UKIP - how do you end up not defending a ward which you won with 808 people voting for you last time? Effing unprofessional.
I completely agree, the whole of UKIP organisation is still in a state of infancy. However OGH's glee at UKIP on only 7% is going to smack him in the eye.
The Lab vote share seems to be down in every single seat tonight - OK, only by 0.2% in one seat - but the falls in all other seats are significant / substantial.
Could they be on course for an absolute hammering next May?
Another superb performance by Corbyn Labour in a real election. Dare we hope for a repeat in Oldham? Only humiliating defeat piled on humiliating defeat can save Labour from itself.
When do you is think the most likely time for him to be deposed? After the London mayoral election (which Labour ought to win easily given the demographics)?
When we start to see NickP express doubts we'll know the game is up. The more catastrophic defeats Labour suffers the sooner it will be. I suspect Labour supporters across the country will be casting votes hoping to hasten the day. It cannot come soon enough. Corbyn, though, will try to hold on at least until the way the party leader is selected can be changed. That'll take a couple of years or so, I guess.
4/1 on Betfair does look more than fair for UKIP in Oldham on the back of tonight's results. If they were in better shape themselves they might be 6/4.
Lib Dems hold South Smallburgh , vote share up from 31% to 54%
LD 1383 Con 697 UKIP 219 Lab 103 Green 52
Good turnout that too.
One interesting fact not picked up by Harry re South Smallburgh . The seat was a narrow LD gain from the Conservatives in 2009 . The LD councillor defected to the Conservatives and attempted to win the seat as a Conservative in 2013 but narrowly lost . He stood again for the Conservatives in this by election and has noe lost heavily .
Another superb performance by Corbyn Labour in a real election. Dare we hope for a repeat in Oldham? Only humiliating defeat piled on humiliating defeat can save Labour from itself.
When do you is think the most likely time for him to be deposed? After the London mayoral election (which Labour ought to win easily given the demographics)?
When we start to see NickP express doubts we'll know the game is up. The more catastrophic defeats Labour suffers the sooner it will be. I suspect Labour supporters across the country will be casting votes hoping to hasten the day. It cannot come soon enough. Corbyn, though, will try to hold on at least until the way the party leader is selected can be changed. That'll take a couple of years or so, I guess.
Surely the £3 sign-ups are a key factor - how long do they remain "on the books"?
ie after what date would they have to sign-up again?
(Obviously anyone who has converted to full member is a full member)
Ditto - what about union affiliated supporters?
I do think that interview with Ronnie Campbell and Mike Gapes on Daily Politics last week is absolutely key information - they both contacted all their new registered supporters more than once and only got an absolutely miniscule response - as if everyone had vanished into thin air.
Another factor not mentioned is that when anything happens for a 2nd time people have less enthusiasm - it's always more exciting first time. So if there is another leadership election the Corbynistas may not come out in force to the same degree.
4/1 on Betfair does look more than fair for UKIP in Oldham on the back of tonight's results. If they were in better shape themselves they might be 6/4.
I don't like to criticise the opinion polls because I've always been a big fan of them, but some of their recent results seem like total nonsense. Labour up on their performance in May this year? You've got to be joking. Maybe it's best if they take a raincheck for a couple of years.
Another superb performance by Corbyn Labour in a real election. Dare we hope for a repeat in Oldham? Only humiliating defeat piled on humiliating defeat can save Labour from itself.
Corbyn Labour = French Intellectuals, never mind whether it works in practice - does it work in theory?
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
It appears that Islamist threats against the Bataclan Theatre went as far back as 2009.
There is a lot of police action in Germany this evening. Whenever the German Interior Minister claimed they had to cancel the Germany Netherlands match on Tuesday, he said they had to do it due to the most 'bitter' of reasons. The bitter reasons had much to do with the nature of the leader of the Hanover plot.
Meanwhile the elusive missing Paris attacker has reportedly been seen in Brussels. This guy has more sighting than Lord Lucan. Yesterday the Spanish were searching for a Citroen he was believed to be in.
It appears that Islamist threats against the Bataclan Theatre went as far back as 2009.
