For all the 1990s England cricket fans on pb - here is an interview with Dermot Reeve. I would never have recognised him and it's a shock to hear at the end where he is now.
Is there any evidence that there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform? This idea seems to be getting a lot of airtime. The civil servants I know are professionals who implement government policy without reference to their personal values or beliefs.
It’s an imported MAGA conspiracy theory. The Conservatives botched their own rhetoric on immigration by introducing contradictory policies.
It’s not a conspiracy theory that the Home Office employs at least some people who are ideologically committed to facilitating immigration.
My experience of the home office is that they’re very much the opposite. Much to the irritation of other departments.
That hostile environment stuff - it didn’t all come from Theresa. Nor did the treatment of the Windrush generation.
Is there any evidence that there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform? This idea seems to be getting a lot of airtime. The civil servants I know are professionals who implement government policy without reference to their personal values or beliefs.
It’s an imported MAGA conspiracy theory. The Conservatives botched their own rhetoric on immigration by introducing contradictory policies.
The idea of institutional blockage goes back a long way, just look at Yes Minister, but I really don't buy the extent of it from a party in power for more than a decade.
On civil service blocking governments I can recount a tale from around 15 years ago. Essentially chemical safety and the government at the time looking to ‘cut red tape’. The chap who came to talk to us made it clear that institutionally any attempts to reduce safety would be resisted by hook or by crook. Now I was and am totally on board with this, but it was also an example of the civil service resisting the desires of the government, justified or not.
Is there any evidence that there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform? This idea seems to be getting a lot of airtime. The civil servants I know are professionals who implement government policy without reference to their personal values or beliefs.
It’s an imported MAGA conspiracy theory. The Conservatives botched their own rhetoric on immigration by introducing contradictory policies.
It’s not a conspiracy theory that the Home Office employs at least some people who are ideologically committed to facilitating immigration.
The Home Office employs over 50k people so yes, I suspect there are "at least some people who are ideologically committed to facilitating immigration".
It probably also employs some people who are ideologically committed to repatriating all immigrants. Neither of which signifies much except that in a population of 50k there'll be some extreme views.
It is an evidence-free conspiracy theory to suggest there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform.
Is there any evidence that there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform? This idea seems to be getting a lot of airtime. The civil servants I know are professionals who implement government policy without reference to their personal values or beliefs.
It’s an imported MAGA conspiracy theory. The Conservatives botched their own rhetoric on immigration by introducing contradictory policies.
It’s not a conspiracy theory that the Home Office employs at least some people who are ideologically committed to facilitating immigration.
I can bet you they also employ some people who are ideologically committed to opposing immigration. Given how many people work there, it would be staggering if that wasn't the case.
Labour will have to do something about the boats though.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
Labour will have to do something about the boats though.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
Sounded vaguely plausible, until Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards. Nobody sane ever carries their political party membership cards with them, surely? Mine has never left the house.
he is talking about a bunch of pretentious fannies here, I can quite believe it.
I'm sure Leon's friends are all perfectly nice people in the flesh, but he always manages to make them sound absolutely bloody awful.
It comes of excessive sobriety. My theory is
- half a bottle of bubbly per person before the meal (or cocktails) - a bottle per person per course, with Tokay for the desert and something interesting with the cheese.
I've never had problems with people talking politics at the table.
Coincidentally - someone - I’m not sure who - has just sent me TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES of English artisanal gin, vodka and rye whisky
I’m not joking
I’m guessing it is a gazette reader who knows I like a tipple and hopes I will talk about them and publicise them?
TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES
Look!
How did they know where to send them?
A very good question I just asked myself. And I’ve worked out who it is. A fan of my writing on the gazette
But was it sent via the Gazette? Otherwise you may have been doxed or whatever young people call it.
About a week ago the deputy head of the Gazette's Basalt Butt Plug Supplement told me "Leon, there's a reader who really likes your writing, wants to send you something, can I give him your address?"
I said Sure, because I quite often get these requests (maybe I am foolish to hand my address out?). Usually it's someone who wants to send me a posh, stiff, formal invite to some function, which is nice - even if I rarely go to them
I did not expect £2k's worth of hard English liquor, but - now, in retrospect, going back to the reader concerned - I can see it is indeed that person
WTF am I gonna do with it?!
Devoted followers know precisely where you live - right down to the soft-top Mini of questionable hue that used to be parked outside. That cornucopia of home-grown hooch will last the rest of your life - so drink it r...e...a...l slow.
