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Rage against the machine – charting the rise of outsider parties – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,928
edited 8:05AM in General
Rage against the machine – charting the rise of outsider parties – politicalbetting.com

A moment I remember from the 2015 election is when a TV interviewer was asking a series of vox pops and one respondent replied he was deciding between UKIP and the Greens.

Read the full story here

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Comments

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249
    First!
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,232
    Mainly agreed.

    I would say that Ed does ask questions about Social services and Carers as well.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 89,815
    edited 8:13AM
    All this perfect for the con artist bobby grower. If Your Party hadnt been sich a farce should have been even better for them as for all Corbyn many faults fighting against cosy global elites is his Mastermind specialist subject and obviously he much prefers the company of your downtrodden freedom fighters and the local allotment society than billionaire nonce clubs.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,376
    Owen Jones is not a fan of Starmer

    https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1FUPvhhz8i/
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,662
    Since the 2008 Crash outsiders have gained popularity but rarely actually won. Corbyn lost twice, Yes lost the 2014 referendum etc. Even Brexit only got done over 3 years after the narrow 2016 Leave win in the EU referendum and even then that was partly as Boris was facing even more outsider Corbyn. Boris was then swiftly removed by the elites in 2022 and Truss didn’t last long so two insiders, Sunak and Starmer fought the 2024 general election.

    Farage is now leading as an outsider but his attracting defections of ex Tory Cabinet ministers is making him more of an insider to try and prepare a Reform government which will turn off voters wanting an anti establishment outsider to vote for. Polanski and the Greens are still polling less than half what Corbyn Labour got in 2017
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 89,815

    Owen Jones is not a fan of Starmer

    https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1FUPvhhz8i/

    Paul Mason on the other hand definitely backed the wrong horse upon the fall of Corbynism.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 13,321
    edited 8:20AM
    Agree with the header - though I think on the working-class v elite issues, it's more an question of emphasis. I think people do care about Trump and Brexit, it's just that "the elite" don't (typically) have money or health issues, and therefore cost-of-living/NHS are relatively unimportant, which is a stark contrast with the public.

    I also think there is a missing option 2.1: Reform/Green are able to radically transform the country and make the elites bend to the Government’s will (and it all goes horribly wrong, a la Truss).
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,693
    FPT

    There are pros and cons for Labour with Rayner.

    On one side, she is divisive, she has baggage with the tax affairs, and she hasn’t displayed tremendous competence in the short space of time that she was a minister.

    On the other side, she is tactically savvy (see yesterday), she commands loyalty and is in tune with her party grassroots, she has a good story, and she can at least sell Labour values in a way Starmer desperately struggles with.

    The thing about Rayner taking over mid-term is that acting in a hurry without a mandate destroyed Liz Truss, and I’m doubtful the money markets will have much truck with a significant pivot left on the economic side. That is why I very firmly suspect that monetary and fiscal policy would stay broadly the same under a Rayner government (maybe a few sprinklings of wealth taxes here and there as a sop for the base). Her premiership would be more a change of emphasis and a more confident articulation of Labour values. The prize would be winning a full term in 2029. A united left would stand a much better chance in that election than Labour do currently.

    I wouldn’t vote for a Rayner led party, but then I’m not the target demographic. I can see merit to the change. The Labour Party desperately needs to work out what it is for and to sell a vision to the country. Starmer has shown himself completely incapable of doing so. And indeed with the dark lord of New Labour out of the picture, that centrist vision of a social democratic middle road Labour Party that doesn’t believe in much but power isn’t looking hale and healthy right now.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 60,510

    An interesting header as usual from Gareth.

    Question: as the big insider parties have ground themselves to a halt, mired in scandal and political inertia, why is an outsider party such a bad idea...

    When the outsiders will break more than they fix, of course.

    It’s all very well to say - “we won’t be dictated to by the bond markets… ”. But none of them are saying the other bit “… and we will raise taxes to stop borrowing. Immediately”.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,125
    I am sure this could be a metaphor for something.

    Did I see a #mouse run under door, just now, during @Peston interview with @KemiBadenoch?

    https://x.com/AlastairBruce_/status/2019186505659330923
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983
    It's exciting to see new parties rise and (mostly) fall. The Greens have plugged away for a long time.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983
    edited 8:23AM
    HYUFD said:

    Nigelb said:

    HYUFD said:

    Battlebus said:

    After Trump was completely vindicated ( his analysis) on Saturday when the Epstein files dropped, Trump explains how he intends to Federalise the midterms. Trump and not the states to manage the count.

    Complain the 2026 mid-terms were a fraud to put pressure on federalising the 2028 Presidential Election. He wants to steal that, not for something as lowly as the House/Senate. The plebs don't deserve it.
    If Trump doesn't stand again he won't give a toss whether say Buttigieg or Vance win in 2028
    The rest of the administration will, which is what counts. He's surrounded by people equally contemptuous of the law, and they have shown the ability to manipulate the ageing narcissist.
    Trump couldn't even overturn the 2020 presidential election when he was on the ballot.

    If Vance had replaced him as President Trump would even want Vance to lose as revenge
    He's a lot more prepared now, as we've seen. 2020 he was in a scramble trying to overturn and didnt have the people in place to do it - Pence found a moral line he could not cross, judges were not playing ball on his frivolous suits, law enforcement wouldn't act on nothing, and when he tried to repace the acting AG with a patsy because they wouldn't persue it he was faced down by threat of mass legal counsel resignations.