There is a lot of police action in Germany this evening. Whenever the German Interior Minister claimed they had to cancel the Germany Netherlands match on Tuesday, he said they had to do it due to the most 'bitter' of reasons. The bitter reasons had much to do with the nature of the leader of the Hanover plot.
Meanwhile the elusive missing Paris attacker has reportedly been seen in Brussels. This guy has more sighting than Lord Lucan. Yesterday the Spanish were searching for a Citroen he was believed to be in.
Is the 'bitter reason' the fact that he is a German citizen?
It appears that Islamist threats against the Bataclan Theatre went as far back as 2009.
There is a lot of police action in Germany this evening. Whenever the German Interior Minister claimed they had to cancel the Germany Netherlands match on Tuesday, he said they had to do it due to the most 'bitter' of reasons. The bitter reasons had much to do with the nature of the leader of the Hanover plot.
Meanwhile the elusive missing Paris attacker has reportedly been seen in Brussels. This guy has more sighting than Lord Lucan. Yesterday the Spanish were searching for a Citroen he was believed to be in.
Is the 'bitter reason' the fact that he is a German citizen?
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
You mean you actually have trains in the USA????
(only kidding! Did the New Mexico RailRunner between Santa Fe and Albuquerque (2009), and the Denver RTD light rail network (as it was in 2011))
I popped into my local library a few years ago. I presented my card which they had issued in 1976 and was told that it was no longer valid.
That's disappointing. Longevity ought to be accorded the respect it deserves.
I always liked Barclays Bank's response when an enterprising researcher asked to see Lord Nelson's bank account records - had he given money to Lady Hamilton, had he spent a lot on wine? Barclays said icily,
"Our clients' records are confidential. This does not change with the passage of time."
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
You mean you actually have trains in the USA????
(only kidding! Did the New Mexico RailRunner between Santa Fe and Albuquerque (2009), and the Denver RTD light rail network (as it was in 2011))
There's heavily subsidized Amtrak on (primarily) the east coast corridor and a few others.
One of the most disappointing academic developments of recent years in my opinion is the way that university libraries all over the country have installed security procedures to prevent members of the public from using their facilities. I'm not sure about it but I think in previous decades anyone could enter provided they didn't cause a nuisance. More recently universities must, I assume, have had a few anti-social people misusing the free access and the authorities decided it was easier to stop all non-university bods from entering rather than trying to identify the small number of people actually responsible. The wrong approach IMO but understandable from a time and money perspective.
Jeremy Corbyn is poised to offer Labour MPs a free vote on Syria, after whips warned that dozens will rebel if he tries to order them to vote against air strikes.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
You mean you actually have trains in the USA????
(only kidding! Did the New Mexico RailRunner between Santa Fe and Albuquerque (2009), and the Denver RTD light rail network (as it was in 2011))
There's heavily subsidized Amtrak on (primarily) the east coast corridor and a few others.
Wikipedia just this week announced on its front page work has started on California High Speed Rail
Depressingly, most British Islamist terrorists are depressingly ordinary:
The majority are British nationals and the remainder, with a few exceptions, are here legally. Around half were born in the UK, with others migrating here later in life. Some of these fled traumatic experiences and oppressive regimes and claimed UK asylum, but more came to Britain to study or for family or economic reasons and became radicalised many years after arriving.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
I don't like to criticise the opinion polls because I've always been a big fan of them, but some of their recent results seem like total nonsense. Labour up on their performance in May this year? You've got to be joking. Maybe it's best if they take a raincheck for a couple of years.
You are forgetting that the Tories are up by even more, so in fact the 6% lead they had at the election is now 7% with Mori, at least for the moment the 2 main parties are squeezing the smaller parties
Why does "Britain Elects" (whoever that is) insist on telling us the percentages but not the numbers? Don't they realise that's the sort of thing that makes ordinary normal decent psephologists want to go out and massacre a hundred million people with a hydrogen bomb?
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
For alcohol (and betting on politics, to keep on-topic) most British retailers now have "think 25" where they now ask for ID from customers who look as if they might be aged under 25. The minimum age is unchanged at 18, but authorities looking to prove their efficacy have developed a taste for sting operations: sending in under-age buyers.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
I never have to sign or put a pin number in for any transactions under $50. It's quite unnerving!
