politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If this is accurate, then you might wish to update your Trump impeachment, conviction, resignation, and exit date betting
(THREAD) BREAKING: Harvard professor and @CNN political analyst Juliette Kayyem says, per sources, Michael Flynn may have flipped on Trump. pic.twitter.com/kkG4h4gqvw
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Laying Donald Trump to go this year is good value IMO.
https://twitter.com/SethAbramson/status/845722486100635648
You might not like it, but having close ties to Russia could be considered a virtue by the Trump administration.
Is Old Age catching up with me?
Whilst on the sporting theme, the Dharamsala venue for the India Oz test match must have one of the finest cricket backdrops anywhere sitting as it does in the foothills of the Himalayas.
That said, there is a perception among some Remainers that the BBC went easy on Leave claims during the referendum and continues to give Nigel Farage, for one, inordinate amounts of airtime. Just goes to show it's not just Leavers who see bias.
Forgive my ignorance but what is this thread about? A few tweets from people I've never heard of. I did google Abramson and he seems to be a blogger hinting at something I know not.
What crime is being hinted at?
I'm happy to believe that Trump has dome something, but what is it?
Without wanting to start an argument about BBC bias, @Morris_Dancer of this parish quite rightly points to Kamal Ahmed's question to Mark Carney - "Can you rule out a recession if we vote to leave the EU?"
That doesn't prove bias, but it does show that the BBC employ some complete morons.
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/www.inquisitr.com/4090747/donald-trump-impeachment-michael-flynn-flipped-on-trump-working-with-fbi/amp/
Just got up. Woke up in time to listen to the race. First half sounded very exciting, second half mostly settled down. Will be watching the highlights later, and writing the post-race article shortly.
If that’s the aim of the opposition it’s an admission of futility. Far better to spend time organising, and putting the Dem machine back in order to try and get control of the House in 2018 and make some advances in the Senate and in the ranls of the Governors.
Thanks.
So, it might be that some tweeters don't like Trump and are hinting they someone he knows may or may not have received information from the Russians during the POTUS election campaign about some factual information about Hilary's campaign. which Trump may or may not have used. And if he did, he may or may not have lied about it.
As this sounds a little bit like Watergate, they hope he'll be impeached.
Oh, the excitement.
"Ten of thousands of people joined the march"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-39392584
And it wasn't just being fed intelligence by the Russians; it was the allegations that people linked with the Russian authorities were running attacks and hatchet jobs on Clinton on-line. Bogus information that idiots believed and accentuated; for instance 'confusing' uranium ore for plutonium ...
The 2016 presidential campaign will be remembered for a blonde-haired monkey throwing sh*t all around his cage. Sadly, the monkey is incapable of cleaning up after himself, and has not learnt better habits.
Mr. Eagles, I'll probably be off the computer at 8pm, but I'm sure we'll see each other on Monday.
Thanks.
I'll admit to a guilty secret. I didn't like Nixon, so when Watergate blew up I was all for it. But to be totally honest, it was the burglary and deceit that I disliked. After all, he was seeking factual information against his opponent, a bit like the opposition newspapers were.
One of Reagan's better lines was "Let's make a deal. I'll stop telling the truth about you, if you stop telling lies about me."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-39392584
I am not sure what the BBC policy is on covering marches that turn out to be about 25 times smaller than claimed by the organisers in advance:
"Unite for Europe, an umbrella group of remain campaigners, plans to march on parliament at 11am on 25 March – the last weekend before Theresa May’s self-imposed deadline for launching the process of leaving the European Union – hoping to attract a crowd in excess of three-quarters of a million people."
"The idea is to try to make this the biggest march the capital, or country, has ever seen,” said French, who pointed out that there were 6 or 7 million voters in London alone, some 70% of whom had opposed Brexit."
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jan/28/stop-brexit-campaign-biggest-uk-biggest-protest-march
Own. Petard. Hoist. But the BBC didn't cover that, so may have been biased the other way !
