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DefSec Wallace now firm favourite for next PM – politicalbetting.com

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  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,652
    Leon said:

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    The Johnson blonde gene is like some Ancient Mark of Cain
    Though I note Romy has brown ringlets.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    Who is warning Tory MPs they will “rue the day” apart from that screaming brain donor, Andrea Jenkyns?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    Pure Dacre. One of the most evil drugs known to mankind.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 55,289

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    That’s just true. Eurocrats hated Boris, Putin and Co hate him now he’s so vividly pro-Ukraine
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    Dunno about Moscow but they have been popped in my humble midlands abode tonight.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,380
    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,652
    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    That’s a black mark.
    I always found IAHHM quite funny.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447
    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Yes.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    Bunch of fucking amateur chancers.
    Get him out! Get him out!
    What have you done?!
    No wonder Hodges is such a hysterical lunatic
    I see the Great Betrayal Narrative is up and running only 10 hours after the resignation.

    The poison of Johnson will not easily be drained from the Conservatives.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,402
    edited July 2022
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Ben Wallace would appear to be perhaps the best choice (out of a poor selection) for caretaker Prime Minister.

    Especially IF he were to disavow any intention to run for the leadership (this time) AND remain serving as Minister of Defense, as Big Dog's (alleged) role model, Winston Churchill.

    Given numbers posted at top of this thread, reckon that he could be put in and Boris tipped out, with amazing speed . . . even for Tory MP slugs . . .

    Question NOW is NOT the ideology or personality or electablity of next PM. It is getting BJ-Exit DONE. ASAP.

    That may be your priority, but it certainly isn't the priority of anyone living in the UK - surprisingly we actually give a shit who we get as next PM.
    Purpose of caretaker - who will serve until Tory leadership is decided - is to hold down the fort and mind the store.

    Right now, focus is removing Boris from the seat of power - pronto.

    Unless you wish the perfect to be the enemy of the good . . . and risk Boris turning something up . . .
    Boris is gone.

    You've been batshit crazy in saying that Boris is Trump/Putin all along when he's nothing of the sort, and the UK isn't Russia/USA either.

    The system worked, the unwritten constitution did its job, and he's gone and he's accepted he's gone - something Trump never did and still hasn't done.

    Boris is officially a caretaker PM now.
    He's not gone gone! He's still PM - for now!
    His credibility and power has gone and he's a caretaker PM not a proper PM now.

    He's accepted its over. Something Trump has never done. Its over, now we need his successor.

    As days pass people will stop talking about Boris and just be debating more and more about who's coming next.
    I want Boris gone not even as caretaker, but the Trump stuff always gets taken too far. Trump lost an election and then sought in many ways to overturn that and stay in power. Boris lost no election, not even an internal party one, so was entitled to try to make them formally kick him out, he was just very stupid to do that as it has only made things worse. And even then he belatedly realised he couldn't carry on morally.

    That's not about superiority of the UK over the USA, but about the limitations of making direct comparisons even when some elements are similar.
    I agree that the Trump comparisons tend to diminish the magnitude of what happened there.

    Johnson is a pathological liar. Vain, arrogant, selfish, and utterly unsuitable for office.

    But Trump actively encouraged an attempted coup in which people died and, had he and his mob been more competent, many would have died. Democracy was genuinely under threat from that man (and possibly still is).

    Trump deserves to be behind bars. Johnson deserves to be out of office and, perhaps, a degree of pity.
    But the Trump coup stuff is hindsight talking. A lot of people didn't believe he would do something like that until he did, and claimed such things were impossible, and chided those who feared he would try to cling on.

    I'm not drawing an equivalence, but do watch out for hindsight.
    Absolutely, but Trump refused to concede defeat, despite losing the election. Boris already has, despite not losing one.

    The two scenarios couldn't be more different, thankfully.
    They COULD be more different; in some aspects of their character they are similar and they have both have form for at least flouting convention. That's what worries some people, because convention is at the heart of our system.
    Those who are assuming the sky will fall in should relax a little. But those who are wary are totally justified in their wariness. We already know Boris is the type to break rules, conventions and laws. So whatever our understanding is of leaving office, it cannot be predicated solely on him obeying rules, conventions, and laws. We must seek alternative sources of reassurance. I believe those sources are present.
    One's a sociopath and the other has Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
    That's your difference.
    It really is that simple.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,679
    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
    The most impressive Tory for me is Kemi Badenoch.

    But she won't get it.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541
    edited July 2022

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    Lost it.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,434
    IshmaelZ said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    Applicant said:

    biggles said:

    Ben Wallace would appear to be perhaps the best choice (out of a poor selection) for caretaker Prime Minister.

    Especially IF he were to disavow any intention to run for the leadership (this time) AND remain serving as Minister of Defense, as Big Dog's (alleged) role model, Winston Churchill.

    Given numbers posted at top of this thread, reckon that he could be put in and Boris tipped out, with amazing speed . . . even for Tory MP slugs . . .

    Question NOW is NOT the ideology or personality or electablity of next PM. It is getting BJ-Exit DONE. ASAP.

    That may be your priority, but it certainly isn't the priority of anyone living in the UK - surprisingly we actually give a shit who we get as next PM.
    Purpose of caretaker - who will serve until Tory leadership is decided - is to hold down the fort and mind the store.

    Right now, focus is removing Boris from the seat of power - pronto.

    Unless you wish the perfect to be the enemy of the good . . . and risk Boris turning something up . . .
    Nobody really believes this “Boris can’t be trusted to leave after the vote” nonsense. A few were worked up about it earlier but the idea will be dead by tomorrow night. The system has worked and is working. Again.