The Tories seem to be going with Sir Keir’s changing his mind.
That will have bite if this policy comes to nothing but for the time being I’m not sure how much potency this really has.
The Tories seem irrelevant to this. Which is a strange state of affairs for someone like me who grew up in the 70s and 80s, but nonetheless that’s how it appears, right now.
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
Sounded vaguely plausible, until Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards. Nobody sane ever carries their political party membership cards with them, surely? Mine has never left the house.
he is talking about a bunch of pretentious fannies here, I can quite believe it.
I'm sure Leon's friends are all perfectly nice people in the flesh, but he always manages to make them sound absolutely bloody awful.
It comes of excessive sobriety. My theory is
- half a bottle of bubbly per person before the meal (or cocktails) - a bottle per person per course, with Tokay for the desert and something interesting with the cheese.
I've never had problems with people talking politics at the table.
Coincidentally - someone - I’m not sure who - has just sent me TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES of English artisanal gin, vodka and rye whisky
I’m not joking
I’m guessing it is a gazette reader who knows I like a tipple and hopes I will talk about them and publicise them?
TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES
Look!
How did they know where to send them?
A very good question I just asked myself. And I’ve worked out who it is. A fan of my writing on the gazette
But was it sent via the Gazette? Otherwise you may have been doxed or whatever young people call it.
About a week ago the deputy head of the Gazette's Basalt Butt Plug Supplement told me "Leon, there's a reader who really likes your writing, wants to send you something, can I give him your address?"
I said Sure, because I quite often get these requests (maybe I am foolish to hand my address out?). Usually it's someone who wants to send me a posh, stiff, formal invite to some function, which is nice - even if I rarely go to them
I did not expect £2k's worth of hard English liquor, but - now, in retrospect, going back to the reader concerned - I can see it is indeed that person
Reform UK has selected a leader for its new group of councillors on Leicestershire County Council.
Dan Harrison has taken up the position following this month's election where the party wiped out the Tory majority at County Hall.
Harrison, a former Conservative county councillor who defected to Reform in February, will lead the party's 25 newly-elected members, it was announced on Monday.
One one hand, it's understandable. Conservative retreads are often the only people Reform have who knows where the toilets are in County Hall. But it's not exactly new politics, is it?
Reform UK has selected a leader for its new group of councillors on Leicestershire County Council.
Dan Harrison has taken up the position following this month's election where the party wiped out the Tory majority at County Hall.
Harrison, a former Conservative county councillor who defected to Reform in February, will lead the party's 25 newly-elected members, it was announced on Monday.
One one hand, it's understandable. Conservative retreads are often the only people Reform have who knows where the toilets are in County Hall. But it's not exactly new politics, is it?
Some actual yoof in those photos. Too many brown shoes with suits though. Are they farmers?
Reform UK has selected a leader for its new group of councillors on Leicestershire County Council.
Dan Harrison has taken up the position following this month's election where the party wiped out the Tory majority at County Hall.
Harrison, a former Conservative county councillor who defected to Reform in February, will lead the party's 25 newly-elected members, it was announced on Monday.
One one hand, it's understandable. Conservative retreads are often the only people Reform have who knows where the toilets are in County Hall. But it's not exactly new politics, is it?
Some actual yoof in those photos. Too many brown shoes with suits though. Are they farmers?
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
Labour will have to do something about the boats though.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
It would still be some kind of betrayal to someone or other.
It's still visible - no doubt photos of planes arriving would be splashed across a few front pages. The advantage is of course that they're no longer "illegal" immigrants, and that also gets around the issue where anyone who came to the UK "illegally", can't become a citizen.
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
I think the Reform surge is real.
The Reform surge is real. Leon's multiple stories of his friends aren't though.
I did get quite a surprise the other day. I live in one of the poshest bits of the Guildford constituency. It will also have a much older demographic. When the ballot boxes for here were opened up the spot checks gave us this ward just. That really was a clincher that we had won, because this was one of the harder wards to pick up compared to say the town.
However I have only just found out that the Reform tally was higher here than most of Guildford. If asked I would have guessed we would have been one of the lowest.
Isn't it simply that Reform are replacing the Tories, for a significant lump of their voters ?
A number I'd be interested in is what % of RUK support is from people who voted for Boris and Get Brexit Done in 2019.
A few voters have gone Lab-Ref over the years, but the main flow that matters is UKIP - Con - Ref.
I'm struggling to interpret that. Are we really suggesting that a negligible number of 2019 Labour voters went Reform in 2024? Or those that did, didn't vote in 2015?
