. They go on about poverty and food banks but you never see them actually visiting foodbanks and the so called impoverished. It is all a farce and they get away with it. They could use tax powers to alleviate foodbanks but will not. They are not interested in the poor and never have been. Independence is their one and only aim even if it means real poverty and mass unemployment. Shared misery in independence. England should really consider protecting its border sooner than later.
Leon Wolfeson
…If you want to hide that information.