    None of those barriers are there now. He appointed people explicitly who would have followed his orders in 2020.

    You're repeating the error McConnell made that because his attempts to overturn failed there is no worry about someone trying again more competently.

  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,376
    edited 8:21AM
    https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1AcFbeLx8q/


    Corrected link at Owen Jones.. he's not wrong...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,649
    Curse of the new thread....


    FPT: If Labour does apppoint Rayner, they have finally caught up with the Tories in having a female leader (albeit it has taken half a century to catch up).

    The markets will be wary of her "left-wing credentials", which will likely box in what she can actually achieve. Not sure if that will satisfy those MPs putting their faith in her.

    As an aside, I think the LibDems will need to move on from Davey. I reckon Daisy Cooper will be leading the LibDems within 6 months of PM Ange...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983
    edited 8:22AM

    An interesting header as usual from Gareth.

    Question: as the big insider parties have ground themselves to a halt, mired in scandal and political inertia, why is an outsider party such a bad idea...

    In theory it's not. It depends on the particular outsider parties available though, what they promise, and how realistic those promises are.

    Reliance simply on being outsiders alone would be recipe for disaster, just as presuming insider ones cannot cock up would be.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,355
    Thank for Gareth; an interesting read.

  • MattWMattW Posts: 31,969
    IanB2 said:

    Oops! TSE has posted NEW THREAD in the new thread, not here

    NEW THREAD!

    Ed Balls !!
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,232

    I am sure this could be a metaphor for something.

    Did I see a #mouse run under door, just now, during @Peston interview with @KemiBadenoch?

    https://x.com/AlastairBruce_/status/2019186505659330923

    Didnt there used to be a children's song way back about mice with clogs on?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,489

    I am sure this could be a metaphor for something.

    Did I see a #mouse run under door, just now, during @Peston interview with @KemiBadenoch?

    https://x.com/AlastairBruce_/status/2019186505659330923

    Thank goodness there wasn’t a child identifying as a cat in the room, it could have got bloody.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249
    edited 8:31AM
    A good header - but missing that prior to 2010 the LibDems could indeed position themselves as an outsider party.

    There are two dimensions to being an outsider party - the lead identifies one, the extent to which the party wants to change or overthrow the system. Here, it is fair that the LibDems' moderate image doesn't fully fit (although the Liberals have always had a radical wing, and on issues such as constitutional reform the Liberals and LDs have always campaigned to change almost all aspects of our previous governance, including fair voting, devolution, federalism, independent local government, and an elected second chamber).

    But the second dimension is more simple - you can pose as an outsider party if you are untainted by power. Which, prior to 2010, the LDs were, and they brought to national politics a long-honed ability to be effective campaigners against whoever was running their local councils. Look at Liberal and LD campaign messaging and positioning themselves against "the two big parties" was always central (cf. 'Don't blame me, I voted Liberal', 'the real fight is for Britain', etc.)

    The 2010 coalition severely hit the LD's ability to pose as outsiders - both because they'd been in power and hence shared responsibility for specific outcomes delivered by that government (tuition fees!), and because, once you've been in office, it's much harder to persuade voters that, if only you were "given a chance", "everything would be different". It's noticeable that what would have been a reliable core LD vote of 10%+ across most of the country is now reduced to a bedrock closer to 5%.

    Hence those voters looking for dreamers to deliver some sort of utopia moved on to UKIP, and now the Greens and Reform.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,125
    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 12,493

    I am sure this could be a metaphor for something.

    Did I see a #mouse run under door, just now, during @Peston interview with @KemiBadenoch?

    https://x.com/AlastairBruce_/status/2019186505659330923

    Thank goodness there wasn’t a child identifying as a cat in the room, it could have got bloody.
    Would it have lunged for the pest or the Peston?
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 2,221
    edited 8:33AM
    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    Whoever promises to stop this nonsense gets my vote.

    And Test Matches must start on Thursdays
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,786

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    It’s going down about as well as Scotland v England on Valentine’s Day.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249

    An interesting header as usual from Gareth.

    Question: as the big insider parties have ground themselves to a halt, mired in scandal and political inertia, why is an outsider party such a bad idea...

    When the outsiders will break more than they fix, of course.

    It’s all very well to say - “we won’t be dictated to by the bond markets… ”. But none of them are saying the other bit “… and we will raise taxes to stop borrowing. Immediately”.
    The upside is that it will take them a few years to become as venal and corrupt as the last lot. The downside is that it will take the same amount of time for them to work out what on earth they are supposed to be doing.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983

    In the 2000s, there were few votes for outsider parties. The LDs took an outsider position on Iraq, but it would be hard to call them an outsider party.

    I disagree, in the 2000s the LDs were the outsider party. They were the pox on both your houses, none of the above, party.

    Yes their leadership were not that, but a very large chunk of their voters were.

    The Coalition fractured that. More than tuition fees, it was the very act of going into Government that destroyed what for many LD voters were the LDs very nature of being outsiders and making them just another establishment party.

    I remain firmly of the belief (both anecdotally and from data) that a large chunk of the 2015 UKIP vote were ex-LD voters.

    They dropped voteshare before tuition fees, immediately in fact. The act of going into government was enough (ok, who with was relevant too).
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,125
    Sandpit said:

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    It’s going down about as well as Scotland v England on Valentine’s Day.
    I'm going to be in Edinburgh and North Britain that weekend.

    I have packed all my England rugby shirts for the occasion.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,983
    We want easy answers, and hoping outsiders can change fundamentals provides that.

