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I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbynstodge said:
I'd be perfectly happy to have Clarke as an interim PM to agree the extension and block the No Deal.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Last night but it was very vague and it is more likely he would be nominated
As for Corbyn, with the appropriate shackles, he could do the same job though without Clarke's style.
As to how Johnson and the other No Dealers respond if and when the caretaker Government gets the extension voted through the Commons, we'll see.0 -
Or he can spend his days designing a hyper-spatial, multi-verse project management tool.williamglenn said:
He can get a column in the Telegraph where he can slag off Boris Johnson for not believing in Brexit enough.rottenborough said:Cummings is this administration's Bannon.
He'll be gone before too long.0 -
None to be honest. He may even face reselectionsurbiton19 said:
What are the chances of Philip Hammond becoming the next leader of the [sensible] Conservatives ?Black_Rook said:
It may even be part of Johnson's strategy in playing hardball with Parliament: clearly if MPs let him have his way then the hardcore Remainers will be beaten, but if a majority can be assembled to install an alternative PM (and, in my opinion, this is now the only sure way to avert No Deal AND the only viable alternative PM is Corbyn) then any sitting Conservative MP who does it can be instantly deselected.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
It's essentially an invitation to any Tory MP who thinks staying in the EU is the first imperative of policy to stand by their principles - and be replaced by a candidate capable of supporting a Brexit manifesto and believing it.0 -
Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
I hope they doScott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
Was that not suggested earlier by Gordon Brown?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
‘Don’t call me Boris. People I like don’t call me that.’ His Christian name is not Boris but Alexander. Boris is his second name and his family call him ‘Al’.justin124 said:
Also James Harold Wilson - Arthur Neville Chamberlain - James Ramsay Macdonald.viewcode said:
James Gordon Brown and Leonard James Callaghan are on the phone. Quite a few people go by a name other than their first forename. Some also do nicknames, as James Jeremy Durham "Paddy" Ashdown can attest.nichomar said:It’s interesting if you call him ‘Boris’ you are already psychologically biased towards him. His name is Alexander Boris’s De god knows what Johnson unless you call everybody else by their first names the you are adding to the con trick that Johnson is not what he is but some cuddles brilliant buffoon that can save the U.K. from disaster
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3510848/My-amitie-amoureuse-boris-johnson-Boris-loner-actually-rates-Dave-personal-close-friend.html0 -
Yesjustin124 said:
Was that not suggested earlier by Gordon Brown?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
Firstly, the Tory Party is splitting. The minority of MPs who flat refuse to contemplate No Deal under any circumstances - and are willing to do whatever it takes to stop it, up to and including installing a Corbyn Government - will, one would imagine, all end up resigning from the party or being thrown out.anothernick said:Incredible. The Brexiteers have now created a situation in which Tory MPs and the Financial Times openly advocate the election of a Marxist as PM.
Secondly, whether or not a majority for Corbyn as PM of last resort can be assembled is highly doubtful. On the one hand, how many Conservative MPs would be willing to take the ultimate step not merely of dethroning their own Prime Minister but also installing Jeremy Corbyn in his place? And, set against that, how many MPs on the Opposition side (over and above the DUP contingent, of course) might find they are unable to bring themselves to vote Corbyn into office, regardless of how badly they might or might not want to stay in the EU? It's not just the Lib Dems that are reluctant - John Woodcock, Frank Field, Lady Sylvia Hermon and all five remaining TIGs all immediately spring to mind.
Remember, if the anti-No Deal MPs are going to depose Johnson then they have to be absolutely sure they have the numbers to install Corbyn as well. If the 14 day period under the FTPA expires with no alternative PM having been appointed, then the current Government remains in office until after a General Election, which would almost certainly take place after October 31st.0 -
Can this be done ? Many say the UK has to agree. But the March 29 deadline was removed by the EU Council when May was upstairs and not in the meeting of the 27.justin124 said:
Was that not suggested earlier by Gordon Brown?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
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https://mobile.twitter.com/MSF_Sea/status/1167345918951272448
I don't know how bad it must be for people to flee to Moria. Don't they know what the dwarves awoke in the darkness of Khazad-dum?0 -
After the break up ?Big_G_NorthWales said:
None to be honest. He may even face reselectionsurbiton19 said:
What are the chances of Philip Hammond becoming the next leader of the [sensible] Conservatives ?Black_Rook said:
It may even be part of Johnson's strategy in playing hardball with Parliament: clearly if MPs let him have his way then the hardcore Remainers will be beaten, but if a majority can be assembled to install an alternative PM (and, in my opinion, this is now the only sure way to avert No Deal AND the only viable alternative PM is Corbyn) then any sitting Conservative MP who does it can be instantly deselected.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
It's essentially an invitation to any Tory MP who thinks staying in the EU is the first imperative of policy to stand by their principles - and be replaced by a candidate capable of supporting a Brexit manifesto and believing it.