Perhaps because most areas of the country voted Out, a regional "London" news item is about right.
They should have publicised more heavily that Farron and Clegg were speaking, then 100k extra people would have come down from the Peaks and the Lakes with their thermos flasks.
I really can’t see enough Republicans being prepared to push Trump into resigning for the movement to get anywhere. IIRC it took ages to get to that point with Nixon, and proceedings against Clinton could only be undertaken because the Republicans had control of Congress.
Furthermore, given the way electoral districts are drawn in the US, it’s probably more important for the Democrats to get hold of the machinery for same in as many states as possible than it is to spend time and effort on organising against the President.
http://inktank.fi/15-fantastically-fun-protest-signs-from-the-unite-for-europe-march/
"Borders against Borders" was mildly amusing, as was "I am quite cross" and the Tintin one.
I suppose 3/15 isn't too bad...
They say the dawn follows the darkest night but only Farage drowning in a giant bowl of custard could make this a more optimistic header..
(Footnote....Why are the BBC leading on Sebastian Vettel winning the grand Prix if the POTUS is about to be impeached?)
http://www.lejdd.fr/Politique/Dix-senateurs-centristes-annoncent-leur-soutien-a-Macron-856406
Jeremy Kyle
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/03/26/fighting-breaks-supporters-opponents-donald-trump-clash-southern/
There is no healing of the divide but the thought of 30 protesters violently blocking a rally by 2000 seems a little anti-democratic
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-39397211
Knowing that by doing so they address the letter of impartiality against them, by having a Leave representative, but failing in spirit because he is so effective at repelling centrists.
And yet they didn't.
http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/australia-post-race-analysis-2017.html
If this tone is matched by TM and David Davis this could be the start of a badly needed consensus. In my opinon the hard Brexit demanded by UKIP and some others will not happen
Personally, I prefer Trump to Pence on current evidence. His willingness to give up on Obamacare shows his lack of real hard-edged conservative ideology. Pence is the real deal. We need to be thankful for small mercies.
And the bigger story (this is not tailored trolling btw, I was going to say this anyway) is that the Grauniad has a turnout of "more than a thousand" for the Edinburgh event. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2017/mar/25/brexit-protest-thousands-march-in-london-to-unite-for-europe-live
I thought Scotland's huge Remain majority meant that this was the issue which was going to put fire in the bellies of Yes this time round. This is surely serious for Sturgeon? "more than a thousand" sounds thin to me.
Trump's choice was bizarre to say the least. It just shows the man does not do any detail. Flynn, Manafort et al would work with the Devil if the pay was right.
Ignore both.
Sounds like Labour are pivoting to oppose Brexit when Theresa May fails to deliver on their impossible demands.
Nonetheless, Trump has a third of Americans rock solid behind him.
[ P.S. Useless anecdote. I was looking at our Mexican subsidiaries sales in 2017. Up 23% on last year with a week to go ! ]
If the EU feels its political situation has stabilised, but can still point to the UK with a depreciated currency, a big divorce bill, ongoing payments into the EU budget, some jobs relocating into the EU, but with no say or vote in the rules, then all of that creates the political space to do a pragmatic economic deal.
Recommend anything?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/04/20/english-sparkling-wine-beats-champagne-in-paris-blind-tasting/
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/weird-news/haw-yersel-away-watch-scottish-10098265
I prefer veuve Clicquot myself.
As far as you thinking that Scotland's huge Remain majority meant this was the issue which was going to put fire in the bellies of Yes this time round, can I ask which specific statements propelled this idea into your (no doubt pretty) little head, or are you resorting to setting up your own proposition so you can say it's failed? I'd wait for the council elections in May to see the lie of the land, since we're told by no greater authority than Tessy herself that they'll be a proxy poll on the desire for a 2nd referendum. You should perhaps note that in Glasgow yesterday the SNP & Sturgeon were launching their manifesto for the GCC council elections and large numbers of members were pounding the streets, which should give an indication of current priorities.