Makes a bit more sense if you read it right-to-left. But yes; a negligible number of Labour 2019 voters went Reform in 2024.
I can't get my head round the idea that so few Reform voters have been Labour voters in the past - or at least back to 2015. The prevailing narrative is wrong, but still shapes the way I think about. Difficult to shake.
It was 2015 UKIP did well but did not dent the Tories relative to Labour. Taking that chart back to 2010 might give a somewhat bigger red tab, though I doubt anywhere near parity.
Indeed, Brown did better than Ed Miliband with white working class voters, it was middle class ex LD progressives Labour won back in 2015.
There will be a significant number of voters who voted Labour in 2010, UKIP in 2015, Conservative or Labour in 2017, Conservative in 2019, Labour or Reform in 2024 and now back Reform
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
Most ordinary gays are thoroughly embarassed by today's version of pride marches. Source: ordinary gay. And this pre-dates the trans explosion. It was the weird fetish stuff before.
Labour will have to do something about the boats though.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
It would still be some kind of betrayal to someone or other.
It's still visible - no doubt photos of planes arriving would be splashed across a few front pages. The advantage is of course that they're no longer "illegal" immigrants, and that also gets around the issue where anyone who came to the UK "illegally", can't become a citizen.
Ultimately it will come down to whether the right voters think Sir Keir has done enough to listen to their concerns.
It won't ever be enough for some but is it enough for those that Labour have lost? Perhaps.
I still think Labour has more of a plan than people give it credit for. Evidently they will sweet talk the left flank back in 2028 with "it's me or Farage" and presumably tax cuts or the like.
I can see how it all comes together. But I can also see how it all falls apart.
Labour will have to do something about the boats though.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
It would still be some kind of betrayal to someone or other.
It's still visible - no doubt photos of planes arriving would be splashed across a few front pages. The advantage is of course that they're no longer "illegal" immigrants, and that also gets around the issue where anyone who came to the UK "illegally", can't become a citizen.
Ultimately it will come down to whether the right voters think Sir Keir has done enough to listen to their concerns.
It won't ever be enough for some but is it enough for those that Labour have lost? Perhaps.
I still think Labour has more of a plan than people give it credit for. Evidently they will sweet talk the left flank back in 2028 with "it's me or Farage" and presumably tax cuts or the like.
I can see how it all comes together. But I can also see how it all falls apart.
Ofcom @Ofcom We’re proposing a change to our broadcasting rules.
Under this change, politicians could still present programmes, but could not be a newsreader, news interviewer or news reporter in any type of programme, without exceptional editorial justification.
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
"As Cannes shuns nudity, the days of the naked dress are numbered With the film festival outlawing sheer gowns, is the red carpet finally ready to move on from a trend both lauded and loathed?"
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
Republicans against Trump @RpsAgainstTrump · 31m Trump: “You know, in one area, they lost two whales, like, in 20 years washed ashore. This year they had 17 wash ashore…There’s something driving the whales a little bit loco.”
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
...because Pride marches have never protested the law before?
What I find worrying is that nearly no one from those opposed to the Supreme Court ruling wants the law changed.
The ruling said, explicitly, in several places, that they were mediating conflicts in existing law. Change the law, change the result.
Why is it worrying? Part of collapse in American politics has been the rise of the US Supreme Court as the supreme legislative body. It’s pretty clear that if you have the court and the Presidency, you can do *anything*.
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
This. 1000x this.
But why should we be surprised that nothing adds up in politics land?
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
Sounded vaguely plausible, until Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards. Nobody sane ever carries their political party membership cards with them, surely? Mine has never left the house.
he is talking about a bunch of pretentious fannies here, I can quite believe it.
I'm sure Leon's friends are all perfectly nice people in the flesh, but he always manages to make them sound absolutely bloody awful.
It comes of excessive sobriety. My theory is
- half a bottle of bubbly per person before the meal (or cocktails) - a bottle per person per course, with Tokay for the desert and something interesting with the cheese.
I've never had problems with people talking politics at the table.
Coincidentally - someone - I’m not sure who - has just sent me TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES of English artisanal gin, vodka and rye whisky
I’m not joking
I’m guessing it is a gazette reader who knows I like a tipple and hopes I will talk about them and publicise them?
TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES
Look!
How did they know where to send them?
A very good question I just asked myself. And I’ve worked out who it is. A fan of my writing on the gazette
But was it sent via the Gazette? Otherwise you may have been doxed or whatever young people call it.