    It's not impossible, but it has risks we ignore through belief in easy solutions.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249

    In the 2000s, there were few votes for outsider parties. The LDs took an outsider position on Iraq, but it would be hard to call them an outsider party.

    I disagree, in the 2000s the LDs were the outsider party. They were the pox on both your houses, none of the above, party.

    Yes their leadership were not that, but a very large chunk of their voters were.

    The Coalition fractured that. More than tuition fees, it was the very act of going into Government that destroyed what for many LD voters were the LDs very nature of being outsiders and making them just another establishment party.

    I remain firmly of the belief (both anecdotally and from data) that a large chunk of the 2015 UKIP vote were ex-LD voters.

    I agree - as I effectively said above. Someone despising the political duopoly were key voters for the Liberals, before the field became so crowded.

    The big question is whether having so many of the politicians who just failed us last time around, now in prominence within Reform, will significantly dent Reform's ability to try and fool us that if only we elected them, it would all be better...?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,481
    Good morning, everyone.

    F1: early wibble about midfield chaps who may do well: Gasly, Bearman, and Alonso (who may have an outside shot of competing for the title):

    https://medium.com/@rkilner/f1-2026-gasly-bearman-and-alonso-to-shine-ff2241616abd
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 27,312
    edited 8:40AM
    kle4 said:

    In the 2000s, there were few votes for outsider parties. The LDs took an outsider position on Iraq, but it would be hard to call them an outsider party.

    I disagree, in the 2000s the LDs were the outsider party. They were the pox on both your houses, none of the above, party.

    Yes their leadership were not that, but a very large chunk of their voters were.

    The Coalition fractured that. More than tuition fees, it was the very act of going into Government that destroyed what for many LD voters were the LDs very nature of being outsiders and making them just another establishment party.

    I remain firmly of the belief (both anecdotally and from data) that a large chunk of the 2015 UKIP vote were ex-LD voters.

    They dropped voteshare before tuition fees, immediately in fact. The act of going into government was enough (ok, who with was relevant too).
    Indeed. Though they likely would have dropped immediately by going in with Labour too.

    Many on the left liked to sum Labour and LD as combined "progressive" votes, but they are not and never were interchangeable.

    In LD/Lab marginals the LDs would appeal as the "stop Labour" party and in LD/Tory marginals they would appeal as the "stop the Tories" party.

    By being in Coalition with either, you alienate the others you were trying to appeal to.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,662
    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    In terms of anti immigration and anti woke policies Reform are outsiders.

    Wales voted for Brexit just like England, Reform are polling higher in Scotland now than in London
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249
    MattW said:

    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    Reform wants the electorate to THINK they are an outsider party.

    What does the line up of MPs look like?

    Perhaps Lee Anderson is an outsider.

    The rest are last year's committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch.
    Left-wing revolutionaries have got away for centuries with being themselves often well-off, middle class intellectuals and self-appointed champions of the proletariat, whose views and lifestyle they neither shared. Now it's the turn of the 'hedge fund board members' of Reform to try the same trick....
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 14,895
    kle4 said:

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    Whoever promises to stop this nonsense gets my vote.

    And Test Matches must start on Thursdays
    With a rest day on Sunday so i can watch live John Player Sunday League cricket on BBC2
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 133,662
    edited 8:48AM
    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Nigelb said:

    HYUFD said:

    Battlebus said:

    After Trump was completely vindicated ( his analysis) on Saturday when the Epstein files dropped, Trump explains how he intends to Federalise the midterms. Trump and not the states to manage the count.

    Complain the 2026 mid-terms were a fraud to put pressure on federalising the 2028 Presidential Election. He wants to steal that, not for something as lowly as the House/Senate. The plebs don't deserve it.
    If Trump doesn't stand again he won't give a toss whether say Buttigieg or Vance win in 2028
    The rest of the administration will, which is what counts. He's surrounded by people equally contemptuous of the law, and they have shown the ability to manipulate the ageing narcissist.
    Trump couldn't even overturn the 2020 presidential election when he was on the ballot.

    If Vance had replaced him as President Trump would even want Vance to lose as revenge
    He's a lot more prepared now, as we've seen. 2020 he was in a scramble trying to overturn and didnt have the people in place to do it - Pence found a moral line he could not cross, judges were not playing ball on his frivolous suits, law enforcement wouldn't act on nothing, and when he tried to repace the acting AG with a patsy because they wouldn't persue it he was faced down by threat of mass legal counsel resignations.

    None of those barriers are there now. He appointed people explicitly who would have followed his orders in 2020.

    You're repeating the error McConnell made that because his attempts to overturn failed there is no worry about
    someone trying again more competently.

    It was the armed forces not
    backing the Trump attempted
    coup in 2021 that stopped it not Pence, judges or lawyers as
    the armed forces take an oath to the constitution not the President
  • CookieCookie Posts: 16,757

    kle4 said:

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    Whoever promises to stop this nonsense gets my vote.

    And Test Matches must start on Thursdays
    With a rest day on Sunday so i can watch live John Player Sunday League cricket on BBC2
    God I miss Grandstand.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 22,050
    MattW said:

    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    Reform wants the electorate to THINK they are an outsider party.

    What does the line up of MPs look like?

    Perhaps Lee Anderson is an outsider.