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
For alcohol (and betting on politics, to keep on-topic) most British retailers now have "think 25" where they now ask for ID from customers who look as if they might be aged under 25. The minimum age is unchanged at 18, but authorities looking to prove their efficacy have developed a taste for sting operations: sending in under-age buyers.
The age here is 21, but to avoid 'profiling' accusations many stores card everyone.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
I never have to sign or put a pin number in for any transactions under $50. It's quite unnerving!
It's been the case for some time that most big chains if you use Amex you don't need to sign for less than $100.
The only card Costco accepts is American Express (except Debit Cards). It's been that way as long as I've known Costco. But from next February they will only take Visa as Amex and Costco couldn't reach a new agreement. I await my new Visa card with my photo on the back.
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
I never have to sign or put a pin number in for any transactions under $50. It's quite unnerving!
It's been the case for some time that most big chains if you use Amex you don't need to sign for less than $100.
The only card Costco accepts is American Express (except Debit Cards). It's been that way as long as I've known Costco. But from next February they will only take Visa as Amex and Costco couldn't reach a new agreement. I await my new Visa card with my photo on the back.
They have those fancy lounges at airport that look so nice compared with the crappy United ones. Makes me want to open an account with them
He gives that impression, at least to me. It'd be nice to hear him say something good about Turkey. Since he does not, and repeatedly writes invective against the country, you can see why someone could say that he hates it.
If not, then I apologise.
I have not and would not say I hate Turkey. I think Erdogan is a rubbish person, probably as bad as Assad given the level of state sponsored terrorism he has approved. I think the Turkish people are easily led, but that is true of a lot of Middle Eastern and Asian countries. I have no special hatred of Turkey or its people though, many of whom are involved in the refugee relief effort and making a big difference to the displaced people. I do have a plain, normal hatred for the leadership which manipulates and whips up hatred for the PKK at the right time (look at the bombing campaign just before the second election). I loathe the way that they all have a case of collective amnesia when it the questions come as to how ISIS are funnelling their illicit oil through Turkish companies.
Finally, I think you are far too easy on Erdogan who is no different to Assad. The difference between Syria and Turkey is the population, one has had a secular style democracy for almost 100 years and whose founder after the Ottoman empire imposed democracy on the nation, the other has had a secular dictatorship. In many ways if democracy had been imposed on Syria, we may not have these problems today. Part of why ISIS are successful is because Islamists can claim that the alawite leader is suppressing Sunni Muslims, it isn't true (or at least it wasn't until we encouraged a Sunni rebellion) and simply put the people of Syria wouldn't know what to do with democracy, it would become very much like Libya where people think the party they vote for should be in power and no one else's vote matters.
"probably as bad as Assad given the level of state sponsored terrorism he has approved."
That is incredible. I really cannot believe you have sunk so low as to believe that.
"Finally, I think you are far too easy on Erdogan who is no different to Assad"
Again, I find it hard to believe you would write such a thing. I mean, do you really, really believe it? Are you that incapable of examining and interpreting evidence?
Subway spokesman Jared pleads guilty to possession of child porn and crossing state lines to have sex with minors, and gets 15 years.
He won't be holding his foot long anytime soon, but his fellow prisoners might.
He gets a longer sentence than some killers in the UK.
I'm not surprised - Subway meats etc are pre-cut in a central plant and shipped to the store, so when you say what you want they peel the tissue paper off and put the prepared lump on the bread. It's awful, just bad.
I prefer Lenny's, where you say what you want, and they take a ham etc and put it through the slicer in front of you.
In general I like the USA, but the country is definitely paranoid in a lot of respects. For example I had to show my passport to buy a train ticket in Boston a few months ago. In the UK I usually walk around without any ID of any kind.
I get asked for ID almost every time I use a credit card. Plus travelling by train (who the hell does that??) is suspicious in itself. OK, I am teasing just a tad on the train thing, but it is unusual.
Is the credit card ID requirement because America does not have chip-and-pin cards?