About a week ago the deputy head of the Gazette's Basalt Butt Plug Supplement told me "Leon, there's a reader who really likes your writing, wants to send you something, can I give him your address?"
I said Sure, because I quite often get these requests (maybe I am foolish to hand my address out?). Usually it's someone who wants to send me a posh, stiff, formal invite to some function, which is nice - even if I rarely go to them
I did not expect £2k's worth of hard English liquor, but - now, in retrospect, going back to the reader concerned - I can see it is indeed that person
WTF am I gonna do with it?!
Are you serious about wanting to get rid of the bottles? I don't drink but I could give a bottle to a family member as a birthday present. Alistair M (aka Antifrank) sent me a couple of bottles of Hungarian wine in 2016 because my Brexit prediction spreadsheet was very useful for him.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
Don't worry - they will just find back room efficiencies, then use AI, merge functions leading to savings for the taxpayer, etc.
Is there any evidence that there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform? This idea seems to be getting a lot of airtime. The civil servants I know are professionals who implement government policy without reference to their personal values or beliefs.
It’s an imported MAGA conspiracy theory. The Conservatives botched their own rhetoric on immigration by introducing contradictory policies.
It’s not a conspiracy theory that the Home Office employs at least some people who are ideologically committed to facilitating immigration.
I can bet you they also employ some people who are ideologically committed to opposing immigration. Given how many people work there, it would be staggering if that wasn't the case.
And yet, I suspect it would be very hard to find the latter. I suspect admitting to being in the latter camp would be a socially- and career-limiting move. While I suspect those in the former camp are rather keener to self-identify. It's rare, in the public sector, to find individuals willing to identify themselves with unfashionable opinions. I mean, it would be amazing if no-on in the Greater Manchester public sector supported Brexit. But I have yet to find one.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
This. 1000x this.
But why should we be surprised that nothing adds up in politics land?
A lot of care is contracted out and the care companies are very variable.
One here was charging £70/hr on the bank holiday. I would guess the actual carer saw maybe £15 of that.
Is there a case for an NHS style care organisation instead?
I imagine it would be underfunded and the target of much criticism but would it actually be worse?
'The organisers of Pride have been accused of being “anti-democratic” after banning politicians from marches in response to the Supreme Court trans ruling.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
This. 1000x this.
But why should we be surprised that nothing adds up in politics land?
A lot of care is contracted out and the care companies are very variable.
One here was charging £70/hr on the bank holiday. I would guess the actual carer saw maybe £15 of that.
Is there a case for an NHS style care organisation instead?
I imagine it would be underfunded and the target of much criticism but would it actually be worse?
"NHS style care organisation instead"
Not going to happen in our lifetimes would be my prediction.
New net migration figures come out in what, 10 days time?
What do we think they will be?
There’s going to be a significant drop but the biggest change is likely to show up in the November update as that would include a full year of data after all the last governments changes .
I’d think the new figure should be under 500,000 from the current 724,000.
That’s not just because of the changes but an undercount of Ukrainian refugees in earlier releases which were then later added to the figures .
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
Sounded vaguely plausible, until Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards. Nobody sane ever carries their political party membership cards with them, surely? Mine has never left the house.
he is talking about a bunch of pretentious fannies here, I can quite believe it.
I'm sure Leon's friends are all perfectly nice people in the flesh, but he always manages to make them sound absolutely bloody awful.
It comes of excessive sobriety. My theory is
- half a bottle of bubbly per person before the meal (or cocktails) - a bottle per person per course, with Tokay for the desert and something interesting with the cheese.
I've never had problems with people talking politics at the table.
Coincidentally - someone - I’m not sure who - has just sent me TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES of English artisanal gin, vodka and rye whisky
I’m not joking
I’m guessing it is a gazette reader who knows I like a tipple and hopes I will talk about them and publicise them?
TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES
Look!
How did they know where to send them?
A very good question I just asked myself. And I’ve worked out who it is. A fan of my writing on the gazette
But was it sent via the Gazette? Otherwise you may have been doxed or whatever young people call it.
About a week ago the deputy head of the Gazette's Basalt Butt Plug Supplement told me "Leon, there's a reader who really likes your writing, wants to send you something, can I give him your address?"
I said Sure, because I quite often get these requests (maybe I am foolish to hand my address out?). Usually it's someone who wants to send me a posh, stiff, formal invite to some function, which is nice - even if I rarely go to them
I did not expect £2k's worth of hard English liquor, but - now, in retrospect, going back to the reader concerned - I can see it is indeed that person
WTF am I gonna do with it?!