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Nil.surbiton19 said:
What are the chances of Philip Hammond becoming the next leader of the [sensible] Conservatives ?Black_Rook said:
It may even be part of Johnson's strategy in playing hardball with Parliament: clearly if MPs let him have his way then the hardcore Remainers will be beaten, but if a majority can be assembled to install an alternative PM (and, in my opinion, this is now the only sure way to avert No Deal AND the only viable alternative PM is Corbyn) then any sitting Conservative MP who does it can be instantly deselected.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
It's essentially an invitation to any Tory MP who thinks staying in the EU is the first imperative of policy to stand by their principles - and be replaced by a candidate capable of supporting a Brexit manifesto and believing it.0 -
Off topic, just seen West Indies spinner Rakheem Cornwall bowling against India. He's just huge, by far the heaviest player I've ever seen playing in a test match.0
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It does not take genius to get the Brexit supporting media eating out of your hand if you are promoting the agenda they advocate. If Johnson had 90% approval ratings or the Tories were at 60%+ in the opinion polls, that would be another thing. Genius does not make over 50% of the population fundamentally opposed to the agenda the Government you are working for is trying to implement. Johnson is pretty dim if he thinks he can engage in political discourse the same way as trump as the US is a two party system and the UK is a multi-party system with a record of tactical voting...Peter_the_Punter said:
Allow me to make myself a bit of a hostage to fortune.dixiedean said:
You may be right. However, my point was, that Cummings, who has never been a member of any political party, is spectacularly inexperienced and unqualified for such a situation.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
He simply does not do nuance. May, for all her faults, kept the vast majority of the party together.
I think Cummings' political genius is vastly exaggerated, and he is a bit of psycho.
Be happy to proved wrong in due course on this one.0 -
The break up you seek will not happen before a GEsurbiton19 said:
After the break up ?Big_G_NorthWales said:
None to be honest. He may even face reselectionsurbiton19 said:
What are the chances of Philip Hammond becoming the next leader of the [sensible] Conservatives ?Black_Rook said:
It may even be part of Johnson's strategy in playing hardball with Parliament: clearly if MPs let him have his way then the hardcore Remainers will be beaten, but if a majority can be assembled to install an alternative PM (and, in my opinion, this is now the only sure way to avert No Deal AND the only viable alternative PM is Corbyn) then any sitting Conservative MP who does it can be instantly deselected.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
It's essentially an invitation to any Tory MP who thinks staying in the EU is the first imperative of policy to stand by their principles - and be replaced by a candidate capable of supporting a Brexit manifesto and believing it.
Too many careers at stake0 -
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
I believe your'e right. A hotel recommended by Norman Bates.justin124 said:
Was that not suggested earlier by Gordon Brown?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?0
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Every LD I speak to despises Corbyn and his ilk with a healthy passion. Harriet Harman, as an alternative from Labour, would be fine as would Yvette Cooper and there are other options.Big_G_NorthWales said:
I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbyn
Good to see YouGov pushing the LDs back up after a poor poll (outlier?) the other day. The other curiousity - CON/BP down to 45%, Lab/LD/Green now at 50%.
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Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
A new budget you say? I wonder how bad the budget looks without the UK’s contributionBlack_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/11675394888994242560 -
That is a really stupid comment. I have opposed Boris as PM since the leadership contest and I disagree completely with his latest little jape. But if you remove him in any way other than by an election you make him the focal point for all Brexit support and make him almost certain to win the following GE on a policy of completing Brexit. Against a divided Remain camp he will walk it. I don't want him as PM so I would really rather you didn't give him that sort of help.The_Taxman said:
Are you sure you don't post as HYUFD as well? Removing Johnson from office eliminates No Deal Brexit. Once Johnson is removed he becomes a loser. Little risk of a Marxist led Corbyn Government getting much extreme stuff through the H of C as an alternative Government would be multi-party. You might not agree with it and maybe it would not be stable but I think it takes the ground from under the extremist Johnson/Cummings strategy.Richard_Tyndall said:
That is the one way to ensure Boris wins the subsequent GE with an overwhelming majority.The_Taxman said:
I agree. I think Boris(Cummings) have war gamed this as a battle between the people v parliament, the elite and judiciary and if any baulk his chosen path he will just announce a GE and challenge Corbyn to the battle. I see no circumstances where Corbyn would not agree
Following that I expect a near SNP whitewash and many London and south based conservatives to lose seats but for the conservatives to make considerable gains off labour in England and Wales but not enough for a majority
The HOC are likely to see a big increase in lib dems, and together with the SNP, and the remains of labour the conservatives could end up in the same position,
Indeed, this talk about legislating against No Deal plays into his hands in that scenario.
I think the best thing for MPs opposed to No Deal is to remove Boris Johnson from office and install someone else. I would be interested to see if the media would give his successor a fair wind as Johnson is enjoying at the moment.Lets remember Johnson has No Mandate for No Deal and removal from office eliminates the risk...
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He probably told Johnson what to write when he did the letters to submarine commanders.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
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Worst thing is it’s a retweet of one of his own tweets! What a desperate attention seeker 🙈Streeter said:0 -
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
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RE: Tories splitting.Black_Rook said:
Firstly, the Tory Party is splitting. The minority of MPs who flat refuse to contemplate No Deal under any circumstances - and are willing to do whatever it takes to stop it, up to and including installing a Corbyn Government - will, one would imagine, all end up resigning from the party or being thrown out.anothernick said:Incredible. The Brexiteers have now created a situation in which Tory MPs and the Financial Times openly advocate the election of a Marxist as PM.
