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Even the oldies are now giving Johnson negative ratings – politicalbetting.com

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  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,494

    Oh? I am not a Labour fan, but I am sure the words "up to" were used. I am not expecting to be in receipt of anything. I thought it looked pretty straightforward to me?
    Agreed

  • ApplicantApplicant Posts: 3,379

    Oh? I am not a Labour fan, but I am sure the words "up to" were used. I am not expecting to be in receipt of anything. I thought it looked pretty straightforward to me?
    Use of the words "up to" is always a good sign that the advertiser is trying to give a false impression.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    Sure, Windfall taxes are a terrible idea which usually end up with the customer paying.

    No good Conservative should support a windfall tax, they are the ultimate virtual signal tax.

    Which is why I expect this government to announce one soon.
    They really arn’t. It will be boost Starmer and Labour far too much, implying Labour and Starmer are as the ones with the ideas and leading in this crisis!

    The challenge here is not to boost Labour by obeying what they tell you to do, but outflank Labour with a smarter, less glib response than windfall tax (it is indeed glib, we want private firms to invest and innovate here, and a few years ago they made no profit at all, where was Starmer then?).

    When in power you can easily see off opposition, because you can actually do stuff, Opposition’s can’t.

    If the Tories want to avoid this summers polling death spiral, outflank Labour, my Dad’s suggestion is they introduce a universal credit top-up, and add four figure money to pensioners winter fuel payment and bring part of it forward so they get it earlier. For those that rely on heating oil, they can be targeted by extending the price cap on energy to the heating oil.market. Also Cutting tariffs on non domestic products can make supermarket shop cheaper.

    Paid for by? One of the reasons windfall tax isn’t happening, Instead of raising money from windfall tax the government is actually sitting on at least £20B it can use anytime on measures to help, before even contemplating borrowing more. And can pause spending in other areas to help fund these emergency measures, such as in the new alternative energy plans.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited May 2022

    Oh? I am not a Labour fan, but I am sure the words "up to" were used. I am not expecting to be in receipt of anything. I thought it looked pretty straightforward to me?
    The words commonly used by labour spokespersons were £200 off energy bills and upto £600 but I have listened to labour mps say £600 off energy bills

    I expect if a poll was run on this the majority would expect £200 off their bills under this windfall tax policy
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    This is a succinct account of why the Tories are in real trouble and likely to lose next time. Nothing revelatory, just common sense, really. They need to remove Boris, but won't be able to.

    https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/cure-for-the-blues-the-tories-mid-term-plight-in-perspective

    This is a good, final, point:

    "Ted Heath and Jim Callaghan lost elections after struggling to manage the fallout from the oil shocks of the early and late 1970s. There are many differences between then and now. But the problems of energy and prices could prove to be just as unmanageable, and just as politically devastating for the government. If so, its current blues could prove less mid-term than terminal."
    Indeed, HYUFD continues to harp on about yesterday's battles (Brexit), as though those will inform how people will vote next time, when last time they swapped votes quite easily. My best guess is that the Conservatives are fecked at the next election, and Boris Johnson's legacy will be one of dishonesty and incompetence. They will lose a lot of the red wall to Labour and a lot of southern seats to LDs. The Tories need to get rid of Johnson and fast to stand any chance of averting Labour led governments in perpetuity.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    I opened a new hospital this morning. Sorry, I meant a new packet of paracetamol....

    :wink:
    Of all the stupid things the government has done, and there is a long list, this is one of the most irritating to me. In most cases there has been spending from central pockets to improve facilities. Often its a new unit (such as maternity or cancer etc). They are all shiny and new. Job done.

    And then some prick thinks 'lets call it a new hospital' and makes mugs of us all.

    A new hospital is a new hospital, with everything. A new unit at an existing hospital is not.

