Maark Abbott, on 18 June 2024 - 06:48 AM, said:
Not even "I AM
Wonder if it's any more common among the Tories (actually the Conservative and Unionist Party, since the Tory party is officially no more). And whether the syntax of "I am a Tory" vs "I am Labour" gives the Conservative and Unionists any advantage. "Reform" does seem like a more effective name than Ukip: "I am UKIP the mighty and singular! And nothing is more English than UK IP!"
Ukip sounds almost as "foreign" and demonic as Maga. George W. Bush's Skull and Bones code name is Magog after all; "I am MAGA(G)!"
In my personal experience Republicans are much more likely to say "I'm a Republican" than Democrats are to say "I'm a Democrat". But I've probably heard "I'm a Marxist" or "I'm a socialist" more often than either, so I'm hardly representative....
[Edit: correction: the Tories are officially the "Conservative and Unionist Party".]
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 18 June 2024 - 11:40 AM