    The rest are last year's committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch.
    Last years BLACKBALLED committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch
  • MelonBMelonB Posts: 16,739
    Great header. I’m not sure the inside/outside divide is as black and white (and I don’t see the SNP or Plaid as full outsiders, in the same way say Bloc Quebecois are not full outsiders).

    One development since social media came along is the return of grand global narratives. Movements that take inspiration from similar ideas (and events) in other countries. We see that all the time in MAGA world and eco world. We saw it during Covid about masks and vaccines. Enhanced of course by the bot army.

    That enables outsider parties to position themselves as part of something bigger. Just as a startup communist outfit somewhere in Latin America could get itself a political head start during the Cold War.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 36,600
    Great thread header - thanks Gareth.

    Of interest to me is the wider reason for the general sense of ennui that pervades not just the UK but the whole West (and, as a far as I know the world).

    I would contend that on most measures the population of the UK is on average better off than it was 20 years ago. But no one 'feels' that way for some reason.
  • BlancheLivermoreBlancheLivermore Posts: 7,431
    Mandelson is nine under par in just three Prime Ministers
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 14,895
    MattW said:

    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    Reform wants the electorate to THINK they are an outsider party.

    What does the line up of MPs look like?

    Perhaps Lee Anderson is an outsider.

    The rest are last year's committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch.
    Indeed.
    Most of their councillors are ex Tories or defectors directly from them. They have 3 Tory cabinet members and a minister in their partly party of 8, their backers are ex Tory backers.
    Reform are the blob with a shit christmas cracker 'tash on

    Greens are outsiders but nowhere near winning in the polls and if YouGov, Find Out Now and Ashcroft are overstating them, nowhere near over 20 seats with everyone else
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,489

    Good piece but I want to put forward the case for Stancilism: It's the information environment.

    Will Stancil's key argument on this is that if you look on people's perceptions of their economy (he's looking at the US which undoubtedly had a strong economy), not only do they not match the economic data, which generally says things are pretty good, but they don't match their own expressed experiences. If you ask people, "what is the economy like", they'll say it's horrendous, but if you ask them how they're personally doing, they mostly say, "pretty good". Why do they think this? Because of the way they're getting information.

    Talking up negatives has always been a feature of media, but it seems to have got turbocharged with social media, which for whatever reason is really conducive to doomerism of all kinds.

    Probably a bit of a stretch, but a glimmer of hope there, ie I'm alright but things aint so good for my countrmen, my nation, society, humanity etc. Not sure how, but if altruism could be weaponised against all the solipsistic rage...
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 35,037
    Surely the header misses the obvious current exemplar of an elite global network: Davos Epstein Island.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,672
    Excellent article, @Garethofthevale, thank you. Seems to me the most important bit is at the end - politicians and parties must start addressing people's concerns. Who could possibly have guessed that? Very, very few of the 'elite' or whatever one likes to call them.

    I've just come across Amelia, a figment of someone's imagination.
  • ajbajb Posts: 173
    There are really two dimensions here:

    Insider/outsider: outsiders want to replace the current insiders

    Revisionist/status quo: revisionists want to change how the system works, status quo wants to keep how it works. (This terminology is from Perun, I guess it's used by the military).

    The Lib Dems have classically always been outsiders but not really revisionist. Reform: Brexit was a clear revisionist policy. Otherwise many are technically revisionist, in the sense of wanting to revert to an older status quo where many regulations and equality rules are rolled back. But despite claiming to be a working class party , my sense is that it's run for the landlord/pensioner class and increasingly so as more Tories defect. There will be a fight if they get into power about how revisionist they want to be.

    Greens: outsider, and also revisionist for idealist reasons; the question here will be if it achieves power, will it's politicians have enough determination to stick to their ideals and execute real change, or will their idealism fade.

    That's in terms of the parties; what about the voters? I think many are sick of the current parties and so willing to see outsiders take a turn. Many also feel that the current system is failing and willing to take a chance on changing it, but it's not clear how committed they are to any particular change.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 54,249
    edited 9:07AM

    Great thread header - thanks Gareth.

    Of interest to me is the wider reason for the general sense of ennui that pervades not just the UK but the whole West (and, as a far as I know the world).

    I would contend that on most measures the population of the UK is on average better off than it was 20 years ago. But no one 'feels' that way for some reason.

    One hypothesis is that it's down to the fall of communism, prior to which the 'threat' of an alternative economic model forced capitalist societies to keep their people onside by ensuring that the benefits of growth were equitably distributed, ensuring some egalitarianism. Once capitalism became triumphant, uncontested as the way to run an economy, those in power began aggrandising power and wealth to themselves - hence the rise of inequality and the superrich, with very modest gains made by the majority of folk in the middle.

    The 2008 financial crisis then dented our faith in capitalism to deliver stability and growth, yet still without any serious alternative, following which the super-rich used their power and leverage to largely protect their own position, while everyone else's real incomes stagnated.

    You might also add in the psychological challenge to assumed western dominance that the rise of China (India, Brazil, Nigeria etc.) poses to democracies, especially to the US, faced with no longer being sole top dog, and casting doubt on whether the Chinese might have a better way, taking a long-term view, of steering their economy.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,649
    Roger said:

    MattW said:

    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    Reform wants the electorate to THINK they are an outsider party.

    What does the line up of MPs look like?

    Perhaps Lee Anderson is an outsider.

    The rest are last year's committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch.
    Last years BLACKBALLED committee of the Tunbridge Wells Conservative Party Branch
    You need to look at the reasons they were blackballed...
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 17,709

    Good piece but I want to put forward the case for Stancilism: It's the information environment.

