We shall shortly be told who is to be our new Prime Minister. It won’t be one the public voted for, but that is far from the first time: more like, the forty-first mid-term takeover since 1802. Technically it is the Monarch who invites someone to form a government, one that can command a majority in Parliament; commonly, based on the results of a General Election in which our role is limited to voting for a local MP, largely according to rosette and influenced by who is the current leader of our favoured faction.
Who asked YOU to vote?
Who asked YOU to vote?
Who asked YOU to vote?
We shall shortly be told who is to be our new Prime Minister. It won’t be one the public voted for, but that is far from the first time: more like, the forty-first mid-term takeover since 1802. Technically it is the Monarch who invites someone to form a government, one that can command a majority in Parliament; commonly, based on the results of a General Election in which our role is limited to voting for a local MP, largely according to rosette and influenced by who is the current leader of our favoured faction.