Interesting first appointment of Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Handling the irreconcilable differences within the Tory party is probably mission impossible, but Mark Spencer sounds like a genuine doer, so as much chance as anyone.
Mr. Borough, indeed. A major fork in the betting road is whether this is a short term or long term matter.
Laying the flavour of the day is probably a good idea - there is no clear Boris like figure on the backbenches. Gove at 25-1 could be the best bet amongst that lot, but does he fancy failing another time. Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
Interesting first appointment of Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Handling the irreconcilable differences within the Tory party is probably mission impossible, but Mark Spencer sounds like a genuine doer, so as much chance as anyone.
Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Frank Spencer as Prime Minister.
It’s easy to counter that by asking what the Labour Party have achieved in terms of their supposed target groups in need of help since there was last a labour government? With corbyn they have achieved nothing in government and now see success as losing a GE by less than was thought.
That presupposes Corbynites value practicality over purity (they don't) and reason over belief (they don't).
They're a cult not really interested in real power, but impotent purity.
Boris Johnson elected as leader and thus PM has with the impact of the heat made me feel sick. The type of sickness you feel when a relative suddenly dies and the shock reverberates to your core. I truly dread where the idiot will take the country. His thank you speech did not strike me as Prime Ministerial and I noticed the lame attempt to get laughs, some of which fell flat. He really cannot do serious!
Interesting first appointment of Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Handling the irreconcilable differences within the Tory party is probably mission impossible, but Mark Spencer sounds like a genuine doer, so as much chance as anyone.
Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Frank Spencer as Prime Minister.
lol
The new chief whip makes me think of the company! Boris thinks he is a bright spark but it wont get him any extra points!
Mr. Borough, indeed. A major fork in the betting road is whether this is a short term or long term matter.
Laying the flavour of the day is probably a good idea - there is no clear Boris like figure on the backbenches. Gove at 25-1 could be the best bet amongst that lot, but does he fancy failing another time. Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
Yes the Moggster is far too short - but what odds would you want for him? I can seriously picture him as the next Boris
Mr. Borough, indeed. A major fork in the betting road is whether this is a short term or long term matter.
Laying the flavour of the day is probably a good idea - there is no clear Boris like figure on the backbenches. Gove at 25-1 could be the best bet amongst that lot, but does he fancy failing another time. Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
Yes the Moggster is far too short - but what odds would you want for him? I can seriously picture him as the next Boris
Mr. Borough, indeed. A major fork in the betting road is whether this is a short term or long term matter.
Laying the flavour of the day is probably a good idea - there is no clear Boris like figure on the backbenches. Gove at 25-1 could be the best bet amongst that lot, but does he fancy failing another time. Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
Yes the Moggster is far too short - but what odds would you want for him? I can seriously picture him as the next Boris
I'd have a think if he was in 3 figures to back.
Yup - that's what I would have wanted at this stage as well - but if he's given a cabinet role and things progress...
I think I did quite well last time - I was only 2 votes away from Profit after I got on Gove at long odds.
Mr. Borough, indeed. A major fork in the betting road is whether this is a short term or long term matter.
Laying the flavour of the day is probably a good idea - there is no clear Boris like figure on the backbenches. Gove at 25-1 could be the best bet amongst that lot, but does he fancy failing another time. Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
Yes the Moggster is far too short - but what odds would you want for him? I can seriously picture him as the next Boris
I can' t believe that voters might seriously consider an Old Etonian stick insect for next Prime Minister. Where are the Hartlepudlian class warriors when you need them.
I can' t believe that voters might seriously consider an Old Etonian stick insect for next Prime Minister. Where are the Hartlepudlian class warriors when you need them.
Is the Moggster etonian as well - well someone should have mentioned that before - they certainly get about.
I can' t believe that voters might seriously consider an Old Etonian stick insect for next Prime Minister. Where are the Hartlepudlian class warriors when you need them.
Interesting first appointment of Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Handling the irreconcilable differences within the Tory party is probably mission impossible, but Mark Spencer sounds like a genuine doer, so as much chance as anyone.
Had not previously heard of him. From his wiki page "Spencer attracted criticism in early 2015 after suggesting that a man with learning difficulties who had been left without food or power after being sanctioned for arriving four minutes late at the benefit office should "learn the discipline of timekeeping". Sounds like a whip.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
I always divide by about 3 or 4 and still get told off.
For me the most interesting of the early polling. The British people don't want an election, MPs don't want to make any Brexit decision. An alliance of inertia which is fascinating and horrifying in equal measure.
Swinson says she would only accept the result of a second referendum if Remain won.
Lol - at least she's honest - Source?
Guido
Yes and you can be sure Guido has spun it in as hostile a way as possible as he's the arch-propagandist for the LEAVE fraternity.