Secondly, whether or not a majority for Corbyn as PM of last resort can be assembled is highly doubtful. On the one hand, how many Conservative MPs would be willing to take the ultimate step not merely of dethroning their own Prime Minister but also installing Jeremy Corbyn in his place? And, set against that, how many MPs on the Opposition side (over and above the DUP contingent, of course) might find they are unable to bring themselves to vote Corbyn into office, regardless of how badly they might or might not want to stay in the EU? It's not just the Lib Dems that are reluctant - John Woodcock, Frank Field, Lady Sylvia Hermon and all five remaining TIGs all immediately spring to mind.
Remember, if the anti-No Deal MPs are going to depose Johnson then they have to be absolutely sure they have the numbers to install Corbyn as well. If the 14 day period under the FTPA expires with no alternative PM having been appointed, then the current Government remains in office until after a General Election, which would almost certainly take place after October 31st.
When the Liberals split in the last century they had competing factions who returned blocks of MPs. People seem to think that if a chunk of Tory MPs fails to back BJ in a VONC, then they will end their career. It is perfectly possible, especially in Remain orientated areas for A Tory Remain MP to be returned at the 'forthcoming election' IMO.0 -
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?0 -
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So the tories are unpopular but will win a General Election? So 52% voted for Brexit but its still unpopular?
I voted 'Remain' but it seems to me the delusionalists are mainly the commentators on this site. FFS get out of your bubble....!1 -
I have no problem with either Harman or Cooper but Ken is best with one of those two deputystodge said:
Every LD I speak to despises Corbyn and his ilk with a healthy passion. Harriet Harman, as an alternative from Labour, would be fine as would Yvette Cooper and there are other options.Big_G_NorthWales said:
I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbyn
Good to see YouGov pushing the LDs back up after a poor poll (outlier?) the other day. The other curiousity - CON/BP down to 45%, Lab/LD/Green now at 50%.0 -
I don't think he's an alcoholic, no.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?0 -
I don't think Bad Al was psychotic. I think he had clinical depression. Two different conditions entirely.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?0 -
Who do you think should be CofE, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary?Big_G_NorthWales said:
I have no problem with either Harman or Cooper but Ken is best with one of those two deputystodge said:
Every LD I speak to despises Corbyn and his ilk with a healthy passion. Harriet Harman, as an alternative from Labour, would be fine as would Yvette Cooper and there are other options.Big_G_NorthWales said:
I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbyn
Good to see YouGov pushing the LDs back up after a poor poll (outlier?) the other day. The other curiousity - CON/BP down to 45%, Lab/LD/Green now at 50%.0 -
Completely out of order, given Campbell's public battle with issues around mental health.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?0 -
Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?0
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Campbell never ran the country. Cummings does.Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
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Celtic v Rangers and it goes back decades. It happened when I lived in Edinburgh in the 1960' sGallowgate said:0 -
Name them.The_Taxman said:
RE: Tories splitting.Black_Rook said:
Firstly, the Tory Party is splitting. The minority of MPs who flat refuse to contemplate No Deal under any circumstances - and are willing to do whatever it takes to stop it, up to and including installing a Corbyn Government - will, one would imagine, all end up resigning from the party or being thrown out.anothernick said:Incredible. The Brexiteers have now created a situation in which Tory MPs and the Financial Times openly advocate the election of a Marxist as PM.
Secondly, whether or not a majority for Corbyn as PM of last resort can be assembled is highly doubtful. On the one hand, how many Conservative MPs would be willing to take the ultimate step not merely of dethroning their own Prime Minister but also installing Jeremy Corbyn in his place? And, set against that, how many MPs on the Opposition side (over and above the DUP contingent, of course) might find they are unable to bring themselves to vote Corbyn into office, regardless of how badly they might or might not want to stay in the EU? It's not just the Lib Dems that are reluctant - John Woodcock, Frank Field, Lady Sylvia Hermon and all five remaining TIGs all immediately spring to mind.
Remember, if the anti-No Deal MPs are going to depose Johnson then they have to be absolutely sure they have the numbers to install Corbyn as well. If the 14 day period under the FTPA expires with no alternative PM having been appointed, then the current Government remains in office until after a General Election, which would almost certainly take place after October 31st.
When the Liberals split in the last century they had competing factions who returned blocks of MPs. People seem to think that if a chunk of Tory MPs fails to back BJ in a VONC, then they will end their career. It is perfectly possible, especially in Remain orientated areas for A Tory Remain MP to be returned at the 'forthcoming election' IMO.0 -
Not sure they are needed to achieve an extension and then an immediate GEsteve_garner said:
Who do you think should be CofE, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary?Big_G_NorthWales said:
I have no problem with either Harman or Cooper but Ken is best with one of those two deputystodge said:
Every LD I speak to despises Corbyn and his ilk with a healthy passion. Harriet Harman, as an alternative from Labour, would be fine as would Yvette Cooper and there are other options.Big_G_NorthWales said:
I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbyn
Good to see YouGov pushing the LDs back up after a poor poll (outlier?) the other day. The other curiousity - CON/BP down to 45%, Lab/LD/Green now at 50%.0 -
Why is this "completely out of order"? His mental issues are entirely relevant given his position of control, including his chairing of the JIC at the time of the Iraq war (which by the way was completely and utterly disgraceful).rottenborough said:
Completely out of order, given Campbell's public battle with issues around mental health.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?0 -
I guess if you believe at some point in the future the Tories may find themselves in a coalition with the SNP then independence for Scotland is an electoral negative.StuartDickson said:Fraser Nelson delivers stunning Brexit warning to Tories as Ruth Davidson leaves party
”She has many reasons for resigning, but one is that she can’t sell an agenda she can’t bring herself to believe in. “This ought to give the Tories pause”.