    Will Stancil's key argument on this is that if you look on people's perceptions of their economy (he's looking at the US which undoubtedly had a strong economy), not only do they not match the economic data, which generally says things are pretty good, but they don't match their own expressed experiences. If you ask people, "what is the economy like", they'll say it's horrendous, but if you ask them how they're personally doing, they mostly say, "pretty good". Why do they think this? Because of the way they're getting information.

    Talking up negatives has always been a feature of media, but it seems to have got turbocharged with social media, which for whatever reason is really conducive to doomerism of all kinds.

    Same in this country right now, people's perceptions of their own financial outlook are more positive than their view of the economy overall.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,489
    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,632

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    And the Winter Olympics starting BEFORE the Opening Ceremony!
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,672

    I am sure this could be a metaphor for something.

    Did I see a #mouse run under door, just now, during @Peston interview with @KemiBadenoch?

    https://x.com/AlastairBruce_/status/2019186505659330923

    Didnt there used to be a children's song way back about mice with clogs on?
    Something about a windmill in Old Amsterdam:
    I saw a mouse! Where? There on the stair. There on the stair, right there! A little mouse with clogs on, well I declare .....
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 42,261
    @Steven_Swinford
    BREAKING:

    Labour backbenchers are now publicly warning Sir Keir Starmer that his own future will be in doubt unless he sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

    It's effectively an ultimatum that's being echoed across the backbenches

    Karl Turner, a Labour MP, says the mood on the backbenches is 'dire'. He says that unless Starmer sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he will be 'up against it' and have to make a decision about his own future

    He tells
    @TimesRadio
    the atmosphere in the Commons was the 'angriest' he has ever seen it, but that the anger was directed at his advisers

    He says he forwarded messages from people expressing their anger directly to the prime minister last night. 'He thanked me, and I suspect he thanked those who were then messaging him'

    'My advice to the prime minister is get rid of those advisers who have frankly given terrible advice to him over weeks and months. The PM needs to deal with that and make a decision. If the PM decides he has to be surrounded by advisers who give him shoddy advice the reality of that is the prime minister is going to have to make a decision about his future some point soon

    'If McSweeney is still in 10 Downing Street the PM is up against it'
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 31,701

    An interesting header as usual from Gareth.

    Question: as the big insider parties have ground themselves to a halt, mired in scandal and political inertia, why is an outsider party such a bad idea...

    When the outsiders will break more than they fix, of course.

    It’s all very well to say - “we won’t be dictated to by the bond markets… ”. But none of them are saying the other bit “… and we will raise taxes to stop borrowing. Immediately”.
    That I agree with. What I am hoping an "outsider" party will do is take a deep breath and understand our place in the world:
    We have influence but we're disconnected
    We're rich but we're also crumbling broke
    We have much to offer if we invested in it

    I don't want to work against the bond markets, I want to work with them. A country with a clear purpose, which is investable and openly driving its economy for the long term.

    I could go on all day about our very urgent need to start investing in ourselves. We can't carry on cutting literally every bit of spending so that the country is both expensive and tatty. I am way more on the side of the Green outsiders than I am the Refuk outsiders. But I fear that bringing that traitorous fuck Farage into Downing Street will only wreck the country further.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,649

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    The tech bros have learnt how to control the media, old and new.

    Those who control the media...
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,571
    Dopermean said:

    Is Reform an outsider party?
    It and it's predecessors have been used to shift the overtime window right. It's policies are promoted by most of the mainstream media. while the Greens are portrayed as loonies.
    On mainland UK the lurch to the right and insular nationalism seems to be an English problem, Scottish and Welsh nationalism being for devolution within the EU.

    Are the SNP an outsider party? They've been in power in Scotland for so long.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 126,125

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    And the Winter Olympics starting BEFORE the Opening Ceremony!
    Happens at most Olympics.

    For example in 2012 the football started two days before the opening ceremony.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,786
    So, one of Russia’s top 10 banks just posted a 9bn ruble loss for Q4 - with the vast majority of the losses being in December. A lot of loan defaults with high interest rates.

    https://x.com/maria_drutska/status/2019305489817882832

    Are we about to see the long-awaited collapse in the Russian economy? These things happen slowly then happen quickly, but it’s been happening slowly for a while now.
  • BlancheLivermoreBlancheLivermore Posts: 7,431

    Mandelson is nine under par in just three Prime Ministers

    An albatross on Blair

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DOeXv5MjJez/

    An albatross on Brown

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/cartoon/2008/oct/27/mandelson-osborne-brown-cameron

    Starmer knew where to look for the Labour PM albatross
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,571

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    And the Winter Olympics starting BEFORE the Opening Ceremony!
    They always do.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 23,011
    Scott_xP said:

    @Steven_Swinford
    BREAKING:

    Labour backbenchers are now publicly warning Sir Keir Starmer that his own future will be in doubt unless he sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

    It's effectively an ultimatum that's being echoed across the backbenches

    Karl Turner, a Labour MP, says the mood on the backbenches is 'dire'. He says that unless Starmer sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he will be 'up against it' and have to make a decision about his own future

    He tells
    @TimesRadio
    the atmosphere in the Commons was the 'angriest' he has ever seen it, but that the anger was directed at his advisers

    He says he forwarded messages from people expressing their anger directly to the prime minister last night. 'He thanked me, and I suspect he thanked those who were then messaging him'

    'My advice to the prime minister is get rid of those advisers who have frankly given terrible advice to him over weeks and months. The PM needs to deal with that and make a decision. If the PM decides he has to be surrounded by advisers who give him shoddy advice the reality of that is the prime minister is going to have to make a decision about his future some point soon

    'If McSweeney is still in 10 Downing Street the PM is up against it'

    I had a feeling the upshot of all this might be McSweeney being served up in a plater,
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,786

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,632
    Cookie said:

    kle4 said:

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    Whoever promises to stop this nonsense gets my vote.

