Me neither. Trecherous pricks. I voted Labour anyway though to try and keep the Tories out. Unfortunately they're all pretty shit.
I've never voted , but if I had it would have been SNP. Labour would have been much better than the scum we have in power now. They coalition try and make out that poor people are the problem, and that they're scroungers. A lot of my family are poor, and this is affecting them really badly, but they're not scroungers and they have rejected any help that I've offered them because they're too proud to accept it.
Over in N.Ireland we don't have the option to vote for normal political parties. We only have a choice between a bunch of Protestant bigots, or a bunch of Catholic Bigots. It's not worth voting over here. They're all as bad as each other.
Vote informal. Put in a blank sheet. Once you get your name ticked off, you can do what you like. I doubt they stand over you watching you mark off the paper.
It's not worth it. Every political party has to declare itself either Unionist or Nationalist. I think the Alliance Party are the only party that are neutral. I just can't be bothered getting involved in politics over here at all.
I suppose voting informal would probably be the best way to make a protest vote againsdt the current system here. If I ever get round to being registered to vote I might try it. I'd certainly do that before I'd vote for any of the parties in this wretched little part of the world.
That's why voting informal is the best idea, or wearing the fine (here you have to turn up to get marked off if you are registered, and if you don't, then you cop a fine). If you are a-political, then nothing those batards say is gonna sway you one way or the other.
On the other hand, if you DO want to have your say, it's better to make your vote count, rather than have a system like the US where only so-and-so many vote because of apathy or laziness.
And BTW, there is nothing contradictory in my above comments. Only someone who can't read would see any contradiction.