FinlayClarke
19 July 2026 · after 10 votes · current
The Cautious Collectivist
19 July 2026 · after 10 votes · current
The Cautious Collectivist
At 19, you're already voting for a Britain that protects: social care workers on fair pay, the GLA kept intact, extremist parties banned outright rather than tolerated into respectability. This is a collectivist instinct — state-shaped, institution-trusting — but it isn't reflexively liberal.
You went against the grain on the big-ticket items: you rejected European-style NHS reform when 70% said yes, and you said no to more nuclear defence capability when most of the country said build it. But on deporting foreign offenders you sided hard with the 84% majority, and on the burka ban you joined the 62%. You're not a contrarian — you're inconsistent in a very specific, telling way: soft on the state, hard on visible threats to order.
Ten votes and huge chunks of national life — housing, economy, education, energy, justice — are untouched. Your left lean on health and welfare is real, but it's resting on a single vote each. This is early days, not a verdict.
This profile is thin by design — seven scored votes is a sketch, not a portrait. Vote on housing or the economy next and watch whether the collectivist thread holds or the immigration-and-rights streak pulls you rightward; either way, we'll have a sharper read next week.