KT edit: UK all set for the 'Brexit' elections

There is a certain excitement over whether Boris Johnson will survive this onslaught or not.

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Published: Tue 10 Dec 2019, 7:00 PM

Last updated: Tue 10 Dec 2019, 9:02 PM

Come tomorrow and Britain will trot off to the polls for the third time in five years but with a difference. Less of a national election, this tryst with the hustings is truly the Brexit election because whoever wins will be the architect of the departure from the European Union next year or then by the call of the Labour's Jeremy Corbyn renegotiate the deal as it stands now or even consider staying back in the Union. With the clock winding down and most of the UK seeing it all as a bit of a lark, the turnout might be larger than expected in what should have been a rather frustrating experience watching government fall apart every few months.
The curiosity factor is what is keeping things ticking and there is a certain excitement over whether Boris Johnson will survive this onslaught or not. At this moment the flurry of pre-poll opinions gives the incumbent a fair chance and lead but as the UK sets out for polls who and what will motivate the public are notoriously unpredictable and unreliable as they are in most democratic elections. It may well be recalled in 2017 that the Tories were touted as being well over the majority line and when the vote was counted the party did not even make anywhere near the needed figure.
What can be seen at this moment is that with the Liberal Democrats and the Brexit party deflating and losing its grip as contenders, it will be a fight between Johnson and Corbyn. Johnson has gone on record saying that if he wins he will ensure an exit from the EU as soon as possible and then go in for a reworked and sculpted free trade deal. Corbyn would even consider unpacking if that is what the British people want. And the odds are he will go public to get a final verdict through another vote if he is installed as the next prime minister. This is the aspect that might please the public ego of being involved and turn the tables in Corbyn's favour and turn the pollsters' predictions into pretzels.


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