All Jo has said if the people vote LEAVE she could not support that in parliament - that doesn't mean such a result couldn't and wouldn't be enacted but it seems strange having advocated one side before the vote to do a complete volte face if the vote goes the other way - I mean, who could support REMAIN and argue for it and then turn round the next day, if LEAVE won, and said they were a confirmed LEAVE supporter all along?
Swinson says she would only accept the result of a second referendum if Remain won.
Lol - at least she's honest - Source?
Guido
Yes and you can be sure Guido has spun it in as hostile a way as possible as he's the arch-propagandist for the LEAVE fraternity.
All Jo has said if the people vote LEAVE she could not support that in parliament - that doesn't mean such a result couldn't and wouldn't be enacted but it seems strange having advocated one side before the vote to do a complete volte face if the vote goes the other way - I mean, who could support REMAIN and argue for it and then turn round the next day, if LEAVE won, and said they were a confirmed LEAVE supporter all along?
In the interview she comes over as flustered and pathetic.
Half a moment, half a moment. We're still waiting for earlier LibDem promises to be made good.
It was only in this morning's thread that we were promised Heidi or Sarah would be going over to the LibDems today -- one by one as OGH memorably said "to maximise the impact."
And the thread before that was entitled "Get ready for Boris’s big day to see CON resignations and the LDs perhaps getting another MP"
We are all fully prepared for the big defections one by one "to maximise the impact" ... how many more times will they have to be predicted?
Maybe the impact of these defections is so enormous that like the Tunguska Event they have to be limited to one or two a century for safety's sake.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
Half a moment, half a moment. We're still waiting for earlier LibDem promises to be made good.
It was only in this morning's thread that we were promised Heidi or Sarah would be going over to the LibDems today -- one by one as OGH memorably said "to maximise the impact."
And the thread before that was entitled "Get ready for Boris’s big day to see CON resignations and the LDs perhaps getting another MP"
We are all fully prepared for the big defections one by one "to maximise the impact" ... how many more times will they have to be predicted?
Maybe the impact of these defections is so enormous that like the Tunguska Event they have to be limited to one or two a century for safety's sake.
I've been on Sky more than usual because of the defection talk.
Still not too late for the Six I guess but it would be second (or last) story - maybe they're best waiting til Thursday or Friday.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
It's a bit mystifying why someone would choose to live in the mordour that is the south east if 50k means you're struggling
Swinson says she would only accept the result of a second referendum if Remain won.
That's her honeymoon over. What a silly thing to say.
I heard her interview and Jo came across as shrieky and semi-deranged.
Still, she is probably not as bad as Ed Davey, who comes across as a seriously slow-witted individual who has been battling an intravenous downer habit for twenty years.
Hmm. Sounds as if Boris is already equivocating on 31 October and an early election. I wonder if his secret strategy all along was booting Brexit into the long grass in the hope that TBP will have burned itself out in a couple of years.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I can tell £8 from £20 and £20 from £50 but above £50 I find it tough to differentiate
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
Well, rural_voter sure don't live anywhere rural.
The closest Majestic Wines to me are 2 and 1/2 hours drive away in Cardiff or Swansea.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
It's a bit mystifying why someone would choose to live in the mordour that is the south east if 50k means you're struggling
Some jobs pay well down there. Other than that, fuck knows.
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I can tell £8 from £20 and £20 from £50 but above £50 I find it tough to differentiate
IMF predicting a boris bounce for the economy - must be all those tax cuts for those struggling to get by on 50k
Good show. I struggle to get by on £50k.
Try being a bit more bohemian - you can always switch to cider for example; one of those big bottles has your weekly allowance of alcohol in one handy bottle.
Weekly allowance. Right.
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
Anyone struggling to live on £50k/y mystifies me. My red 'vin ordinaire' costs a mere £4 a bottle and it's very good. There are lots of good ones between £4-4.50.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
I guess you don't live in London or the South East with a family - or you'd find it a lot less mystifying. Buying cheap wine would be the least of your worries!
How do you suppose people manage on £20k, then?
I imagine it's incredibly tough, and explains why many kids go hungry during the school holidays. Housing costs eat up a huge fraction of people's incomes. I am not saying people on £50k are on the poverty line, I am saying that if they have a family and live in an area where they have to pay a lot for housing as well as transport, childcare etc they probably are not sitting around bitching about having to buy cheap wine. Also: "why do they live there then" is a dumb question because that is where the jobs and opportunities are. You're better off living on £50k/yr in London than unemployed in Hartlepool.
Swinson says she would only accept the result of a second referendum if Remain won.
Lol - at least she's honest - Source?
Guido
Yes and you can be sure Guido has spun it in as hostile a way as possible as he's the arch-propagandist for the LEAVE fraternity.
All Jo has said if the people vote LEAVE she could not support that in parliament - that doesn't mean such a result couldn't and wouldn't be enacted but it seems strange having advocated one side before the vote to do a complete volte face if the vote goes the other way - I mean, who could support REMAIN and argue for it and then turn round the next day, if LEAVE won, and said they were a confirmed LEAVE supporter all along?