Several issues are expected to rise out of the resignation, with Scottish independence a burning topic that may well take centre stage.
Ms Davidson is a staunch believer of staying in the UK, and had campaigned to remain in her eight years as leader - her resignation may well pave the way for bolstered independence support.
https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1171700/brexit-latest-news-ruth-davidson-conservative-party-no-deal-eu-exit-scotland-tories/amp
I very much take the opposite view.0 -
He had a psychotic breakdownThe_Taxman said:
I don't think Bad Al was psychotic. I think he had clinical depression. Two different conditions entirely.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/mediapacks/mental-health-and-me/depression
Tell you what lads, let’s put him in charge of the country (unelected).0 -
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
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I'm as sure as one can be of anything these days that no alternative PM to Corbyn will be installed, because Corbyn himself won't back it. To allow himself to be sidelined in his way would spell almost certain death for his whole project: once the precedent is set, what justification is there to refuse any demand from a future confidence and supply or coalition partner that Labour should nominate an acceptable candidate as Prime Minister?Big_G_NorthWales said:
I have no problem with either Harman or Cooper but Ken is best with one of those two deputystodge said:
Every LD I speak to despises Corbyn and his ilk with a healthy passion. Harriet Harman, as an alternative from Labour, would be fine as would Yvette Cooper and there are other options.Big_G_NorthWales said:
I too would be content with Ken but under no circumstances Corbyn
Good to see YouGov pushing the LDs back up after a poor poll (outlier?) the other day. The other curiousity - CON/BP down to 45%, Lab/LD/Green now at 50%.
The whole idea would turn Corbyn into a spare part. It's fantasy.0 -
The PM has the right to fire all SPADs.justin124 said:
What would happen if Javid simply ignored Cummings and announced that this lady is now working for him on a personal basis?Philip_Thompson said:Has the very public sacking of Javid's SPAD made it more or less likely other SPADs will continue to undermine the government by leaking to the governments enemies like Hammond do you think?
If the Chancellor tried to do an end-run around that then I think the result would need to be a new Chancellor.0 -
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A statement of fact. He would say the same about himself.rottenborough said:
Completely out of order, given Campbell's public battle with issues around mental health.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?
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Am I the only one who finds the Hard Left's rage about Johnson's use of the rules around end of parliamentary sessions laughable?
This is exactly the kind of tactic the left use all the time in endless committee meetings and conferences.0 -
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
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The (official) PM didn't fire her.Philip_Thompson said:The PM has the right to fire all SPADs.
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An election is what he wants and his prorogation of parliament is about. Don't make things personal about yourself in terms of whether you want BJ as PM or not. I was simply suggesting a strategy to end No Deal. Removing him from office kills him stone dead. As he has taken the ball away from parliament, MPs would be returning the favour. Legislating against No Deal does not stop the process but removing him from office does! He has not been elected by the UK electorate or MPs for that matter. I don't think BJ deserves an election on his terms, so MPs can cut him down and he can face one on the terms the MPs dictate. A small fraction of the population had a vote in the Tory leadership. That is clearly not democratic and MPs are the ones with the strongest democratic mandate at the moment in our parliamentary democracy.Richard_Tyndall said:
That is a really stupid comment. I have opposed Boris as PM since the leadership contest and I disagree completely with his latest little jape. But if you remove him in any way other than by an election you make him the focal point for all Brexit support and make him almost certain to win the following GE on a policy of completing Brexit. Against a divided Remain camp he will walk it. I don't want him as PM so I would really rather you didn't give him that sort of help.The_Taxman said:
Are you sure you don't post as HYUFD as well? Removing Johnson from office eliminates No Deal Brexit. Once Johnson is removed he becomes a loser. Little risk of a Marxist led Corbyn Government getting much extreme stuff through the H of C as an alternative Government would be multi-party. You might not agree with it and maybe it would not be stable but I think it takes the ground from under the extremist Johnson/Cummings strategy.Richard_Tyndall said:
That is the one way to ensure Boris wins the subsequent GE with an overwhelming majority.The_Taxman said:
The HOC are likely to see a big increase in lib dems, and together with the SNP, and the remains of labour the conservatives could end up in the same position,
Indeed, this talk about legislating against No Deal plays into his hands in that scenario.
I think the best thing for MPs opposed to No Deal is to remove Boris Johnson from office and install someone else. I would be interested to see if the media would give his successor a fair wind as Johnson is enjoying at the moment.Lets remember Johnson has No Mandate for No Deal and removal from office eliminates the risk...
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Yes of course, I agree that, at the moment, a Corbyn premiership is still unlikely. But it is less unlikely than it was a week ago and the fact that Conservative MPs and the voice of British capitalism (the FT) are openly contemplating the possibility is a measure of the disaster that Brexit has visited upon the Tory party.Black_Rook said:
Firstly, the Tory Party is splitting. The minority of MPs who flat refuse to contemplate No Deal under any circumstances - and are willing to do whatever it takes to stop it, up to and including installing a Corbyn Government - will, one would imagine, all end up resigning from the party or being thrown out.anothernick said:Incredible. The Brexiteers have now created a situation in which Tory MPs and the Financial Times openly advocate the election of a Marxist as PM.
