miss_s_b: (feminist heroes: oracle)miss_s_b ([personal profile] miss_s_b) wrote,
@ 2012-04-05 07:12 pm UTC
Current mood: contemplative
Entry tags:politics
http://cdn.yougov.com/cumulus_uploads/document/88fhchg0tf/YG-Archives-FictionalCharactersVoting-050412.pdf

So YouGov did a survey on which party people think various fictional characters would vote for. From the little I know, I would suspect most of them are correct, but I want to talk about the one I know is definitely false, and the one I think is probably wrong.

Firstly, Victor Meldrew is definitely a Labour voter. This is canonical, he talks about it in the show, he reads the Daily Mirror onscreen on a regular basis, and in one episode is shown roundly abusing a Tory canvassar, and in another episode castigating a Tory politician in a hospital. So why do the majority of people think of him as a Tory?

There's a definite stereotype effect going on; most of the Tories are characters people don't like, or love to hate, and most of the Labour characters are seen as good fun but a bit thick. The one Lib Dem is the Vicar of Dibley - worthy, does good works and makes people happier, but is ultimately pretty powerless and someone to feel sorry for. So I think people put Victor Meldrew as a Tory because he's so bloody grumpy, and people see him as selfishly grumpy - but he's totally not. He's a tireless crusader against injustice, not just for himself, but for others (see the episode set in the Old People's home), and he has the Labourite's unshakeable conviction that the government ought to sort things out.

The other one that I think is a bit off is the Doctor. The biggest result for him is "wouldn't vote", which is probably correct, because I think the timelord maxim of non interference still has SOME traction on him... But then the next biggest is Green LOL! The Doctor is a scientist. The Greens, despite their hearts being in the right place, are totally wedded to woo. Add to that their occasional authoritarian tendencies and... no, the Doctor is a Lib Dem. I shall stubbornly cling to that belief.


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ext_51145: (National Pep)


[identity profile] andrewhickey.info
2012-04-05 07:05 pm UTC (link)
Eccles is Old Labour, but in the Prescott type of way that's just New Labour with a Northern accent. Smith... actually, he's probably Lib Dem, you're right.

McCoy's Doctor wouldn't want people voting for him - a job like Prime Minister would be nowhere near powerful enough for him. I *could* see him as a Sir Humphrey figure, though, wielding the real power, with just a touch of Francis Urquhart, the Patrician and Peter Mandelson thrown in.

Of course Del Boy's a Tory. Anyone who thinks differently hasn't thought about it for five seconds.

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miss_s_b: (Politics: FU)


[personal profile] miss_s_b
2012-04-05 07:08 pm UTC (link)
Del Boy is poor, therefore must vote Labour I think is the "thought" process people have followed.

McCoy and FU....? Hmmm...

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