    And Test Matches must start on Thursdays
    With a rest day on Sunday so i can watch live John Player Sunday League cricket on BBC2
    God I miss Grandstand.
    And World of Sport too!
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,649
    edited 9:15AM
    Sandpit said:

    So, one of Russia’s top 10 banks just posted a 9bn ruble loss for Q4 - with the vast majority of the losses being in December. A lot of loan defaults with high interest rates.

    https://x.com/maria_drutska/status/2019305489817882832

    Are we about to see the long-awaited collapse in the Russian economy? These things happen slowly then happen quickly, but it’s been happening slowly for a while now.

    The Russian economy is as robust as a hollowed-out meringue...

    Just needs one more whack with a heavy spoon.

    Putin has done to Russia what Pol Pot did to Cambodia.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,693
    Scott_xP said:

    @Steven_Swinford
    BREAKING:

    Labour backbenchers are now publicly warning Sir Keir Starmer that his own future will be in doubt unless he sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

    It's effectively an ultimatum that's being echoed across the backbenches

    Karl Turner, a Labour MP, says the mood on the backbenches is 'dire'. He says that unless Starmer sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he will be 'up against it' and have to make a decision about his own future

    He tells
    @TimesRadio
    the atmosphere in the Commons was the 'angriest' he has ever seen it, but that the anger was directed at his advisers

    He says he forwarded messages from people expressing their anger directly to the prime minister last night. 'He thanked me, and I suspect he thanked those who were then messaging him'

    'My advice to the prime minister is get rid of those advisers who have frankly given terrible advice to him over weeks and months. The PM needs to deal with that and make a decision. If the PM decides he has to be surrounded by advisers who give him shoddy advice the reality of that is the prime minister is going to have to make a decision about his future some point soon

    'If McSweeney is still in 10 Downing Street the PM is up against it'

    Ah, the old “go for the advisor” trick.

    I think McSweeney is useless, but so is Starmer. Ditching McSweeney might give him cover for a bit, but it’s easy to see the direction of travel.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 69,985
    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,571

    Great thread header - thanks Gareth.

    Of interest to me is the wider reason for the general sense of ennui that pervades not just the UK but the whole West (and, as a far as I know the world).

    I would contend that on most measures the population of the UK is on average better off than it was 20 years ago. But no one 'feels' that way for some reason.

    Social media?
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562
    Excellent and thought provoking article

    The comment about working class friends is interesting. I had, when younger, many working class friends. Nowadays those I am still friends with would not be deemed working class. White colllar jobs, nice homes, comfortably off.

    The working class has always had people who wallow in it and people who aspire to do better. That’s where most of my friendship group from my younger years ended up. I do also have posh friends who were privately educated.

    This thread is key to me. There is little substantive consequence for misdeeds.

    ‘ We see scandal after scandal, and the politicians keep uttering the same trite phrase, “lessons will be learned”. The public want to see people being actually held to account.

    After the collapse of RBS, Fred Goodwin lost part of his pension, but I doubt he is living in a council house. Paula Vennells of the Post Office handed back her CBE in 2024, but she was only awarded it in 2019, well after the scandal was known about.’
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 42,261
    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    Bezos can afford to lose that much for hundreds of years
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562

    kle4 said:

    What is this utter woke nonsense with the Six Nations starting tonight, A THURSDAY!

    Whoever promises to stop this nonsense gets my vote.

    And Test Matches must start on Thursdays
    With a rest day on Sunday so i can watch live John Player Sunday League cricket on BBC2
    I remember a player was nicknamed ‘the vicar’ as he only turned up,on Sundays.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,786
    AnneJGP said:

    Excellent article, @Garethofthevale, thank you. Seems to me the most important bit is at the end - politicians and parties must start addressing people's concerns. Who could possibly have guessed that? Very, very few of the 'elite' or whatever one likes to call them.

    I've just come across Amelia, a figment of someone's imagination.

    “Amelia” started life in a government-funded public information film, as the bad character trying to entice people into right-wing extremism.

    Except that they made her cute and fun, so the online right adopted her and made their own videos.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 59,786
    Scott_xP said:

    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    Bezos can afford to lose that much for hundreds of years
    But why would he want to sell Amazon shares, to throw good money after bad at a failing business?
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,232
    edited 9:18AM

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Don't upset Taz, he lives his Durham Nazis.

    They keep his poll tax low...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 41,239
    Sandpit said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Excellent article, @Garethofthevale, thank you. Seems to me the most important bit is at the end - politicians and parties must start addressing people's concerns. Who could possibly have guessed that? Very, very few of the 'elite' or whatever one likes to call them.

    I've just come across Amelia, a figment of someone's imagination.

    “Amelia” started life in a government-funded public information film, as the bad character trying to entice people into right-wing extremism.

    Except that they made her cute and fun, so the online right adopted her and made their own videos.
    Every guy needs an Amelia.