Secondly, whether or not a majority for Corbyn as PM of last resort can be assembled is highly doubtful. On the one hand, how many Conservative MPs would be willing to take the ultimate step not merely of dethroning their own Prime Minister but also installing Jeremy Corbyn in his place? And, set against that, how many MPs on the Opposition side (over and above the DUP contingent, of course) might find they are unable to bring themselves to vote Corbyn into office, regardless of how badly they might or might not want to stay in the EU? It's not just the Lib Dems that are reluctant - John Woodcock, Frank Field, Lady Sylvia Hermon and all five remaining TIGs all immediately spring to mind.
Remember, if the anti-No Deal MPs are going to depose Johnson then they have to be absolutely sure they have the numbers to install Corbyn as well. If the 14 day period under the FTPA expires with no alternative PM having been appointed, then the current Government remains in office until after a General Election, which would almost certainly take place after October 31st.0 -
I’m sure you’re right.Peter_the_Punter said:
Allow me to make myself a bit of a hostage to fortune.dixiedean said:
You may be right. However, my point was, that Cummings, who has never been a member of any political party, is spectacularly inexperienced and unqualified for such a situation.Philip_Thompson said:
Internal Tory politics right now are brutal. We need a resolution and one side must vanquish the other, it is politically kill or be killed.dixiedean said:
This is the danger with Cummings. He works on binary questions. Them and us.Scott_P said:
He knows nowt, and cares less, for internal Tory politics.
May's career died because she was impotent and useless. Boris must defeat people like Hammond if he is to have any chance.
He simply does not do nuance. May, for all her faults, kept the vast majority of the party together.
I think Cummings' political genius is vastly exaggerated, and he is a bit of psycho.
Be happy to proved wrong in due course on this one.
On the other hand, he has, for now, achieved considerably greater influence than Bannon ever did.
I stick with my jumped up little shit assessment.0 -
isam said:
He had a psychotic breakdownThe_Taxman said:
I don't think Bad Al was psychotic. I think he had clinical depression. Two different conditions entirely.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/mediapacks/mental-health-and-me/depression
Tell you what lads, let’s put him in charge of the country (unelected).
Quite. Campbell was temperamentally utterly unsuited to any position of authority in government. And Blair let him chair the JIC!!!
This is an eternal stain on the Labour Party and anyone who tries to defend Campbell for his shameful behaviour. Against his behaviour Brexit is but a small matter.
How dare Campbell lecture anyone on anything.0 -
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.0 -
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
0 -
Just read this.nichomar said:
I know and I don’t know the answer I’m about to cut myself off from my remaining contacts because they really don’t accept anything but boris brexit as the only true answer. I’ve spent my life fighting tories and had some success but at this point it really isn’t worth the effort. It’s actually quite difficult existing in the over 65 cross tab when you are so far out of lineGallowgate said:
But this is not a game! We live here and have to face the consequences.nichomar said:
He wants to be no confidenceThe_Taxman said:Big_G_NorthWales said:
He announced it two days ago but then Adonis is another one of those driven stir crazy by brexitScott_P said:
It is pretty obvious to me that Boris Johnson is in an "election lockdown" given his daily media appearances. The Brexit supporting media are in full propaganda mode - I don't buy into it but that is what is going on. Maybe the proroguing of Parliament is about a snap GE as much as anything else. I have seen all this before with other PM's but the strategic positioning and media output is unmistakable.Big_G_NorthWales said:
He announced it two days ago but then Adonis is another one of those driven stir crazy by brexitScott_P said:
He wants to be stopped from no dealing (who wouldn’t)
He’s playing the opposition and they need to sit back and let him reap what he sows don’t give him his people v parliament election let him eat digest and regurgitate no deal
@nichomar, I feel for you.
Come back to Remainia. My friends range between early 20s and mid 70s, and it really doesn’t matter how old you are so long as you have something interesting to say, can have a laugh, don’t mind small children, and think Boris is a tosser...0 -
-
The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.Scott_P said:
The (official) PM didn't fire her.Philip_Thompson said:The PM has the right to fire all SPADs.
0 -
Is anyone - even the thickest person in Britain - really stupid enough to believe Bunter and his hollow pledges? (Except HYUFD-ISAM)Scott_P said:0 -
Ha ha ha...you think Campbell "never ran the country"?!SouthamObserver said:
Campbell never ran the country. Cummings does.Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Bless....0 -
You think BoZo is the authority and Cummings is the functionary?Philip_Thompson said:The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.
Bless...0 -
Did no one learn from the £350m on a bus? Cummings has done this on purpose. Challenging him helps give it airtime beyond its sell-by date.....Scott_P said:0 -
It remains to be seen whether Brexit will help or hinder the Conservative Party. Many, possibly most, people thought Corbyn was electoral kryptonite in the run up to the 2017 election, myself included. Then 4 in 10 voters looked at him and thought "yes, I don't mind having him as Prime Minister, actually."anothernick said:
Yes of course, I agree that, at the moment, a Corbyn premiership is still unlikely. But it is less unlikely than it was a week ago and the fact that Conservative MPs and the voice of British capitalism (the FT) are openly contemplating the possibility is a measure of the disaster that Brexit has visited upon the Tory party.Black_Rook said:
Firstly, the Tory Party is splitting. The minority of MPs who flat refuse to contemplate No Deal under any circumstances - and are willing to do whatever it takes to stop it, up to and including installing a Corbyn Government - will, one would imagine, all end up resigning from the party or being thrown out.anothernick said:Incredible. The Brexiteers have now created a situation in which Tory MPs and the Financial Times openly advocate the election of a Marxist as PM.