    IIRC, heard similar just after the votes were counted in November 2020.

    And thanks for calling me a "nobody"! One of the nicest things said about me on PB recently.
    Totally different system. You're letting your visceral hatred of Trump (a man whose name you can't even bring yourself to use) cloud your understanding.
    It is pitiful how retards (no offence!) think that Yebbut you hate Trump/Johnson, is an actual argument. It's not like people hate them for their skin colour or choice of pronoun, it's more that hating them is the only morally permissible position. You are like a critic complaining that a history of WW2 betrays its author's hatred of Nazism.
    Utter nonsense. It is not morally beneficial to hate anyone. And a history of World War II with the author constantly berating the Nazis for being evil would be boring and a failure as a history. It is necessary to leave that visceral feeling behind to gain any sort of useful insight.
    It is, at the very least, morally contemptible to like, approve of or vote for them.
    Other people are operating from the vantage point of a totally different reality from you or I. And you and I have a completely different reality from one another. The factors that we all use to make decisions are totally different.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,838
    edited July 2022
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
    She's as Woke as Reveille in Pirbright Guards Training Depot, or so it seems from a quick look at the Mumsnet.

    (May be unfair regarding other aspects, mind.)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922
    edited July 2022
    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    The Tories were still polling 30%, not 0%, and over half of their voter base were still backing Johnson

    These people all read The Mail.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    I think Penny is currently at Women can have up to 8 penises
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,064

    I drink about 8 cups of coffee a day.
    You can take the coffee from my cold, dead hands.

    Cold, dead, but probably still shaking with that much caffeine in them…
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    Pretty sure we will soon be hearing how Boris's Brexit has been diluted by those that followed and any chaos, GDP loss, unemployment, tourist fuck ups, unpicked strawberries and so on is all down to them not doing Our Boris's Proper Brexit.

  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
    The most impressive Tory for me is Kemi Badenoch.

    But she won't get it.
    She’s just a more diverse Truss.
    I don’t hear good things about her.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,380

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Yes, I think that's spot on. Far from harming Labour, Boris's downfall will benefit them in a significant number of marginal seats in the midlands and north, as well as some coastal seats around the country. And I don't think that will change whoever replaces Boris.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,838
    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    In that case you shouldn't expect the state to consider you married.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,402

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    The MP for Hyndburn just said her inbox is full of anger about a "coup".
    He has a substantial constituency who absolutely love him.
    Not convinced anyone does better. The polling agrees with me for now.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    IshmaelZ said:

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    Reallocating 50% of my popcorn stockpiling fund, to sickbags. Diversification is king.
    Day One of the King Over the Water Myth.

  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,434
    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
    It's the worst thing about her.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,838

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    I think Penny is currently at Women can have up to 8 penises
    To be fair, could it be because she has obligations as a Forces reservist not to contradict Forces policy on this and that? (I don't know enough about it to tell.)
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,275
    The Mail is losing the plot. Utterly deranged headline and you’d think Tory MPs just killed the second coming of Christ .

  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    Bunch of fucking amateur chancers.
    Get him out! Get him out!
    What have you done?!
    No wonder Hodges is such a hysterical lunatic
    I see the Great Betrayal Narrative is up and running only 10 hours after the resignation.

    The poison of Johnson will not easily be drained from the Conservatives.
    Wallace made Wilf cry
    Sunaks shameful pass at Carrie
    Javid spat on the wallpaper
    And other Mail tales of ne'er do well
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited July 2022
    The stab-in-the-back myth is lurching to life even as we write.

    Looking forward to the bit where Boris and Nadine lead a beer-hall putsch in Munich.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,838

    The stab-in-the-back myth is lurching to life even as we write.

    Looking forward to the bit where Boris and Nadine lead a beer-hall putsch in Munich.

    Began on here yesterday, with the talk of traitorous pygmies.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,663
    nico679 said:

    The Mail is losing the plot. Utterly deranged headline and you’d think Tory MPs just killed the second coming of Christ .

    The Mail is batshit most days, but today they lost their meal ticket.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 19,913
    Applicant said:

    Roger said:

    Ben Wallace would appear to be perhaps the best choice (out of a poor selection) for caretaker Prime Minister.

    Especially IF he were to disavow any intention to run for the leadership (this time) AND remain serving as Minister of Defense, as Big Dog's (alleged) role model, Winston Churchill.

    Given numbers posted at top of this thread, reckon that he could be put in and Boris tipped out, with amazing speed . . . even for Tory MP slugs . . .

    Question NOW is NOT the ideology or personality or electablity of next PM. It is getting BJ-Exit DONE. ASAP.

    That may be your priority, but it certainly isn't the priority of anyone living in the UK - surprisingly we actually give a shit who we get as next PM.
    Purpose of caretaker - who will serve until Tory leadership is decided - is to hold down the fort and mind the store.

    Right now, focus is removing Boris from the seat of power - pronto.

    Unless you wish the perfect to be the enemy of the good . . . and risk Boris turning something up . . .
    Boris is gone.

    You've been batshit crazy in saying that Boris is Trump/Putin all along when he's nothing of the sort, and the UK isn't Russia/USA either.

    The system worked, the unwritten constitution did its job, and he's gone and he's accepted he's gone - something Trump never did and still hasn't done.

    Boris is officially a caretaker PM now.
    If you believe Dominic Cummings the Tories would be making a HUGE mistake letting Boris squat because they'll never get rid of him. He'll play for time and find reasons to start a rearguard action.