Give it to the homeless?
Why not the prize of @Benpointer annual predictions quiz???
Just had meeting with an old friend. Movie agent. Extremely well connected - personally knows half the Cabinet and has supper parties with ex prime ministers etc
Lives in a big house in Notting Hill
She’s unusually right wing for her posh liberal arty social circle. And getting more right wing
She and her husband threw a big dinner party the other day and it got quite drunken and she and her husband decided to shock everyone by saying “we voted Reform and we’re thinking of joining them”
They didn’t get the shock value they hoped. Why? Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards - they’d already joined. Almost everyone else said Yeah we’re thinking of doing the same
This is posh west london. If THEY are going Reform then
1. The Tories are in desperate trouble and
2. Reform are doing even better than we thought. They’re not just winning Clacton they’re winning the chattering classes in W11
Sounded vaguely plausible, until Three people around the table got out their Reform membership cards. Nobody sane ever carries their political party membership cards with them, surely? Mine has never left the house.
he is talking about a bunch of pretentious fannies here, I can quite believe it.
I'm sure Leon's friends are all perfectly nice people in the flesh, but he always manages to make them sound absolutely bloody awful.
It comes of excessive sobriety. My theory is
- half a bottle of bubbly per person before the meal (or cocktails) - a bottle per person per course, with Tokay for the desert and something interesting with the cheese.
I've never had problems with people talking politics at the table.
Coincidentally - someone - I’m not sure who - has just sent me TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES of English artisanal gin, vodka and rye whisky
I’m not joking
I’m guessing it is a gazette reader who knows I like a tipple and hopes I will talk about them and publicise them?
TWENTY FIVE BOTTLES
Look!
How did they know where to send them?
A very good question I just asked myself. And I’ve worked out who it is. A fan of my writing on the gazette
But was it sent via the Gazette? Otherwise you may have been doxed or whatever young people call it.
About a week ago the deputy head of the Gazette's Basalt Butt Plug Supplement told me "Leon, there's a reader who really likes your writing, wants to send you something, can I give him your address?"
I said Sure, because I quite often get these requests (maybe I am foolish to hand my address out?). Usually it's someone who wants to send me a posh, stiff, formal invite to some function, which is nice - even if I rarely go to them
I did not expect £2k's worth of hard English liquor, but - now, in retrospect, going back to the reader concerned - I can see it is indeed that person
WTF am I gonna do with it?!
Way past time that Basalt Butt Plug Supplement was on HIGNFY.
Shocking that it has been so overlooked all these years.
Ofcom @Ofcom We’re proposing a change to our broadcasting rules.
Under this change, politicians could still present programmes, but could not be a newsreader, news interviewer or news reporter in any type of programme, without exceptional editorial justification.
I thought the rules were already no newsreading or reporter. Wasn't that JRM got in trouble on GB News because there was a terrorist attack and he broke the news and that was counted as newsreading / reporting.
News Interviewer, will be interesting to know what counts as interviewing. Does asking questions of the public count?
For all the 1990s England cricket fans on pb - here is an interview with Dermot Reeve. I would never have recognised him and it's a shock to hear at the end where he is now.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
This. 1000x this.
But why should we be surprised that nothing adds up in politics land?
A lot of care is contracted out and the care companies are very variable.
One here was charging £70/hr on the bank holiday. I would guess the actual carer saw maybe £15 of that.
Is there a case for an NHS style care organisation instead?
I imagine it would be underfunded and the target of much criticism but would it actually be worse?
"NHS style care organisation instead"
Not going to happen in our lifetimes would be my prediction.
No, I agree, it isn't. There could be a case for one though...
The current situation is a mess and a postcode lottery.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
The government booted real reform into the long grass.
Republicans against Trump @RpsAgainstTrump · 31m Trump: “You know, in one area, they lost two whales, like, in 20 years washed ashore. This year they had 17 wash ashore…There’s something driving the whales a little bit loco.”
Revving up to try to stop offshore wind farms already under construction, I hadn't realized that he's already put a halt to the Empire 1 wind farm mid-construction.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
The government booted real reform into the long grass.
17 million inward migrants since 2000 is astonishing.
1/4 of the population.
One thing that rarely gets talked about in the migration debate is that among those incredibly large NET migration figure, the numbers of those leaving is well up. It would be interesting to know who they are, I have a feeling we are undergoing a brain drain.
