LibDem, your tactical vote. QED. Thanks for the clarification.
As usual, no answers from you. You didn’t even explain ‘my situation’ that limits me to LibDem and the Brexit party. Why did you include the brexit party, by the way? Despite your
assertion the Brexit party was an option ‘in my situation’, it was not.
Which brings me to...
You really have quite an internet vendetta going on. Maybe I’d do better claiming to dislike Scots, dislike Scotland and hope you break up the UK rather than believing the opposite.
Anyway, if it helps, below is what I mean by tactical voting. I may be wrong but the point is to help Labour to a majority over the tories and remove the tories from govt, not help keep the tories in govt then whinge every day about what they do.
If someone doesn’t like tory ideology, doesn’t like brexit, doesn’t like what the tories do, the answer is to remove the tories from govt.
1. In a Labour seat - vote Labour.
Don’t vote to remove the seat from Labour.
2. In a non-Labour seat but where they have a chance - vote Labour
3. In a non-Labour seat where Labour does not have a chance - vote for the party most likely to prevent the tory candidate gaining a seat
4. In some places it won’t matter how you vote under FPTP. e.g. where I live it doesn’t matter how I vote.
#1 is the most significant. You and other nationalists voted to reduce Labour seats by 40 before Brexit was even a word. No doubt some will cite #3 as a reason to vote SNP, but that’s to ignore by taking 40 seats from Labour you made it more difficult for Labour to gain a majority in 2015....and no brexit.
I realise #3 is not straightforward and it may be impossible to vote with a totally clear conscience, especially given the antics of the poodle party, but the aim is to help Labour to a majority. I’m comfortable with that approach whatever name you want to pin on it.
Bottom line is, what I wrote there is for people who make replacing the tories in govt their #1 priority. I understand others may have a different #1 priority.