    If anyone would know he would.
    Since when did you start believing Cummings?
    I'm his biggest fan. He's one of the best admen around. He sold a pup to 34,000,000 people without even using a creative agency. Just a seven million quid budget on market research.

    He realised that there are no rules in political advertising. No need to verify anything. An agency couldn't have done that. They have reputations to protect. So what he did was use research to find out the public's prejudices and tell them they would magic them away.

    Pure genius!
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,402
    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    Regular renewal of vows is purification.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
    The most impressive Tory for me is Kemi Badenoch.

    But she won't get it.
    She’s just a more diverse Truss.
    I don’t hear good things about her.
    I consistently hear excellent things about her. And her speeches in parliament, as well as her writings and interviews, are superb.

    I really rate her.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    Farage is looking old and tired on BBC2.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,635
    edited July 2022

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a foreword by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 17,220

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    Sam Freedman probably nails it;

    They seem to have left "with my peerage" off the end of the headline.

    https://twitter.com/Samfr/status/1545152189898915841

    (It's one thing for Nadine and JRM to have nailed their trousers to the BoJo mast- they're dead politicians walking. But the Mail, Express and Telegraph somehow have to work out what to do with their Boris Love if they want a future.)
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,058
    IshmaelZ said:

    Applicant said:

    biggles said:

    Ben Wallace would appear to be perhaps the best choice (out of a poor selection) for caretaker Prime Minister.

    Especially IF he were to disavow any intention to run for the leadership (this time) AND remain serving as Minister of Defense, as Big Dog's (alleged) role model, Winston Churchill.

    Given numbers posted at top of this thread, reckon that he could be put in and Boris tipped out, with amazing speed . . . even for Tory MP slugs . . .

    Question NOW is NOT the ideology or personality or electablity of next PM. It is getting BJ-Exit DONE. ASAP.

    That may be your priority, but it certainly isn't the priority of anyone living in the UK - surprisingly we actually give a shit who we get as next PM.
    Purpose of caretaker - who will serve until Tory leadership is decided - is to hold down the fort and mind the store.

    Right now, focus is removing Boris from the seat of power - pronto.

    Unless you wish the perfect to be the enemy of the good . . . and risk Boris turning something up . . .
    Nobody really believes this “Boris can’t be trusted to leave after the vote” nonsense. A few were worked up about it earlier but the idea will be dead by tomorrow night. The system has worked and is working. Again.

    IIRC, heard similar just after the votes were counted in November 2020.

    And thanks for calling me a "nobody"! One of the nicest things said about me on PB recently.
    Totally different system. You're letting your visceral hatred of Trump (a man whose name you can't even bring yourself to use) cloud your understanding.
    It is pitiful how retards (no offence!) think that Yebbut you hate Trump/Johnson, is an actual argument. It's not like people hate them for their skin colour or choice of pronoun, it's more that hating them is the only morally permissible position. You are like a critic complaining that a history of WW2 betrays its author's hatred of Nazism.
    I remember people on here using the phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome", as if opposition to Trump was some wacky libtard opinion, not because he's a fucking man baby psycopath who should probably be in prison (or a mental hospital).
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    CatMan said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    Applicant said:

    biggles said:

    Ben Wallace would appear to be perhaps the best choice (out of a poor selection) for caretaker Prime Minister.

    Especially IF he were to disavow any intention to run for the leadership (this time) AND remain serving as Minister of Defense, as Big Dog's (alleged) role model, Winston Churchill.

    Given numbers posted at top of this thread, reckon that he could be put in and Boris tipped out, with amazing speed . . . even for Tory MP slugs . . .

    Question NOW is NOT the ideology or personality or electablity of next PM. It is getting BJ-Exit DONE. ASAP.

    That may be your priority, but it certainly isn't the priority of anyone living in the UK - surprisingly we actually give a shit who we get as next PM.
    Purpose of caretaker - who will serve until Tory leadership is decided - is to hold down the fort and mind the store.

    Right now, focus is removing Boris from the seat of power - pronto.

    Unless you wish the perfect to be the enemy of the good . . . and risk Boris turning something up . . .
    Nobody really believes this “Boris can’t be trusted to leave after the vote” nonsense. A few were worked up about it earlier but the idea will be dead by tomorrow night. The system has worked and is working. Again.

    IIRC, heard similar just after the votes were counted in November 2020.

    And thanks for calling me a "nobody"! One of the nicest things said about me on PB recently.
    Totally different system. You're letting your visceral hatred of Trump (a man whose name you can't even bring yourself to use) cloud your understanding.
    It is pitiful how retards (no offence!) think that Yebbut you hate Trump/Johnson, is an actual argument. It's not like people hate them for their skin colour or choice of pronoun, it's more that hating them is the only morally permissible position. You are like a critic complaining that a history of WW2 betrays its author's hatred of Nazism.
    I remember people on here using the phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome", as if opposition to Trump was some wacky libtard opinion, not because he's a fucking man baby psycopath who should probably be in prison (or a mental hospital).
    Both; a prison for criminal lunatics.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,405

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    The right thing.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    dixiedean said:

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    The MP for Hyndburn just said her inbox is full of anger about a "coup".
    He has a substantial constituency who absolutely love him.
    Not convinced anyone does better. The polling agrees with me for now.
    Load of arse. They wont get 10% of the fury they got after partygate, FPNs, Cummings etc etc
    For every Boz lover they lose to not voting they are probably getting 2 back who were disgusted by him
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,052

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Some of us have been saying this for months whilst be informed by almost everyone on this site that he had been “found out” by everyone. In the end his position was made untenable, but ultimately his polling just looked like standard, winnable, midterms to me.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited July 2022

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a forward by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Wow, I did not know this existed.
    It even has positive promo quotes from Elton bloody John. How did she manage that?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    OTOH you are a nauseatingly smug little bigot who thinks that your mouth is so firmly clamped round Our Lord's cock that it gives you a right to dictate to (Labour voting) infidels about the contents of their own wombs and the timing of their own deaths.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,663

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a forward by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Wow, I did not know this existed.
    It even has positive promo quotes from Elton bloody John. How did she manage that?
    Her career was public relations.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,652

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
    It's the worst thing about her.
    It's her main redeeming feature.

