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The Tories are terrified of a Labour β€˜supermajority’ – but there are reasons for Labour supporters to be wary too | Andy Beckett

A landslide victory for Keir Starmer could lead to hubris and division. For Conservatives, however, it’s an existential question

Can a political party win too much power? In many ways, it’s a strange fear to raise about Labour, yet the Conservatives have been doing it for weeks now. For only two periods in Labour’s 124-year history has it had huge parliamentary majorities: from 1945 to 1950 and 1997 to 2005. And even those two governments still faced hostile newspapers, sceptical civil servants, suspicious big business, millions of instinctively rightwing voters in the most prosperous regions and the pro-Tory bias of much of the establishment.

For the Conservatives to warn about the dangerous monopoly power of a Labour β€œsupermajority”, having sought and enjoyed such power much more often themselves, is shameless even by their standards. For many Labour politicians, activists and supporters, meanwhile, the possibility that the party could enter an era of rare dominance next week is – though they dare not say it yet – very exciting. If the polls are right, the 2024 election and the Starmer supremacy that may follow could become legends that Labour lives off for decades.

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Β© Photograph: Jacob King/PA

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Β© Photograph: Jacob King/PA

Fake News Still Has a Home on Facebook

Christopher Blair, a renowned β€œliberal troll” who posts falsehoods to Facebook, is having a banner year despite crackdowns by Facebook and growing competition from A.I.

Β© Greta Rybus for The New York Times

Christopher Blair runs a satirical Facebook group from his home in Maine.
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