I think that how we define left and right wing depends on where we stand. I take my reference point from what were known as the one one nation Tory party. What I see is right wing groups such as the EDL joining up with some UKIP branches, and they have been reported to be joining up with some Tory branches in an attempt to deselect sitting MPs. The same thing is happening within the Labour party, with people like Len McCluskey who openly admits to wanting a strong left wing agenda, and is certainly behind some branches where MP deselection is a real possibility. Like it or not these are the two major parties in the UK, and these are the type of people who are having plenty of say in how the parties are being run already, and it could get worse. We all know that Tory party membership has declined dramatically, while the opposite is true of the Labour party. Yet compared to the overall numbers of electors they are a very small proportion of the country. By driving through their own agenda of policy they do not reflect the population at large, who by and large are not political. Twenty years ago there was a middle of the road approach to governing the country which worked to some extent. The Tories moved to the right to present a difference, and have stayed there, but under the current leadership of the Labour party they have not tried to regain the middle ground, but have policies that have not caught the mood of the nation. To only be 6 points ahead of this government says more about the doubts about them, than the popularity of the government.