    She is not a culture warrior for the forces of reaction.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,405
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
    I’m still dazed and confused by the revelation that reviled exPBer @SeanT missed me in south Armenia by a matter of minutes

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/an-existential-war-even-wealthy-emigres-are-prepared-to-fight-for-russia
    Oh come on, at least let one of us post about him stalking you...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,863
    Jonathan said:

    nico679 said:

    The Mail is losing the plot. Utterly deranged headline and you’d think Tory MPs just killed the second coming of Christ .

    The Mail is batshit most days, but today they lost their meal ticket.
    The website looks even worse
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,705
    It's the use of "collective hysteria" in their hysterical headline - they don't do irony, do they?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited July 2022
    Were I an MP and I was to receive to emails of complaint about Boris’s ouster, I would refer them to social services.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a forward by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Wow, I did not know this existed.
    It even has positive promo quotes from Elton bloody John. How did she manage that?
    None of them will have read it.

    There's a whole PR industry around getting famous people to sign up to quotes and citations about books they haven't so much as browsed.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922

    The stab-in-the-back myth is lurching to life even as we write.

    Looking forward to the bit where Boris and Nadine lead a beer-hall putsch in Munich.

    It took 15 years for the Tory party to get over the toppling of Thatcher in 1990, most of them spent in division and opposition until Cameron was elected in 2005. Boris is no Thatcher but the wounds will not easily heal
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 17,220
    edited July 2022
    Farooq said:

    Leon said:

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    That’s just true. Eurocrats hated Boris, Putin and Co hate him now he’s so vividly pro-Ukraine
    He's hated up and down this country too. The polling is pretty clear.
    Sorry your man turned out so shit.
    But it's also a fair point that some people still really loved Boris. And their votes count as much as anyone else's- maybe more, if they are people who turn out a lot in the right seats.

    I can't remember who first articualted the theory that Johnson had a low floor but a high ceiling for his popularity; he'd probably lead the Conservatives to a calamatous defeat, but might just work his magic one more time. Whereas anyone else would steer the Conservatives to a smaller but almost certain defeat (higher floor, lower celing).

    Ditching Boris was the right thing to do, and should have happened ages ago. But it isn't cost-free.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,557
    Robert Courts MP on Newsnight: Grant Shapps or Ben Wallace would be good options.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922
    edited July 2022
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    In that case you shouldn't expect the state to consider you married.
    I most certainly will, I signed the register which is quite enough, however I made by marriage vows in the sight of God and the holy ghost not the state
  • RogerRoger Posts: 19,913

    Mail is totally over the top tonight even by their recent standards.

    What the hell have they done?

    image
    The right thing.
    A bit bizarre isn't it! She's certainly taken umbrage at something. Or is it just Dacre drooling over a title?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447
    biggles said:

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Some of us have been saying this for months whilst be informed by almost everyone on this site that he had been “found out” by everyone. In the end his position was made untenable, but ultimately his polling just looked like standard, winnable, midterms to me.
    He was losing by-elections heavily, had become as popular as Corbyn, and half of all Tory voters wanted him gone.

    He wouldn't have won a bean.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,507

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
    It's the worst thing about her.
    It’s not a problem with me. But what is it anyway, packed under woke umbrella? Can you really get away with everything from ain’t alf hot mum to trans gender rights in sport, offensive statues to he she and they without accepting your doing nothing but Wallace trying to hold a door like knut held the tide? Everything single one of those things are considered on merit not blanket labelled - where’s your faith gone that each considered on merit we will find the happy medium on each, where is all your lily livened fears coming from? Do they burst forth like Zeus when you get your first fuddyduddy birthday card?

    Moaning about “woke” is a lack of faith in the human spirit will get things right.

    Leave Penny alone on woke 😠
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited July 2022
    HYUFD said:

    The stab-in-the-back myth is lurching to life even as we write.

    Looking forward to the bit where Boris and Nadine lead a beer-hall putsch in Munich.

    It took 15 years for the Tory party to get over the toppling of Thatcher in 1990, most of them spent in division and opposition until Cameron was elected in 2005. Boris is no Thatcher but the wounds will not easily heal
    I have very little sympathy for the moronic clown inferno that calls itself the Conservative Party.

    Their best option is to fold up the tent.
    New jobs await them in “cyber”.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,402

    dixiedean said:

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    The MP for Hyndburn just said her inbox is full of anger about a "coup".
    He has a substantial constituency who absolutely love him.
    Not convinced anyone does better. The polling agrees with me for now.
    Load of arse. They wont get 10% of the fury they got after partygate, FPNs, Cummings etc etc
    For every Boz lover they lose to not voting they are probably getting 2 back who were disgusted by him
    We'll see.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a forward by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Wow, I did not know this existed.
    It even has positive promo quotes from Elton bloody John. How did she manage that?
    None of them will have read it.

    There's a whole PR industry around getting famous people to sign up to quotes and citations about books they haven't so much as browsed.
    Yes but Elton John? Bill Gates?

