If asked for a role model, few aspiring politicians would opt for John Major. Unfashionable, uncharismatic, comprehensively battered at the 1997 election: why would they? Yet the travails of the 1992-7 parliament culminating in that electoral apocalypse overshadow what he achieved in his first 18 months:
Comments
(although it appears that anyone with a life is at the pub)
Agree with thrust of article. A quiet hand on the tiller would a good thing after the EU Ref, and would highlight the ongoing circus that is the opposition.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECxH4uIswiA
I do try and take a month off a year to compensate for the really long working weeks.
Yeah, I know, it's fiction. I just can't help feel it's closer to the truth than most fiction. Murders excepted.
But he stands behind Theresa May in the "safe pair of hands" box. I'm not sure how he gets past her.
Some valid points.
Conversely, if you're wealthy enough, the Jacob's Creek is worth nothing to you, in the sense that you are paying for pleasure, and it adds nothing.
Personally, I'm by no means mega rich but I have a modest cellar, adequate for my needs. If it came to the choice of which would most enhance my pleasure, it would be the one bottle of Mouton Rothschild rather than 1000 of Jacob's Creek. Why would I want 1000 bottles of stuff which is not as good as what I drink every day?
This is not to say Jacob's Creek is bad; it's not (although you can do better even at that price).
I suspect his backing of Remain and his position as Foreign Secretary who backed Remain during the referendum are going to pee off those Tory MPs who consider anyone backing Remain as Traitorous Pig Dogs and bugger up his chances.
But 28/1 is still value.
However, I doubt he is or would be very popular with the public.
More of a Clarkson person myself!
BTW good to meet Mike and a good few other PBers at the Shooting Star tonight.
Thanks again go to Fat Steve for organising things.
The Most Reverend Justin Welby had until now believed his father to be Gavin Welby, a whisky salesman and son of a Jewish immigrant, who was married briefly to his mother, Jane.
But the Telegraph pieced together evidence that suggested Archbishop Welby’s father was actually the late Sir Anthony Montague Browne, who served Churchill in Downing Street and during his retirement.
After this newspaper discussed its research with the Archbishop, he decided to take a DNA test to settle the matter. His mouth swabs were compared with hair samples from Sir Anthony and showed a 99.9779 per cent probability that they were father and son.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/04/08/justin-welby-dna-test-reveals-my-secret-father-was-sir-winston-c/
I have him backed quite well.
He also has the advantage of being older,:so a legitimate transition to the next generation.
May is awful, with no redeeming features whatsoever.
I am curious as to why they felt the need to make that change at the time - it's the sort of thing I'd think the Church would not expect to come up, and so even if no one minded making the change it would not get around to being made.
Hammond vs Boris: Hammond
I will be backing No on that market.
Come to that, I don't actually know a lot of the rules on this issue - I assume it's based off when you are born, not conceived, hence quickfire weddings - and I seem to recall the Church in ancient ages past getting a lot of nobles annoyed by declaring certain levels of distant cousinship marriages and the births thereof as illegitimate.
Given that the archbishop has no reason to be upset, so he says, I therefore appreciate this story making a break from the rather less fun stories otherwise out there.
I think the moral might well be "if you hate what you do, pour cash into the retirement fund pronto".
Edit - Just seen that RichardN said all this a while ago. Ah well.
28/1 is ridiculously good value. Thanks: a very good tip.
a) He's said he's going, Corbyn's said he's not going.
b) If the referendum is lost, he'll almost certainly go at once.
c) He's now less popular than Corbyn, and clearly weaker on the central issue at the moment (whatever Corbyn's other drawbacks, nobody suspects him of having a secret fund in Panama).
I'd have thought it ought to be about 2-5, though I'm talking my book so DYOR...