Starmer has really been on quite a journey, his pitch to Labour party members was pick me I am am just as left wing as Jezza, now he is cutting foreign aid and pitching himself as Nigel Farage ain't tough enough on immigrants coming over here taking our jobs.
Starmer has really been on quite a journey, his pitch to Labour party members was pick me I am am just as left wing as Jezza, now he is cutting foreign aid and pitching himself as Nigel Farage ain't tough enough on immigrants coming over here taking our jobs.
I'm not sure where it's going to lead to. It's difficult to know what all the new Labour MPs make of him, whether they mostly support him or not.
Starmer has really been on quite a journey, his pitch to Labour party members was pick me I am am just as left wing as Jezza, now he is cutting foreign aid and pitching himself as Nigel Farage ain't tough enough on immigrants coming over here taking our jobs.
I'm not sure where it's going to lead to. It's difficult to know what all the new Labour MPs make of him, whether they mostly support him or not.
Its leads to another big relaunch in due course.
He is like Gordon Brittas constantly trying to turn around the unpopular leisure centre.
17 million inward migrants since 2000 is astonishing.
1/4 of the population.
One thing that rarely gets talked about in the migration debate is that among those incredibly large NET migration figure, the numbers of those leaving is well up. It would be interesting to know who they are, I have a feeling we are undergoing a brain drain.
I'd forgotten that around 8 million people have left over the same time. Maybe most of them have gone to Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
17 million inward migrants since 2000 is astonishing.
1/4 of the population.
One thing that rarely gets talked about in the migration debate is that among those incredibly large NET migration figure, the numbers of those leaving is well up. It would be interesting to know who they are, I have a feeling we are undergoing a brain drain.
I'd forgotten that around 8 million people have left over the same time. Maybe most of them have gone to Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
250k have gone to UAE, I would presume at least 500k to Spain / Portugal. The former is brain drain, the later is mostly oldies.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
So if that needs doing it should be done, after the fact.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
So if that needs doing it should be done, after the fact.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
But you don't put the cart before the horse.
LOL. That's not how the care sector works.
The council tell the care home what they are prepared to pay per hour for non self funders and that's the end of it.
The self funders get an increase in order to cross subsidise the council funded peeps.
It is exactly like the current situation in universities: the foreign students are subsiding the home students as the funding bodies will not pay a market rate for UK students (the fee has been frozen since about 1923).
So somebody has had a poo at two properties "linked" to Starmer. Bit of a weird description.
I hope whoever did it gets a stiff prison sentence.
Attacks on politicians of all sides should be treated very seriously and punishment extremely harsh. Same as going after judges. Be it Jezza or Farage or Starmer. It was outrageous that those that attacked Farage got off lightly.
17 million inward migrants since 2000 is astonishing.
1/4 of the population.
One thing that rarely gets talked about in the migration debate is that among those incredibly large NET migration figure, the numbers of those leaving is well up. It would be interesting to know who they are, I have a feeling we are undergoing a brain drain.
I'd forgotten that around 8 million people have left over the same time. Maybe most of them have gone to Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
Didn't quite a chunk of the Polish contingent go home again as a result of Brexit and Covid? IIRC, EU immigration has actually been negative at least some years since 2016.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
So if that needs doing it should be done, after the fact.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
But you don't put the cart before the horse.
LOL. That's not how the care sector works.
The council tell the care home what they are prepared to pay per hour for non self funders and that's the end of it.
The self funders get an increase in order to cross subsidise the council funded peeps.
It is exactly like the current situation in universities: the foreign students are subsiding the home students as the funding bodies will not pay a market rate for UK students (the fee has been frozen since about 1923).
LOL, the Council is obliged to provide for people and if nobody will take them at the rate the Council is willing to pay, that's absolutely NOT the end of it.
Its only the end of it if people are willing to accept the Council's price. If they're not, then the Council has to move, but they won't move if they don't need to.
They don't move out of the goodness of their heart.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
So if that needs doing it should be done, after the fact.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
But you don't put the cart before the horse.
LOL. That's not how the care sector works.
The council tell the care home what they are prepared to pay per hour for non self funders and that's the end of it.
The self funders get an increase in order to cross subsidise the council funded peeps.
It is exactly like the current situation in universities: the foreign students are subsiding the home students as the funding bodies will not pay a market rate for UK students (the fee has been frozen since about 1923).
LOL, the Council is obliged to provide for people and if nobody will take them at the rate the Council is willing to pay, that's absolutely NOT the end of it.