    It's quite funny that the government's own pro immigration propaganda had to be taken down because the only likeable character from it was the one they wanted everyone to hate.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 35,037

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    The trouble with newspapers like the Washington Post is they end up criticising the government, and that can seriously damage a tech bro's wealth, especially if the regime is not above a little tit-for-tat, like President Trump. The writing was on the wall when Bezos gave Trump a million dollars and stopped the paper endorsing Kamala.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 21,332

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Perfect use of my picture of the day.


  • eekeek Posts: 32,465
    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    @Steven_Swinford
    BREAKING:

    Labour backbenchers are now publicly warning Sir Keir Starmer that his own future will be in doubt unless he sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

    It's effectively an ultimatum that's being echoed across the backbenches

    Karl Turner, a Labour MP, says the mood on the backbenches is 'dire'. He says that unless Starmer sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he will be 'up against it' and have to make a decision about his own future

    He tells
    @TimesRadio
    the atmosphere in the Commons was the 'angriest' he has ever seen it, but that the anger was directed at his advisers

    He says he forwarded messages from people expressing their anger directly to the prime minister last night. 'He thanked me, and I suspect he thanked those who were then messaging him'

    'My advice to the prime minister is get rid of those advisers who have frankly given terrible advice to him over weeks and months. The PM needs to deal with that and make a decision. If the PM decides he has to be surrounded by advisers who give him shoddy advice the reality of that is the prime minister is going to have to make a decision about his future some point soon

    'If McSweeney is still in 10 Downing Street the PM is up against it'

    I had a feeling the upshot of all this might be McSweeney being served up in a plater,
    Which means SKS has no one to pin the blame on for the disaster that will be the May local elections...
  • stodgestodge Posts: 16,005

    In the 2000s, there were few votes for outsider parties. The LDs took an outsider position on Iraq, but it would be hard to call them an outsider party.

    I disagree, in the 2000s the LDs were the outsider party. They were the pox on both your houses, none of the above, party.

    Yes their leadership were not that, but a very large chunk of their voters were.

    The Coalition fractured that. More than tuition fees, it was the very act of going into Government that destroyed what for many LD voters were the LDs very nature of being outsiders and making them just another establishment party.

    I remain firmly of the belief (both anecdotally and from data) that a large chunk of the 2015 UKIP vote were ex-LD voters.

    You can argue the same will be true for both Reform and the Greens IF either finds themselves in such a position after the next election.

    That's the thing about "outsider" parties - as long as they are on the outside, they can play that game but as soon as confronted with the consequences of their own electoral success (or the failings of others) they are forced to come "inside" and that, so to speak, taints them for all time (it would seem).

    The other side of it is to ask why a party is in business - I've never heard of a party whose sole raison d'etre was to shout in futile anger from the sidelines. No, people form and join parties to achieve policy goals whether social, economic or both. The only way to achieve those goals (currently) is through the electoral system in our democracy but once you have achieved that you then have to do some (not all) of what you promise and on that you are then judged at the next election.

    The Conservatives don't want to spend the next 10-15 years shouting at Labour and Reform Governments from the sidelines - they want to be there, in Government, enacting policies, enjoying "power" but as they know full well, the price of that power can be very high but do they want another go at Government? You better believe they do.
  • BlancheLivermoreBlancheLivermore Posts: 7,431
    StaLLMer loves you all

    I love this country. It is the greatest country in the world.

    We are tolerant, decent and respectful – and unity is our strength.

    But for too long, proud communities have been failed by politics and left powerless to do anything about it.

    Our Pride in Place programme changes that. We are giving people the power to build up their communities. We’ve already invested thousands into communities across Britain. Now, we are giving thousands more the opportunity to transform their local area.

    Putting local people in control and building a Britain that works for all.
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562
    Sandpit said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    Bezos can afford to lose that much for hundreds of years
    But why would he want to sell Amazon shares, to throw good money after bad at a failing business?
    A point I was making yesterday.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,693
    edited 9:25AM

    StaLLMer loves you all

    I love this country. It is the greatest country in the world.

    We are tolerant, decent and respectful – and unity is our strength.

    But for too long, proud communities have been failed by politics and left powerless to do anything about it.

    Our Pride in Place programme changes that. We are giving people the power to build up their communities. We’ve already invested thousands into communities across Britain. Now, we are giving thousands more the opportunity to transform their local area.

    Putting local people in control and building a Britain that works for all.

    Who decided on the name? It’s not very catchy. Use of ‘Pride’ is an interesting one. Will, I suspect, be subject to lots of wilful misinterpretation by the anti woke warriors!
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 18,571
    stodge said:

    In the 2000s, there were few votes for outsider parties. The LDs took an outsider position on Iraq, but it would be hard to call them an outsider party.

    I disagree, in the 2000s the LDs were the outsider party. They were the pox on both your houses, none of the above, party.

    Yes their leadership were not that, but a very large chunk of their voters were.

    The Coalition fractured that. More than tuition fees, it was the very act of going into Government that destroyed what for many LD voters were the LDs very nature of being outsiders and making them just another establishment party.

    I remain firmly of the belief (both anecdotally and from data) that a large chunk of the 2015 UKIP vote were ex-LD voters.

    You can argue the same will be true for both Reform and the Greens IF either finds themselves in such a position after the next election.

    That's the thing about "outsider" parties - as long as they are on the outside, they can play that game but as soon as confronted with the consequences of their own electoral success (or the failings of others) they are forced to come "inside" and that, so to speak, taints them for all time (it would seem).