They have chip and pin as of October 1, but the roll out is slow. They have the chip but there is no pin. If you buy alcohol they will ask for ID anyway. Most chains will insist the cashier enters your DOB.
I never have to sign or put a pin number in for any transactions under $50. It's quite unnerving!
It's been the case for some time that most big chains if you use Amex you don't need to sign for less than $100.
The only card Costco accepts is American Express (except Debit Cards). It's been that way as long as I've known Costco. But from next February they will only take Visa as Amex and Costco couldn't reach a new agreement. I await my new Visa card with my photo on the back.
They have those fancy lounges at airport that look so nice compared with the crappy United ones. Makes me want to open an account with them
You need a Platinum Card for that. It gets you Priority Pass for overseas lounges too. If you travel it's worth it.
Comments
LDEM - 56.4% (+25.8)
CON - 28.4% (-1.0)
UKIP - 8.9% (-17.8)
LAB - 4.2% (-5.3)
GRN - 2.1% (-1.6)
https://twitter.com/DailyMirror/status/667427888803672064
Could they be on course for an absolute hammering next May?
ie after what date would they have to sign-up again?
(Obviously anyone who has converted to full member is a full member)
Ditto - what about union affiliated supporters?
I do think that interview with Ronnie Campbell and Mike Gapes on Daily Politics last week is absolutely key information - they both contacted all their new registered supporters more than once and only got an absolutely miniscule response - as if everyone had vanished into thin air.
Another factor not mentioned is that when anything happens for a 2nd time people have less enthusiasm - it's always more exciting first time. So if there is another leadership election the Corbynistas may not come out in force to the same degree.
IMO, it's a 1/3:3/1 shot right now.
George Galloway in a statesman like performance.
Excellent tonight though, saying if terrorists were running amok down Piccadilly he would shoot them himself.
There is a lot of police action in Germany this evening. Whenever the German Interior Minister claimed they had to cancel the Germany Netherlands match on Tuesday, he said they had to do it due to the most 'bitter' of reasons. The bitter reasons had much to do with the nature of the leader of the Hanover plot.
Meanwhile the elusive missing Paris attacker has reportedly been seen in Brussels. This guy has more sighting than Lord Lucan. Yesterday the Spanish were searching for a Citroen he was believed to be in.
(only kidding! Did the New Mexico RailRunner between Santa Fe and Albuquerque (2009), and the Denver RTD light rail network (as it was in 2011))
"Our clients' records are confidential. This does not change with the passage of time."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3326272/Corbyn-U-turn-bomb-vote-ll-let-MPs-follow-conscience-60-say-ll-rebel.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_High-Speed_Rail
The majority are British nationals and the remainder, with a few exceptions, are here legally. Around half were born in the UK, with others migrating here later in life. Some of these fled traumatic experiences and oppressive regimes and claimed UK asylum, but more came to Britain to study or for family or economic reasons and became radicalised many years after arriving.
http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2008/aug/20/uksecurity.terrorism1
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/live/bbcfour
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0skjm-uJSs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQXqkiKXiHc
That is unnecessary and sensationalising.
I know the Mirror is a dishrag, but even so...
http://www.independent.co.uk/s3/files/styles/story_medium/public/thumbnails/image/2015/11/19/15/IpsosMoripoll.JPG
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-corbyn-ahead-of-david-cameron-in-latest-net-satisfaction-ratings-a6740611.html
The only card Costco accepts is American Express (except Debit Cards). It's been that way as long as I've known Costco. But from next February they will only take Visa as Amex and Costco couldn't reach a new agreement. I await my new Visa card with my photo on the back.
That is incredible. I really cannot believe you have sunk so low as to believe that.
"Finally, I think you are far too easy on Erdogan who is no different to Assad"
Again, I find it hard to believe you would write such a thing. I mean, do you really, really believe it? Are you that incapable of examining and interpreting evidence?
CON: 23.5% (-21.5)
UKIP: 23.2% (+23.2)
LAB: 22.6% (-32.4)
AI: 19.6% (+19.6)
LD: 9.0% (+9.0)
GRN: 2.1%
Numbers were something like 110, 109, 106 (Con, UKIP, Lab) - Lib Dems got 46 I think