Its only the end of it if people are willing to accept the Council's price. If they're not, then the Council has to move, but they won't move if they don't need to.
They don't move out of the goodness of their heart.
Only works if every single care home in the area agrees a price. The councils pay what the most cost effective care package that meets the absolute bare minimum care plan requirements for the individual concerned that is available in the catchment area.
So if Faulty Towers Care quotes £19 an hour then that's the basic rate. There is some leaway by commissioners at the council for individual shit but basically that's it.
Mrs Miggins Care Homes Ltd survive by charging self funders say £28 an hour and then hey presto they can quote £19 to the council for their people.
If you’re going to stop care visas then you need to increase funding to councils . It’s all well and good bringing in better pay and conditions for care workers but if the costs are going to increase then you need to help councils with that.
So if that needs doing it should be done, after the fact.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
But you don't put the cart before the horse.
LOL. That's not how the care sector works.
The council tell the care home what they are prepared to pay per hour for non self funders and that's the end of it.
The self funders get an increase in order to cross subsidise the council funded peeps.
It is exactly like the current situation in universities: the foreign students are subsiding the home students as the funding bodies will not pay a market rate for UK students (the fee has been frozen since about 1923).
LOL, the Council is obliged to provide for people and if nobody will take them at the rate the Council is willing to pay, that's absolutely NOT the end of it.
Its only the end of it if people are willing to accept the Council's price. If they're not, then the Council has to move, but they won't move if they don't need to.
They don't move out of the goodness of their heart.
Only works if every single care home in the area agrees a price. The councils pay what the most cost effective care package that meets the absolute bare minimum care plan requirements for the individual concerned that is available in the catchment area.
So if Faulty Towers Care quotes £19 an hour then that's the basic rate. There is some leaway by commissioners at the council for individual shit but basically that's it.
Mrs Miggins Care Homes Ltd survive by charging self funders say £28 an hour and then hey presto they can quote £19 to the council for their people.
So what?
Bulk and semi-monopsony suppliers get a discount. That's not new and it's not going to change.
If the costs the care home has to pay changes then the Council will just have to adjust and get used to what the new bare minimum is.
Labour have either accidentally or otherwise spent the last year figuring out what they need to do to win again.
They now have four years to do it.
If they do it, they win. Otherwise it’s Nigel’s turn.
Really as simple as that.
They have thrown the next GE away during this last disastrous week. Labour MPs and his party don’t want the excruciatingly unlikeable and deeply unpopular Starmer to lead them into the next GE, that’s become clear. If the economy continues as economists predict, he won’t make it beyond 2027.
Also need to wonder, from May 3rd 29 onwards, will there be a Labour government ever again?
Labour MPs have always proved themselves to be useless at replacing leaders, (unlike the Tories). Will it be any different this time?
Comments
I think the last PM not to live in Downing St was the Marquess of Salisbury.
That hostile environment stuff - it didn’t all come from Theresa. Nor did the treatment of the Windrush generation.
It probably also employs some people who are ideologically committed to repatriating all immigrants. Neither of which signifies much except that in a population of 50k there'll be some extreme views.
It is an evidence-free conspiracy theory to suggest there's a deep state of civil servants blocking immigration reform.
I think if the criticism is that it’s 240,000 too many then that’s not a bad problem to have.
I think they just will simply have to sign an agreement with France of some kind. That one to take every boat arrival back in exchange for a legitimate asylum seeker didn’t seem too bad to me. I am not sure if that got anywhere.
That will have bite if this policy comes to nothing but for the time being I’m not sure how much potency this really has.
Reform UK has selected a leader for its new group of councillors on Leicestershire County Council.
Dan Harrison has taken up the position following this month's election where the party wiped out the Tory majority at County Hall.
Harrison, a former Conservative county councillor who defected to Reform in February, will lead the party's 25 newly-elected members, it was announced on Monday.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgnlry063qo.amp
One one hand, it's understandable. Conservative retreads are often the only people Reform have who knows where the toilets are in County Hall. But it's not exactly new politics, is it?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9wgrngplnro
"Police probe possible links to two other blazes after Starmer house fire"
Event organisers in London, Birmingham, Brighton and Manchester have all announced that they will be “suspending political party participation” in events this year.'
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/05/12/gender-critical-pride-anti-democratic-politicians-ban-trans/
It's still visible - no doubt photos of planes arriving would be splashed across a few front pages. The advantage is of course that they're no longer "illegal" immigrants, and that also gets around the issue where anyone who came to the UK "illegally", can't become a citizen.