True. But, in this hypothetical situation of of (lets say) a 2nd Referendum with Remain v Theresa May Deal as the choice, if TM Deal won I would expect any MP that said they couldn't support this choice to either abstain on the Parliamentary vote (at least) or more properly resign as an MP.
I'm not saying it'd happen but if another Ref resulted in a Leave option being picked, it simply wouldn't be fair to allow Parliament to block it.
It's not even completely out there. General Election in September results in 330 LD MPs. They extend for 2nd Ref and put TM Deal v Remain for a March 2020 2nd Ref. 2nd Ref results in 52% for TM Leave.
330MPs then turn around, chortle and say 'fooled you, only kidding, we won't vote it through Parliament'?
Comments
Interesting first appointment of Mark Spencer as Chief Whip. Handling the irreconcilable differences within the Tory party is probably mission impossible, but Mark Spencer sounds like a genuine doer, so as much chance as anyone.
Rees Mogg at 12-1 is money for old rope for the bookies.
They're a cult not really interested in real power, but impotent purity.
I wish Boris Johnson well as prime minister with his ‘do or die’ pledge to deliver Brexit on October 31.
It is ‘do or die’ not just for Brexit, but for the future of the Conservative party too.
Does he have the courage to deliver for the country?
Well, quite. Farage has already spotted the opportunity, but that wasn't difficult. Boris couldn't have set a bigger trap for himself.
Squirrel-eating men get fined.
The new chief whip makes me think of the company! Boris thinks he is a bright spark but it wont get him any extra points!
a) Be more cautious of the squirrels in my garden
b) How do you fine a squirrel?
https://tinyurl.com/y37gzqwj
https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1153673004217491456
Be someone Boris doesn't like.
Be someone so famously useless that everyone will naturally blame him or her for a No Deal disaster without Boris even needing to spin anything.
Who would be a good fit?
I think I did quite well last time - I was only 2 votes away from Profit after I got on Gove at long odds.
Guacamole!
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/9552660/seagull-dog-chihuahua-paignton-devon/
Boris probably benefits from not being a Trump cheerleader like Farage
Of all the lies the Brits tell, how modest their consumption of alcohol is (particularly when talking to the nurse or GP) has got to be their biggest whopper.
(Edit: probably because they multiple by 3 or 4)
https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/1153682239584161792?s=20
It's pretty quiet without them. I'm sure we'll get used to it.
just to add: there's a brasier that won't join in.
All Jo has said if the people vote LEAVE she could not support that in parliament - that doesn't mean such a result couldn't and wouldn't be enacted but it seems strange having advocated one side before the vote to do a complete volte face if the vote goes the other way - I mean, who could support REMAIN and argue for it and then turn round the next day, if LEAVE won, and said they were a confirmed LEAVE supporter all along?
It was only in this morning's thread that we were promised Heidi or Sarah would be going over to the LibDems today -- one by one as OGH memorably said "to maximise the impact."
And the thread before that was entitled "Get ready for Boris’s big day to see CON resignations and the LDs perhaps getting another MP"
We are all fully prepared for the big defections one by one "to maximise the impact" ... how many more times will they have to be predicted?
Maybe the impact of these defections is so enormous that like the Tunguska Event they have to be limited to one or two a century for safety's sake.
Chateau Recougne from Majestic is one of the best clarets I've drunk for 20 years. It shortly goes on offer for ... £7.99 per bottle. I came across it at a relative's house in June and then found out that Majestic have a local branch.
I challenge most people to distinguish very good or excellent wine like this from 'great' wine - which I couldn't afford - in a blind tasting.
Still not too late for the Six I guess but it would be second (or last) story - maybe they're best waiting til Thursday or Friday.
Still, she is probably not as bad as Ed Davey, who comes across as a seriously slow-witted individual who has been battling an intravenous downer habit for twenty years.
https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1153695618457591808
The closest Majestic Wines to me are 2 and 1/2 hours drive away in Cardiff or Swansea.
Also: "why do they live there then" is a dumb question because that is where the jobs and opportunities are. You're better off living on £50k/yr in London than unemployed in Hartlepool.
More importantly though - can you tell the difference between Tennents and Carling?
It's not really a question anyway cause Carling is better.
But like the good Scots lad I am I drink Tennents.
However, given #indyref2 I will be making the switch.
Let today be the birth of the hashtag-
#Carling4Tennents4indyref2
I'm not saying it'd happen but if another Ref resulted in a Leave option being picked, it simply wouldn't be fair to allow Parliament to block it.
It's not even completely out there. General Election in September results in 330 LD MPs. They extend for 2nd Ref and put TM Deal v Remain for a March 2020 2nd Ref. 2nd Ref results in 52% for TM Leave.
330MPs then turn around, chortle and say 'fooled you, only kidding, we won't vote it through Parliament'?