    This is not like paying £50 to Nigel Farage on Cameo so that he’ll wish a happy Brexit to Amanda Hugandkiss.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    To be fair to evangelicals - who are mostly really nice and decent people - those in politics tend to get hammered, like Farron, for having views which are unfashionable but fairly widely shared, while Roman Catholics and the Islamic community also have all sorts of minority views but tend to be miraculously protected from scrutiny.

    What? Not my impression that the Islamic community are protected from scrutiny - their beliefs are widely and IMo unfairly regarded with suspicion, and attacked every few days in mainstream media, because some lunatics claim to share them. Evangelicals are seen as a bit cranky, but few would go further than that. I don't really care what Baker's beliefs are, unless they affect his policies.
    How often is the fairly rampant anti Semitism of some Muslim communities addressed? Seldom. How often is the widespread homophobia of many Muslim communities addressed? Never, as far as I can see
    How often does Leon turn up the chance of posting some inflammatory Islamophobic nonsense? Seldom.
    OK, can we back up a bit?

    Is it nonsense that homophobia is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense that antisemitism is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense tha there is a teacher who is still in hiding and under police protection somewhere in england because he GASP HORROR showed a graphic representation of the Muslim Spaghetti Monster to a class of children?

    Are you happy with any or all of the above?
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,828
    Extraordinary. Minister on Newsnight saying he wouldn't comment when pressed on if Johnson might try to cut and run for an election whilst in his caretaker role.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,838
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    In that case you shouldn't expect the state to consider you married.
    I most certainly will, I signed the register which is quite enough, I made by marriage vows in the sight of God and the holy ghost not the state
    By a church which breaks the spirit of the very laws passed by the state? The way it treats single-sex couples? (which I had not realised till this evening)? Come off it. That is outrageous hypocrisy. The C of E is a whited sepulchre.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    edited July 2022
    "Why should a conscientious objector get to avoid military service when their compatriots are dying in war?"

    Because a CO is NOT an agent of the state?

    Anyway, many do NOT avoid military service, including active combat:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmond_Doss

    . . . the only conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor for his actions during the war. His life has been the subject of books, the documentary The Conscientious Objector, and the 2016 Oscar-winning film Hacksaw Ridge, where he was portrayed by Andrew Garfield.

    Citation: Private First Class Desmond T. Doss, United States Army, Medical Detachment, 307th Infantry, 77th Infantry Division. Near Urasoe-Mura, Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, 29 April – 21 May 1945.

    He was a company aid man when the 1st Battalion assaulted a jagged escarpment 400 feet high. As our troops gained the summit, a heavy concentration of artillery, mortar and machinegun fire crashed into them, inflicting approximately 75 casualties and driving the others back. Private First Class Doss refused to seek cover and remained in the fire-swept area with the many stricken, carrying them one by one to the edge of the escarpment and there lowering them on a rope-supported litter down the face of a cliff to friendly hands.

    On 21 May, in a night attack on high ground near Shuri . . . [Doss was] giving aid to the injured until he was himself seriously wounded in the legs by the explosion of a grenade . . . . he cared for his own injuries and waited five hours before litter bearers reached him . . . Doss, seeing a more critically wounded man nearby, crawled off the litter and directed the bearers to give their first attention to the other man. . . .

    Through his outstanding bravery and unflinching determination in the face of desperately dangerous conditions Private First Class Doss saved the lives of many soldiers. His name became a symbol throughout the 77th Infantry Division for outstanding gallantry far above and beyond the call of duty.

    [signed] Harry S. Truman October 12,1945

    SSI - President Truman, a WWI combat veteran, often said he rather have the Medal of Honor that be President of the United States.

    As for PFC Doss, when he'd first arrived at the unit, he was quite unpopular (to put it mildly) for being a CO and a religious nut, in his case Seventh-Day Adventist (he was also a vegetarian).

    But when they saw him in action, his compatriots changed their minds about PFC Doss, CO.

    Just a hillbilly boy from WAY back yonder, with a will of iron, a heart of gold and a faith that could - and did - move mountains.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,191
    Isn't Wallace's appeal basically the same as the winning entry in eurovision ?
    I'm not sure that's the best basis for a new PM.
    Sunak's the man for me still x
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922
    IshmaelZ said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    OTOH you are a nauseatingly smug little bigot who thinks that your mouth is so firmly clamped round Our Lord's cock that it gives you a right to dictate to (Labour voting) infidels about the contents of their own wombs and the timing of their own deaths.
    As opposed to extreme secular left liberals like you I suppose who would abort up to birth and have no respect for God given human life
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    IanB2 said:

    Jonathan said:

    nico679 said:

    The Mail is losing the plot. Utterly deranged headline and you’d think Tory MPs just killed the second coming of Christ .

    The Mail is batshit most days, but today they lost their meal ticket.
    The website looks even worse
    Within days/weeks the front page will be along the lines of:

    "Wallace - the Won for England"

    or

    "Braverman will battle for Britain"

    or whatever.

  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,064
    IshmaelZ said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    To be fair to evangelicals - who are mostly really nice and decent people - those in politics tend to get hammered, like Farron, for having views which are unfashionable but fairly widely shared, while Roman Catholics and the Islamic community also have all sorts of minority views but tend to be miraculously protected from scrutiny.

    What? Not my impression that the Islamic community are protected from scrutiny - their beliefs are widely and IMo unfairly regarded with suspicion, and attacked every few days in mainstream media, because some lunatics claim to share them. Evangelicals are seen as a bit cranky, but few would go further than that. I don't really care what Baker's beliefs are, unless they affect his policies.
    How often is the fairly rampant anti Semitism of some Muslim communities addressed? Seldom. How often is the widespread homophobia of many Muslim communities addressed? Never, as far as I can see
    How often does Leon turn up the chance of posting some inflammatory Islamophobic nonsense? Seldom.
    OK, can we back up a bit?