    The other side of it is to ask why a party is in business - I've never heard of a party whose sole raison d'etre was to shout in futile anger from the sidelines. No, people form and join parties to achieve policy goals whether social, economic or both. The only way to achieve those goals (currently) is through the electoral system in our democracy but once you have achieved that you then have to do some (not all) of what you promise and on that you are then judged at the next election.

    The Conservatives don't want to spend the next 10-15 years shouting at Labour and Reform Governments from the sidelines - they want to be there, in Government, enacting policies, enjoying "power" but as they know full well, the price of that power can be very high but do they want another go at Government? You better believe they do.
    We've seen across Europe how outsider potatoes get elected and then sink at the next election.
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Don't upset Taz, he lives his Durham Nazis.

    They keep his poll tax low...
    I would ask if you’re retarded but I know the answer.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 16,005

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    The previous Conservative administration in Kent did a very good job and didn't "deserve" the electoral thrashing they got last May. Reform are finding out the hard way all their lavish claims about "woke" spending were a load of bill hooks.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,232
    Taz said:

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Don't upset Taz, he lives his Durham Nazis.

    They keep his poll tax low...
    I would ask if you’re retarded but I know the answer.
    Retarded? You don't know the meaning of the word....
  • scampi25scampi25 Posts: 392

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Since the previous group were Conservative I've no idea why they'd expect this. KCC has always been unwoke.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 2,422
    edited 9:30AM
    Scott_xP said:

    @Steven_Swinford
    BREAKING:

    Labour backbenchers are now publicly warning Sir Keir Starmer that his own future will be in doubt unless he sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney

    It's effectively an ultimatum that's being echoed across the backbenches

    Karl Turner, a Labour MP, says the mood on the backbenches is 'dire'. He says that unless Starmer sacks his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he will be 'up against it' and have to make a decision about his own future

    He tells
    @TimesRadio
    the atmosphere in the Commons was the 'angriest' he has ever seen it, but that the anger was directed at his advisers

    He says he forwarded messages from people expressing their anger directly to the prime minister last night. 'He thanked me, and I suspect he thanked those who were then messaging him'

    'My advice to the prime minister is get rid of those advisers who have frankly given terrible advice to him over weeks and months. The PM needs to deal with that and make a decision. If the PM decides he has to be surrounded by advisers who give him shoddy advice the reality of that is the prime minister is going to have to make a decision about his future some point soon

    'If McSweeney is still in 10 Downing Street the PM is up against it'

    Sacrificial lamb while keeping Starmer in office but not in power. Next step would be to beef up the Whips office with Raynerites.

    And thanks to GOTV.
  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562
    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    How news is consumed is rapidly changing.

    These redundant hacks need to consider their industry is rapidly changing and what they need to move onto and drop the entitlement I’ve seen on social media.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,489
    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    Ah well, who needs journalist coverage in Kiev..
  • CookieCookie Posts: 16,757
    edited 9:32AM
    Seen in Sainsbury's - a brief vignette of 2020s Britain:


  • TazTaz Posts: 24,562
    edited 9:32AM

    Taz said:

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Don't upset Taz, he lives his Durham Nazis.

    They keep his poll tax low...
    I would ask if you’re retarded but I know the answer.
    Retarded? You don't know the meaning of the word....
    You’re right. I looked it up in the dictionary. There was your picture underneath it.

    How’s about that !!
  • isamisam Posts: 43,505
    Someone saved all of the Epstein emails from the releases and set up a Gmail clone site that you can scroll as if you were in Jeffery's Gmail.
    You can search by contacts, photos and even flight history.
    👉 jmail.world


    https://x.com/setupspawn/status/2019066631557710326?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 21,332
    Taz said:

    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    How news is consumed is rapidly changing.

    These redundant hacks need to consider their industry is rapidly changing and what they need to move onto and drop the entitlement I’ve seen on social media.
    Would you say the same to those who run pubs or restaurants?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 42,261
    Sandpit said:

    Scott_xP said:

    Sandpit said:

    To get back to insiders, apols if I missed it but has there been anny comment on Bezos laying off a huge chunk of the Washington Post's journalists? That cnut arsing about with penis shaped rockets and multi $m weddings in Venice while turning a serious newspaper into Völkischer Beobachter epitomises the state we're in.

    https://x.com/lizziejohnsonnn/status/2019083204133609846?s=20

    WashPo lost $100m last year, that’s why the redundancies.
    Bezos can afford to lose that much for hundreds of years
    But why would he want to sell Amazon shares, to throw good money after bad at a failing business?
    It's only failing cos he backed the Mad King. He drove away the people that wanted to read the paper, now he's killing the rest.

    If that's an example of his business acumen, investors should be concerned
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,232
    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    New Reform councillors in Kent thought they would find millions in woke spending at the council. Just like America.

    They didn't:


    Sunder Katwala (sundersays)
    @sundersays.bsky.social‬

    Reform councillors in Kent told the FT that they were surprised not to find lavish spending on wokeness from their predecessors

    https://bsky.app/profile/sundersays.bsky.social/post/3me3zgcqbvc2o

    Don't upset Taz, he lives his Durham Nazis.

    They keep his poll tax low...
    I would ask if you’re retarded but I know the answer.
    Retarded? You don't know the meaning of the word....
    You’re right. I looked it up in the dictionary. There was your picture underneath it.

    How’s about that !!
    Dictionary's don't have pictures, unless they were picture books from primary school, just about sums you up.
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