Secondly, whether or not a majority for Corbyn as PM of last resort can be assembled is highly doubtful. On the one hand, how many Conservative MPs would be willing to take the ultimate step not merely of dethroning their own Prime Minister but also installing Jeremy Corbyn in his place? And, set against that, how many MPs on the Opposition side (over and above the DUP contingent, of course) might find they are unable to bring themselves to vote Corbyn into office, regardless of how badly they might or might not want to stay in the EU? It's not just the Lib Dems that are reluctant - John Woodcock, Frank Field, Lady Sylvia Hermon and all five remaining TIGs all immediately spring to mind.
Remember, if the anti-No Deal MPs are going to depose Johnson then they have to be absolutely sure they have the numbers to install Corbyn as well. If the 14 day period under the FTPA expires with no alternative PM having been appointed, then the current Government remains in office until after a General Election, which would almost certainly take place after October 31st.
There are, of course, a number of ways in which Brexit could play out, all of which might have different potential consequences for the Tories, and for the wider political system. We may know a lot more about this in a few months - or there may have been yet another Brexit extension and the limbo could still be going on...0 -
0
-
As opposed to Campbell???!!!Scott_P said:
Campbell dismissed ministers, never mind SPADS! And helped win three elections for his "master"...0 -
Sign up for Bunter’s revolution mate. Lots of jobs to be done.basicbridge said:
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
0 -
Evening all
Fascinating to see the final polls for the Saxony and Brandenburg State elections this Sunday.
In Saxony, the CDU Minister President Kretschmer loos likely to survive despite his party losing ground and his coalition partners,the SPD, taking a heavy hit. The FDP may return to the Landtag but Kretschmer's survival is being helped by the strong performance of the AfD which might get as much as 25% of the vote.
Since no one will deal with the AfD Kretschmer will likely be able to build another coalition and his task will be greatly aided if the FDP get back.
In Brandenburg, the SPD leader Woidke is in a similar position. His SDP/Linke coalition won't survive but with the AfD polling 21% and running a close second, the alternatives aren't obvious, The CDU are down as well and it may be Woiske will have to deal with the Greens who are also well ahead on 2014.
I suspect Woidke will cobble together a new coalition possibly with the Greens and Linke though that will be easier if the FDP are once again shut out and that's very much in the balance.0 -
Brown was pretty poor as PM. But compared to those who have come after he is a titan.Omnium said:
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.0 -
Time to go
Discord everywhere and no end in sight
I have to say I have been with the family a little today and now have the TV off
It is remarkable how much better you feel when you realise that this forum is for political geeks and out there most people are getting on with their lives without constant bickering and division
Good night folks0 -
I think the way Javid's SPAD was fired by Cummings in that ungentlemanly way may shift quite a few votes.Scott_P said:
You think BoZo is the authority and Cummings is the functionary?Philip_Thompson said:The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.
Bless...0 -
Quite. PB is a "remain" echo chamber.Big_G_NorthWales said:Time to go
Discord everywhere and no end in sight
I have to say I have been with the family a little today and now have the TV off
It is remarkable how much better you feel when you realise that this forum is for political geeks and out there most people are getting on with their lives without constant bickering and division
Good night folks
Goodnight.1 -
Perhaps pollsters should ask people what they think about Cummings. Curious to see how many know who he is.0
-
Anabobazina said:
Sign up for Bunter’s revolution mate. Lots of jobs to be done.basicbridge said:
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
Not a particular fan of BoJos. But then again he has the great positive of lacking the self-deluding self-righteousness that one sees on so many (ahem) political "betting" sites....0 -
"Psychotic" usually relates schizophrenia. I don't think Bad Al had schizophrenia as he clearly states his brother was schizophrenic and he was worried he had the same condition but did not. It is possible to have schizophrenia and depression, which is called schizo-effective disorder. It maybe that Bad Al made a mistake where it quotes him as saying he had a psychotic breakdown as the article repeatedly says depression. Some very gifted people have suffered psychotic breakdowns and I would not hold it against him. His attitude and arrogance is certainly something to hold against him but serious mental illness. No.isam said:
He had a psychotic breakdownThe_Taxman said:
I don't think Bad Al was psychotic. I think he had clinical depression. Two different conditions entirely.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/mediapacks/mental-health-and-me/depression
Tell you what lads, let’s put him in charge of the country (unelected).0 -
I think it will shift roughly as many votes as Bad Al shifted in the early days of Labour's government.steve_garner said:
I think the way Javid's SPAD was fired by Cummings in that ungentlemanly way may shift quite a few votes.Scott_P said:
You think BoZo is the authority and Cummings is the functionary?Philip_Thompson said:The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.
Bless...0 -
UnbelievableGallowgate said:0 -
Trump’s own remarks about trade with Japan were even more telling. According to a White House transcript, Trump complained that while Japan sends us millions of cars, “We send them wheat. Wheat. (Laughter.)” Do farmers realize that their president considers their livelihood a joke?