    Is it nonsense that homophobia is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense that antisemitism is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense tha there is a teacher who is still in hiding and under police protection somewhere in england because he GASP HORROR showed a graphic representation of the Muslim Spaghetti Monster to a class of children?

    Are you happy with any or all of the above?
    It is nonsense to claim that these issues are never addressed. I read about them on PB.com most weeks, for starters.

  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 18,361

    biggles said:

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Some of us have been saying this for months whilst be informed by almost everyone on this site that he had been “found out” by everyone. In the end his position was made untenable, but ultimately his polling just looked like standard, winnable, midterms to me.
    He was losing by-elections heavily, had become as popular as Corbyn, and half of all Tory voters wanted him gone.

    He wouldn't have won a bean.
    The polling is curious. Johnson is polling as badly as Corbyn ever did, but he doesn't seem to have dragged down the Tory share as much. Perhaps the voters had assumed that the Tories would get rid of him before the next GE, whereas Labour had already failed to do so with Corbyn.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,557
    edited July 2022
    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    It's Suella for you: she's already promised a war on Woke if she is elected leader. Are you in touch with her?
    I’m still dazed and confused by the revelation that reviled exPBer @SeanT missed me in south Armenia by a matter of minutes

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/an-existential-war-even-wealthy-emigres-are-prepared-to-fight-for-russia
    Theodore Dalrymple has said that it's almost impossible to get invited to write for The Spectator. In fact he said he was the only person who ever had unsolicited articles published by former editor Charles Moore.

    http://www.skepticaldoctor.com/life/
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    HYUFD said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Foxy said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    No, Tim Farron found himself on the wrong end of the "belief spectrum" and voted against the Equality Act, tried to timetable the Same Sex Marriage Act so that it would fail and alienated a lot of the LDs. Years later, in a Guardian interview, he claimed that he only went along with the LDs position on LGBT issues but wished he had not done so
    Oh dear. Not very liberal, was it, trying to fiddle things so that others' beliefs were banned/suppressed?
    It's a bit more nuanced than that. He voted for Gay marriage in the bill's early stages, but abstained in the final vote as he wanted protection for registrars and similar who didn't want to perform gay marriages on conscience grounds. So on that issue very compatible with the definition of Liberal.

    Earlier in his career he had voted against some of the same sex issues in the Equality Act of 2007, such as adoption. Several well regarded religious adoption agencies discontinued when required to comply with the act.

    Why should a registrar get to refuse to marry two people of the same sex? Employees of the state should never be allowed to discriminate in performing their services. That's the state sanctioning bigotry and does not fit at all with my idea of liberalism.
    Things really starts getting complex when one looks at the C of E, which is supposed to be an integral part of the state, and yet won't celebrate single-sex marriages made legal by the same state. Not a discussion I'm particularly interested in digging into, but just a comment on the sort of anomaly one gets with the concept of an Established church where the person in charge (for now) is a RC and the state's laws don't match the church's ideology.
    Yes, which is why I personally strongly believe in keeping religion away from all parts of the state. Including up to the point of not recognising (future) religious ceremonies as legal marriages. Have a registrar there if you want to be legally married, but the hocus pocus crap from the priest is just between you and your God.
    You still have to sign the register, even in a Church of England service like I had last year. It is the register signing that effectively makes it legal not the ceremony, whether religious or civil
    But you legally have to speak some vows, as well, no? And certain religious ministers are legally empowered to administer them, while other celebrants are not. That's the bit I think should change. I think either any celebrant should be recognised, or only the state-employed registrar. Anything else is an invitation to state-sanctioned unequal access which is never what the state should do.
    Well I don't, I refuse to take vows twice when I have already made vows under a religious ceremony. Especially as the religious ones have more meaning for me than any secular civil ones.

    The signing of the register for religious and civil ceremonies is quite enough

    In that case you shouldn't expect the state to consider you married.
    I most certainly will, I signed the register which is quite enough, however I made by marriage vows in the sight of God and the holy ghost not the state
    That's only 2 out of 3. What about JC, or are you embarrassed about his blindingly obv homosexual relationship with John?
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Ben Wallace used to be an MSP!

    Amazed i did not know that until 5 mins ago.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    Pulpstar said:

    Isn't Wallace's appeal basically the same as the winning entry in eurovision ?
    I'm not sure that's the best basis for a new PM.
    Sunak's the man for me still x

    Just laid Wallace a little bit.

    I'm not convinced he will go the distance as they say in racing/
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Extraordinary. Minister on Newsnight saying he wouldn't comment when pressed on if Johnson might try to cut and run for an election whilst in his caretaker role.

    Pointless. Hes no longer Tory party leader, he wouldnt be PM even if they won and would have no part in the manifesto etc.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922
    edited July 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    Isn't Wallace's appeal basically the same as the winning entry in eurovision ?
    I'm not sure that's the best basis for a new PM.
    Sunak's the man for me still x

    If Boris has been kicked out in large part because he was fined for partying in lockdown I don't see how the Tories can replace him with Sunak who was also fined for attending the same party as well as facing allegations over his and his wife's tax affairs.

    No, the Tories want someone dull as ditchwater, but competent and scandal free like Wallace
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,557
    Alistair said:

    Ben Wallace used to be an MSP!

    Amazed i did not know that until 5 mins ago.