Eurosceptic ministers Chris Grayling, Dominic Raab, Priti Patel and Julian Brazier all rallied round the PM amid an increasingly hysterical reaction from Labour – including calls for him to go jail.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/politics/7061001/Tories-put-their-bitter-Brexit-spats-to-one-side-to-defend-Cameron-from-Labour-attacks.html
http://popbitch.com/home/2016/03/31/up-the-injunction/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/london-mayor-election/mayor-of-london/9136015/How-Ken-Livingstone-funnelled-238000-through-tax-avoidance-scheme.html
http://www.scotsman.com/news/uk/jeremy-corbyn-snp-has-betrayed-promise-to-combat-austerity-1-4095247
I agree with you that it has been handled well, I enjoyed reading the various articles on the way home, but did feel quite sorry for Lady Williams.
Saw this poor joke from Obama which may come to describe his whole presidency:
https://twitter.com/politico/status/718603348371443712
btw to small stakes back Silviniaco Conti in the National for no other reason than he's the best horse in the race where weight has become less important. No idea if its "value" its about 9 minutes of fun.
http://tinyurl.com/zdno8u9
If Britain leaves Europe, the cost of importing goods could go up by £11bn - meaning prices would rise on everyday good.
Use our quick calculator to find out how much more you and your family could end up paying
How much could you be out of pocket if we leave Europe?
Obviously I think this is nonsense, but I wonder how effective this sort of thing will be? I've yet to see anything from the leave campaigns.
No more nonsensical than the other side though, just better presented.
An erudite and well mannered campaign without lasting animosity in the Conservative party does not seem to be on the cards.
Also Hammond has irritated Leavers with his full-on pronouncements for Remain in recent weeks, despite being previously a wink-wink, nudge-nudge eurosceptic.
Major won because he wasn't Heseltine in a two-horse race, and had good career trajectory after going from Chief Secretary to Foreign Secretary to Chancellor in just 3 years. Hurd was never a serious contender.
Neither is Hammond.
I must confess I was amused by @justin124's comments, for two reasons;
1) He's straightforwardly wrong (a quick look at Duff Cooper, Oswald Mosley, John Mortimer reveals that);
2) he's confused premarital and extra marital sex. The first was not merely normal, it was often quietly encouraged so men could be assured their brides were suitably - ahem - fertile. Extra marital sex by women was however rather frowned upon, for reasons that must be obvious at this moment.
I agree however that he is a long shot.
Did my cheating alcoholic mother turn me into a religious nutjob?
We have the answers .. the DNA, the all important lie detectors results and after the break Justin is on the show and he wants the gods honest truth ....
Mr. W, rather good. [Except that lie detectors only exist in science fiction].
Hammond's a credible leader, as is May (who probably has the advantage). Clarkson's got no chance, though.
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2016/apr/07/greens-advert-causes-social-media-storm-as-kids-play-politicians
The mechanics are different from in 1990 (had they used the current system, it's highly likely that Heseltine would have become PM - a VoNC in Thatcher without the need for an alternative candidate wouldn't have tarnished him as it did in our timeline).
That works the other way too. Who is the stop-Boris/stop-Osborne candidate? May is one option but she too is Remain and more vocally so than Hammond. If there is a leadership change this year, there won't be many unifying figures on offer but Hammond is one of them. I'm not saying he'd win but I think his chances are rather better than the odds suggest.
He might be competent and interview well, but he's no leadership material.
In the absence of Boris/Osborne, I'd put Gove, May, Hunt and Crabb all ahead of him.
No bet for me.
That bloke looks fishy - off to the gulag - is not how it works here either.
Marriage was about business and politics (be it familial, or national) and not love.
Appearances needed to be kept up in public, but everyone (including a lot of domestic staff) turned a blind eye to what would have been an open secret.
I am surprised at Jack W, flippancy tbh.
Though perhaps less tolerated in the respectable classes than the social extremes.
Brief Encounter strikes a chord on the subject, which is why it has worn so well.
Agree entirely on the political nonsense. The Archbishop's parentage is irrelevant. Socialist sermons are another matter.
Speaking of sermons, have Yvette Cooper, Geldof et al. invited migrants into their homes yet?