At one level, it’s not hard to see why farmers supported Trump. Hostility to nonwhite immigrants was central to his campaign, and such hostility tends to be highest in places where there aren’t actually many immigrants. So rural America, with its still tiny immigrant population, was a receptive audience for his fear-mongering.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/29/opinion/trump-trade-farmers.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage0 -
Or, we could give Nichomar the advice a nice, sane person with his best interests at heart would give, which is that politics is a small part of life, and it's senseless to lose friends and comrades because you disagree over something. And that he might be able to give his contacts a valuable perspective from the other side they wouldn't otherwise get, and vice versa. Jeez.Gardenwalker said:
Just read this.nichomar said:
I know and I don’t know the answer I’m about to cut myself off from my remaining contacts because they really don’t accept anything but boris brexit as the only true answer. I’ve spent my life fighting tories and had some success but at this point it really isn’t worth the effort. It’s actually quite difficult existing in the over 65 cross tab when you are so far out of lineGallowgate said:
But this is not a game! We live here and have to face the consequences.nichomar said:
He wants to be no confidenceThe_Taxman said:Big_G_NorthWales said:
He announced it two days ago but then Adonis is another one of those driven stir crazy by brexitScott_P said:
It is pretty obvious to me that Boris Johnson is in an "election lockdown" given his daily media appearances. The Brexit supporting media are in full propaganda mode - I don't buy into it but that is what is going on. Maybe the proroguing of Parliament is about a snap GE as much as anything else. I have seen all this before with other PM's but the strategic positioning and media output is unmistakable.Big_G_NorthWales said:
He announced it two days ago but then Adonis is another one of those driven stir crazy by brexitScott_P said:
He wants to be stopped from no dealing (who wouldn’t)
He’s playing the opposition and they need to sit back and let him reap what he sows don’t give him his people v parliament election let him eat digest and regurgitate no deal
@nichomar, I feel for you.
Come back to Remainia. My friends range between early 20s and mid 70s, and it really doesn’t matter how old you are so long as you have something interesting to say, can have a laugh, don’t mind small children, and think Boris is a tosser...0 -
Tell you what...why dont we hold the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians against him instead...?The_Taxman said:
"Psychotic" usually relates schizophrenia. I don't think Bad Al had schizophrenia as he clearly states his brother was schizophrenic and he was worried he had the same condition but did not. It is possible to have schizophrenia and depression, which is called schizo-effective disorder. It maybe that Bad Al made a mistake where it quotes him as saying he had a psychotic breakdown as the article repeatedly says depression. Some very gifted people have suffered psychotic breakdowns and I would not hold it against him. His attitude and arrogance is certainly something to hold against him but serious mental illness. No.isam said:
He had a psychotic breakdownThe_Taxman said:
I don't think Bad Al was psychotic. I think he had clinical depression. Two different conditions entirely.isam said:
A million dead Iraqis?Luckyguy1983 said:
If Bad Al spinning for New Labour is anything to go by, 3 resounding election victories.SouthamObserver said:It’s clear that Cummings is now running the country. He is not only totally unaccountable, but also completely unhinged. What could possibly go wrong?
Is Cummings a psychotic alcoholic too?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/mediapacks/mental-health-and-me/depression
Tell you what lads, let’s put him in charge of the country (unelected).
Against this the charge of "mental illness" is perhaps a small matter.0 -
No excuse for it now G , just morons. Most people grew up.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Celtic v Rangers and it goes back decades. It happened when I lived in Edinburgh in the 1960' sGallowgate said:0 -
Yes. Apparently "whole bins" thrown.malcolmg said:
UnbelievableGallowgate said:0 -
Get in line mate. Sign on the dotted line for rule by fuckwit.basicbridge said:Anabobazina said:
Sign up for Bunter’s revolution mate. Lots of jobs to be done.basicbridge said:
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
Not a particular fan of BoJos. But then again he has the great positive of lacking the self-deluding self-righteousness that one sees on so many (ahem) political "betting" sites....
You LOVE it!0 -
Is it actually sectarian or is it unemployed young men wanting a punch up? (Genuine question - emphasising that because it’s sometimes hard to tell on the internet).malcolmg said:
No excuse for it now G , just morons. Most people grew up.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Celtic v Rangers and it goes back decades. It happened when I lived in Edinburgh in the 1960' sGallowgate said:0 -
Of course it will .....steve_garner said:
I think the way Javid's SPAD was fired by Cummings in that ungentlemanly way may shift quite a few votes.Scott_P said:
You think BoZo is the authority and Cummings is the functionary?Philip_Thompson said:The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.
Bless...
Ps - I have a bridge if you are interested0 -
Ho ho ho ..very satirical.Anabobazina said:
Get in line mate. Sign on the dotted line for rule by fuckwit.basicbridge said:Anabobazina said:
Sign up for Bunter’s revolution mate. Lots of jobs to be done.basicbridge said:
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
Not a particular fan of BoJos. But then again he has the great positive of lacking the self-deluding self-righteousness that one sees on so many (ahem) political "betting" sites....
You LOVE it!