    Nor did I. But it was the first term of the Scottish parliament in 1999 to 2003.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,652

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a foreword by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Well, she does have "that vision thing" at least.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,191

    Extraordinary. Minister on Newsnight saying he wouldn't comment when pressed on if Johnson might try to cut and run for an election whilst in his caretaker role.

    Things have changed since when I posted about this earlier - he'd be refused now as he's no longer leader of the largest party.
    Simples.
  • KevinBKevinB Posts: 109
    There is a lot of affection for Johnson in the red wall trust me The daily mail is playing to this constituency I honestly think this could all backfire on the conservatives
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    IshmaelZ said:

    Leon said:

    algarkirk said:

    Cookie said:

    HYUFD said:

    geoffw said:

    If the Tories want a principled leader who understands politics and is not tarnished by association with the Borisian shambles they need look no further than Steve Baker. There, I've said it.

    Steve Baker would also be the second evangelical Christian party leader after Tim Farron and our first openly Christian evangelical PM
    If he wants to do religion he can take it to church, but evangelical types seem to have a need to force the rest of us to live by their beliefs. To govern, we need people who can cope with the modern world and not someone who thinks the Universe and the planet run on the basis of a 2,000 year old set of multiply translated fictions.
    I don't think Tim Farron did, to be fair to him. The media found his religion so peculiar it focused on it relentlessly, but he didn't really want to talk about it - seemed very keen to separate the sacred and the profane.
    To be fair to evangelicals - who are mostly really nice and decent people - those in politics tend to get hammered, like Farron, for having views which are unfashionable but fairly widely shared, while Roman Catholics and the Islamic community also have all sorts of minority views but tend to be miraculously protected from scrutiny.

    What? Not my impression that the Islamic community are protected from scrutiny - their beliefs are widely and IMo unfairly regarded with suspicion, and attacked every few days in mainstream media, because some lunatics claim to share them. Evangelicals are seen as a bit cranky, but few would go further than that. I don't really care what Baker's beliefs are, unless they affect his policies.
    How often is the fairly rampant anti Semitism of some Muslim communities addressed? Seldom. How often is the widespread homophobia of many Muslim communities addressed? Never, as far as I can see
    How often does Leon turn up the chance of posting some inflammatory Islamophobic nonsense? Seldom.
    OK, can we back up a bit?

    Is it nonsense that homophobia is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense that antisemitism is mainstream in Islam?

    Is it nonsense tha there is a teacher who is still in hiding and under police protection somewhere in england because he GASP HORROR showed a graphic representation of the Muslim Spaghetti Monster to a class of children?

    Are you happy with any or all of the above?
    It is nonsense to claim that these issues are never addressed. I read about them on PB.com most weeks, for starters.

    But that is purely circular, because you have already said that oyu dismiss postings here as "inflammatory Islamophobic nonsense." Try again but harder.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Her book has a forward by Bill Gates and promo quotes from Tony Blair, Richard Branson and Elton John.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Greater-Penny-Mordaunt-Chris-Lewis/dp/1785906097/
    Wow, I did not know this existed.
    It even has positive promo quotes from Elton bloody John. How did she manage that?
    None of them will have read it.

    There's a whole PR industry around getting famous people to sign up to quotes and citations about books they haven't so much as browsed.
    Yes but Elton John? Bill Gates?

    This is not like paying £50 to Nigel Farage on Cameo so that he’ll wish a happy Brexit to Amanda Hugandkiss.
    This is all Elton John said: “I’m deeply proud to be British, not least because of the extraordinarily brave, funny, brilliant, kind and talented people who call these small islands home. In particular, I’m proud of Britain’s history of engaging in the challenges people face, not just at home but around the world. It has inspired and supported the work of my AIDS Foundation, which aims to help end this devastating pandemic around the world. A book examining what it means to be British and Britain’s potential to be a force for good in the world is timely. Penny and Chris should be congratulated on seizing the opportunity to look forward in this interesting and enjoyable book.”

    That's a rent-a-quote that says essentially nothing about the book, except that he'd been told what it was about, whilst also promoting his own foundation.

    Admittedly, the foreword by Bill Gates is slightly more impressive. But 'she' got both because of her co-author Chris Lewis, who'd worked for both Elton John and Bill Gates:

    https://www.bitebackpublishing.com/authors/chris-lewis
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited July 2022
    So, do we reckon Durham plod are up for Fun Friday?
    Theyve got the cover they need to proceed!
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,064

    Pulpstar said:

    Isn't Wallace's appeal basically the same as the winning entry in eurovision ?
    I'm not sure that's the best basis for a new PM.
    Sunak's the man for me still x

    Just laid Wallace a little bit.

    I'm not convinced he will go the distance as they say in racing/
    If he couldn’t go the distance when you laid him, I can see that would be disappointing and frustrating.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,922
    edited July 2022
    Andy_JS said:

    Alistair said:

    Ben Wallace used to be an MSP!

    Amazed i did not know that until 5 mins ago.

    Nor did I. But it was the first term of the Scottish parliament in 1999 to 2003.
    Will be a much tougher opponent for Sturgeon at least then, Scots like serious but boring, see also Brown and May
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    IanB2 said:

    Jonathan said:

    nico679 said:

    The Mail is losing the plot. Utterly deranged headline and you’d think Tory MPs just killed the second coming of Christ .

    The Mail is batshit most days, but today they lost their meal ticket.
    The website looks even worse
    Within days/weeks the front page will be along the lines of:

    "Wallace - the Won for England"

    or

    "Braverman will battle for Britain"

    or whatever.