There will be a significant number of voters who voted Labour in 2010, UKIP in 2015, Conservative or Labour in 2017, Conservative in 2019, Labour or Reform in 2024 and now back Reform
New leader of Reform in Notts when asked whether there was enough experience in the 39 new councillors:
'we've got two doctors, a lawyer, ex teachers, ex nurses, various successful businessmen, new graduates'
Hmmm...
It won't ever be enough for some but is it enough for those that Labour have lost? Perhaps.
I still think Labour has more of a plan than people give it credit for. Evidently they will sweet talk the left flank back in 2028 with "it's me or Farage" and presumably tax cuts or the like.
I can see how it all comes together. But I can also see how it all falls apart.
@Ofcom
We’re proposing a change to our broadcasting rules.
Under this change, politicians could still present programmes, but could not be a newsreader, news interviewer or news reporter in any type of programme, without exceptional editorial justification.
"As Cannes shuns nudity, the days of the naked dress are numbered
With the film festival outlawing sheer gowns, is the red carpet finally ready to move on from a trend both lauded and loathed?"
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/fashion/news/cannes-nudity-naked-dress/
Republicans against Trump
@RpsAgainstTrump
·
31m
Trump: “You know, in one area, they lost two whales, like, in 20 years washed ashore. This year they had 17 wash ashore…There’s something driving the whales a little bit loco.”
https://x.com/RpsAgainstTrump/status/1922043669416157622
The ruling said, explicitly, in several places, that they were mediating conflicts in existing law. Change the law, change the result.
Why is it worrying? Part of collapse in American politics has been the rise of the US Supreme Court as the supreme legislative body. It’s pretty clear that if you have the court and the Presidency, you can do *anything*.
But why should we be surprised that nothing adds up in politics land?
It's pretty simple really.
It's rare, in the public sector, to find individuals willing to identify themselves with unfashionable opinions.
I mean, it would be amazing if no-on in the Greater Manchester public sector supported Brexit. But I have yet to find one.
What do we think they will be?
( Circa 400,000 pa net increase?)
One here was charging £70/hr on the bank holiday. I would guess the actual carer saw maybe £15 of that.
Is there a case for an NHS style care organisation instead?
I imagine it would be underfunded and the target of much criticism but would it actually be worse?
Not going to happen in our lifetimes would be my prediction.
I’d think the new figure should be under 500,000 from the current 724,000.
That’s not just because of the changes but an undercount of Ukrainian refugees in earlier releases which were then later added to the figures .
Shocking that it has been so overlooked all these years.
News Interviewer, will be interesting to know what counts as interviewing. Does asking questions of the public count?
The current situation is a mess and a postcode lottery.
One thing that rarely gets talked about in the migration debate is that among those incredibly large NET migration figure, the numbers of those leaving is well up. It would be interesting to know who they are, I have a feeling we are undergoing a brain drain.
He is like Gordon Brittas constantly trying to turn around the unpopular leisure centre.
We don't have state planned salary levels. If wages rise, then the care homes will just have to invoice a higher price to the Councils. And the Councils will then need to demand more money for meeting the costs.
But you don't put the cart before the horse.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9wgrngplnro
So somebody has had a poo at two properties "linked" to Starmer. Bit of a weird description.
The council tell the care home what they are prepared to pay per hour for non self funders and that's the end of it.
The self funders get an increase in order to cross subsidise the council funded peeps.
It is exactly like the current situation in universities: the foreign students are subsiding the home students as the funding bodies will not pay a market rate for UK students (the fee has been frozen since about 1923).
Its only the end of it if people are willing to accept the Council's price. If they're not, then the Council has to move, but they won't move if they don't need to.
They don't move out of the goodness of their heart.
So if Faulty Towers Care quotes £19 an hour then that's the basic rate. There is some leaway by commissioners at the council for individual shit but basically that's it.
Mrs Miggins Care Homes Ltd survive by charging self funders say £28 an hour and then hey presto they can quote £19 to the council for their people.
"Britain | Clamping down
Britain has had it with mass immigration
But immigrants might not have had it with Britain" (£)
https://www.economist.com/britain/2025/05/12/britain-has-had-it-with-mass-immigration
Bulk and semi-monopsony suppliers get a discount. That's not new and it's not going to change.
If the costs the care home has to pay changes then the Council will just have to adjust and get used to what the new bare minimum is.
"Trump pushes Republicans to have rich pay more taxes"
https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5290814-trump-tax-hike-wealthy-gop-bill/