Ive lived under plenty of "fuckwits" over the last 60 years. Have you?0 -
No he was the second worst pm of my lifetime - May being the winner by a nose.anothernick said:
Brown was pretty poor as PM. But compared to those who have come after he is a titan.Omnium said:
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.0 -
It doesn't kill him stone dead since he would overnight become the Leader of the Opposition [with 300+ MPs in his party still] with an upcoming General Election and it would be his party versus the most bizarre Rainbow Coalition ever. He would likely only temporarily be out of office.The_Taxman said:An election is what he wants and his prorogation of parliament is about. Don't make things personal about yourself in terms of whether you want BJ as PM or not. I was simply suggesting a strategy to end No Deal. Removing him from office kills him stone dead. As he has taken the ball away from parliament, MPs would be returning the favour. Legislating against No Deal does not stop the process but removing him from office does! He has not been elected by the UK electorate or MPs for that matter. I don't think BJ deserves an election on his terms, so MPs can cut him down and he can face one on the terms the MPs dictate. A small fraction of the population had a vote in the Tory leadership. That is clearly not democratic and MPs are the ones with the strongest democratic mandate at the moment in our parliamentary democracy.
You saw how the Coalition hurt the Lib Dems, you don't think having a Rainbow Coalition to deny Brexit and deny the PM might influence votes? Doing this would kill Farage, it would be a case overnight of if you want Brexit you must vote Tory and the unholy rainbow coalition will be fragmented trying to scoop up the Remainers votes.
And lets not forget at EU referendum roughly 2/3rds of seats and the vast, vast majority of marginal seats all voted Leave.0 -
You sound about 12 so i doubt it.basicbridge said:
Ho ho ho ..very satirical.Anabobazina said:
Get in line mate. Sign on the dotted line for rule by fuckwit.basicbridge said:Anabobazina said:
Sign up for Bunter’s revolution mate. Lots of jobs to be done.basicbridge said:
Whatever makes you feel better....Anabobazina said:
Whatever gets you through the nightbasicbridge said:
Seemingly much of the country out of SW1 and most of the posters on this site....Anabobazina said:Is anyone other than HYUFD, iSam and Mortimer still listening to Bunter and his bunch of custards?
Not a particular fan of BoJos. But then again he has the great positive of lacking the self-deluding self-righteousness that one sees on so many (ahem) political "betting" sites....
You LOVE it!
Ive lived under plenty of "fuckwits" over the last 60 years. Have you?0 -
It appears that my attempt at sarcasm was too cleverly disguised. It was of course in reply to Scott P!Floater said:
Of course it will .....steve_garner said:
I think the way Javid's SPAD was fired by Cummings in that ungentlemanly way may shift quite a few votes.Scott_P said:
You think BoZo is the authority and Cummings is the functionary?Philip_Thompson said:The PM's functionary did under the PM's authority. Same thing.
Bless...
Ps - I have a bridge if you are interested0 -
I am always reminded when someone makes a comment like this of the anecdote I once remember reading, about a voter (I think in John Major's time) who claimed that every Prime Minister she had lived under had been worse than the one who came before.anothernick said:
Brown was pretty poor as PM. But compared to those who have come after he is a titan.Omnium said:
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.
I invite readers to consider what horrors may be to come after Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn have both had a go. We shall truly look back on Theresa May's time in office as a golden age.0 -
-
Boris can't possibly be worse than May. Corbyn will probably be the worst in living memory if he gets the chance.Black_Rook said:
I am always reminded when someone makes a comment like this of the anecdote I once remember reading, about a voter (I think in John Major's time) who claimed that every Prime Minister she had lived under had been worse than the one who came before.anothernick said:
Brown was pretty poor as PM. But compared to those who have come after he is a titan.Omnium said:
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.
I invite readers to consider what horrors may be to come after Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn have both had a go. We shall truly look back on Theresa May's time in office as a golden age.0 -
What makes you think they'd be "unemployed"?ab195 said:
Is it actually sectarian or is it unemployed young men wanting a punch up? (Genuine question - emphasising that because it’s sometimes hard to tell on the internet).malcolmg said:
No excuse for it now G , just morons. Most people grew up.Big_G_NorthWales said:
Celtic v Rangers and it goes back decades. It happened when I lived in Edinburgh in the 1960' sGallowgate said:0 -
Why they thought have a republican parade in Govan , of all places , was a good idea is just unbelievable. NO excuse but was guaranteed to be riots.basicbridge said:
Yes. Apparently "whole bins" thrown.malcolmg said:
UnbelievableGallowgate said:0 -
Blair was the worst. by a country mile. Disguised by the strong economy he inherited (and squandered).Floater said:
No he was the second worst pm of my lifetime - May being the winner by a nose.anothernick said:
Brown was pretty poor as PM. But compared to those who have come after he is a titan.Omnium said:
It is of course a nonsense story, apart from it being in some sense real Someone suggested it, and I think Brown was prompted to float it. No matter what anyone says the EU will be making some efforts to find a way out - I've no idea if those efforts are big or small, serious or token. Brown pontificating, and then an EU leak is precisely the way they'd so such a thing. If you imagined what the EU might try, then this is precisely that.Black_Rook said:
I'm not sure I buy this. The EU has a new Commission incoming and a new budget to set. Do they still want us in the way by the time this all kicks off - especially given that there would, presumably, still be no resolution of Brexit in sight under these circumstances?Scott_P said:Not the headline BoZo wants from the Borisgraph...
https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1167539488899424256
They'll have at least one more try. I can't see who they have left in terms of cards to play though. If you're playing "Brown" then there's no so much in your hand.
Brown will surprise us all by his appointment to some european office or other soon by the way. Who could begrudge it when he's a man of such helpful comment.0