    Tugendhat by name, tugendhat by nature (for German speakers).
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,402
    There are some people up here who adore Boris. And I mean love him. Not the Conservative Party.
    Their numbers were grossly exaggerated when he was riding high. They are in danger of being substantially under counted now he's gone.
    That's all I'm saying.
  • KevinBKevinB Posts: 109
    The idea that someone like Ben Wallace a bald boring man could appeal like Johnson is risible
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,507

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Yes, I think that's spot on. Far from harming Labour, Boris's downfall will benefit them in a significant number of marginal seats in the midlands and north, as well as some coastal seats around the country. And I don't think that will change whoever replaces Boris.
    I disagree. I believe it’s related to investment in their communities, not simply Boris. These communities won’t forget Labour took them for granted, nor forget levelling up predated Boris when they started electing Tory Mayors and Tory MPs.

    Labour are not getting lots of red wall votes back over a short time frame. Penny merely needs to be on front of local gazette in photo with local mayor and MP above headline “more investment agreed” to restore todays severed link.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,298
    edited July 2022
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Leon said:

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    That’s just true. Eurocrats hated Boris, Putin and Co hate him now he’s so vividly pro-Ukraine
    He's hated up and down this country too. The polling is pretty clear.
    Sorry your man turned out so shit.
    But it's also a fair point that some people still really loved Boris. And their votes count as much as anyone else's- maybe more, if they are people who turn out a lot in the right seats.

    I can't remember who first articualted the theory that Johnson had a low floor but a high ceiling for his popularity; he'd probably lead the Conservatives to a calamatous defeat, but might just work his magic one more time. Whereas anyone else would steer the Conservatives to a smaller but almost certain defeat (higher floor, lower celing).

    Ditching Boris was the right thing to do, and should have happened ages ago. But it isn't cost-free.
    Sure, fine. I'm just pointing out that this grubby attempt to insinuate that Boris's enemies are foreign is in the finest tradition of ignoring two third of our own country.
    Not only that but the doltish pairing of Moscow and Brussels. Xenophobic tripe, spoon fed to hateful elderly dribblers.

    I believe Big G gets it “for the sudoku”.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,679

    Farooq said:

    Leon said:

    Corks are popping in Brussels and Moscow apparently. What on earth is the Mail smoking?

    That’s just true. Eurocrats hated Boris, Putin and Co hate him now he’s so vividly pro-Ukraine
    He's hated up and down this country too. The polling is pretty clear.
    Sorry your man turned out so shit.
    But it's also a fair point that some people still really loved Boris. And their votes count as much as anyone else's- maybe more, if they are people who turn out a lot in the right seats.

    I can't remember who first articualted the theory that Johnson had a low floor but a high ceiling for his popularity; he'd probably lead the Conservatives to a calamatous defeat, but might just work his magic one more time. Whereas anyone else would steer the Conservatives to a smaller but almost certain defeat (higher floor, lower celing).

    Ditching Boris was the right thing to do, and should have happened ages ago. But it isn't cost-free.
    If the Tories lose heavily to Sir Keir having been led by some dull mediocrity, I wonder if Boris will be tempted to make a comeback. A historical precedent would be Richard Nixon with whom - not least the initial resignation speech of both men - their are some striking parallels.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,719
    KevinB said:

    There is a lot of affection for Johnson in the red wall trust me The daily mail is playing to this constituency I honestly think this could all backfire on the conservatives

    That may be true.

    But at end of the day, Johnson transgressed one of the unwritten rules of the constitution - you cannot lie knowingly to Parliament (and he did so repeatedly). In the long term the fact that in the end the system made sure that rule applied is far more important than the disappointed voting denizens of Mrs Miggins pie shop in Macclesfield.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,784

    Watching some vox pops earlier, I was struck by the way Boris seemed to be held in genuine affection by voters in the Red Wall seats. A possible nightmare for the Tories: these people actually start resenting to Tories for doing the dirty on 'their' Boris and holding their preferences in contempt; they then vote to punish the Tories accordingly. The Tories might have just killed the golden goose.

    Yes, I think that's spot on. Far from harming Labour, Boris's downfall will benefit them in a significant number of marginal seats in the midlands and north, as well as some coastal seats around the country. And I don't think that will change whoever replaces Boris.
    They were damned of they got rid of him and damned if they didn't. Such a shame, the Tories are a great bunch of lads. I suppose that's what happens when you sell your soul in the name of power, though. There must be a lesson in there somewhere.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 3,785
    KevinB said:

    There is a lot of affection for Johnson in the red wall trust me The daily mail is playing to this constituency I honestly think this could all backfire on the conservatives

    Have you been trying to follow Leon's guide to punctuation and rather misread it?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,447
    edited July 2022
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Leon said:

    It's a good point on Mordaunt's Wokery.

    I read her book where she spent a good few pages having a go at It Ain't Have Hot Mum for having a "full house".

    You can be sure that would all come out in a leadership campaign. I'm not sure how it would affect the MP votes but it would hurt her with the members.

    Oh God, is she Woke??
    Oh yes. Just look up her Mumsnet interview.
    It's the worst thing about her.
    It's her main redeeming feature.

    She is not a culture warrior for the forces of reaction.
    Given you're possibly the Wokest person on here this is the kiss of death for her.

    Tony Blair is well to the Right of her on this, and in the middle ground.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    KevinB said:

    The idea that someone like Ben Wallace a bald boring man could appeal like Johnson is risible

    mmm, content filled post

    I can sort of understand people putting up with being called Kevin cos they were christened that way. But choosing it as a username...
This discussion has been closed.