    One wonders who thought it was a good idea? (Or a good wheeze, in stupid, Old Etonian slang).
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    The words commonly used by labour spokespersons were £200 off energy bills and upto £600 but I have listened to labour mps say £600 off energy bills

    I expect if a poll was run on this the majority would expect £200 off their bills under this windfall tax policy
    Even if that were only for the most disadvantaged I am sure most us could support that couldn't we?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254
    edited May 2022
    mwadams said:

    The *incredibly* stupid thing is that £100/household sounds no worse than £600/household...If and only if noone has offered £600/household first.
    Seeing as bills over a couple of years for some will move from £1000 a year to £3000 a year, £100 per household does not sound like much regardless of other offers. The bottom 10% or so can't just come up with that extra cash at all without a mix of debt, hunger or freezing next winter. The next 20% or so can but it will be a massive lifestyle downgrade. Probably only the top 20% are relatively immune.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,494
    edited May 2022
    Off Topic


    On Jeremy Vine's show this morning they were asking the viewers to ring in with their versions of an "Eton Mess". Sadly I couldn't get through to say an Eton Mess is the present Tory government in the most part.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Applicant said:

    Use of the words "up to" is always a good sign that the advertiser is trying to give a false impression.
    I think most people know what "up to" means. It means that the odd person might get it, but most will get less. Now I know I have a brain the size of a large galaxy, but I am sure even ordinary people could grasp that, Shirley?
  • You approve of the comments?
    That a so-called "No Deal" Brexit impact is ridiculously exaggerated? Yes 100% I do.

    The UK is never going to impose a hard border in Northern Ireland. Ireland is never going to impose a hard border. The rest of the drama is bluffing and greatly exaggerated hysteria, if someone is willing to call that out then I 100% endorse that.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018

    Even if that were only for the most disadvantaged I am sure most us could support that couldn't we?
    Of course, but labour have been caught out spinning the policy they have made so much an issue, and honesty from day one would have avoided the accusation that they have misled the public
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771

    Seeing as bills over a couple of years for some will move from £1000 a year to £3000 a year, £100 per household does not sound like much regardless of other offers. The bottom 10% or so can't just come up with that extra cash at all without a mix of debt, hunger or freezing next winter. The next 20% or so can but it will be a massive lifestyle downgrade. Probably only the top 20% are relatively immune.
    My point being that £600 per household doesn't sound like much against those numbers either.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    That a so-called "No Deal" Brexit impact is ridiculously exaggerated? Yes 100% I do.

    The UK is never going to impose a hard border in Northern Ireland. Ireland is never going to impose a hard border. The rest of the drama is bluffing and greatly exaggerated hysteria, if someone is willing to call that out then I 100% endorse that.
    Gosh, that was a big delay. I was asking whether you approved of what I saw as being pretty offensive to Irish people and what amounts to the use of the "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope. Of course you approve.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,782

    The words commonly used by labour spokespersons were £200 off energy bills and upto £600 but I have listened to labour mps say £600 off energy bills

    I expect if a poll was run on this the majority would expect £200 off their bills under this windfall tax policy
    That's good, because £200 off is what the majority would get. The poorest, whose rise in income is furthest behind inflation, would get £600. Fairly straightforward.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Of course, but labour have been caught out spinning the policy they have made so much an issue, and honesty from day one would have avoided the accusation that they have misled the public
    Oh, come off it, that is ridiculously partisan.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Oh, come off it, that is ridiculously partisan.
    I see Big G has seamlessly moved onto his next synthetic Labour attack line.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254
    mwadams said:

    My point being that £600 per household doesn't sound like much against those numbers either.
    I think it sounds like a lot even if it is not enough. I suspect the end point will be something like £600 for energy for the worst hit plus the £20 pw universal credit coming back.

    Or we are going to end up with a massive crime wave and social unrest on top of everything else.
  • ApplicantApplicant Posts: 3,379

    That's good, because £200 off is what the majority would get. The poorest, whose rise in income is furthest behind inflation, would get £600. Fairly straightforward.
    Really? Someone upthread said the average would be £100.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    I have no idea about this story and it is up to the authorities to investigate if wrong doing is suspected

    However, that is deflecting from my post which questions the veracity of not only Starmers report on beergate, but labours position on the windfall tax providing £200 and £600 for some, which Rachel Reeves clearly has had to clarify in the HOC this afternoon
    Ha, deflection strategy foiled. 🙂

    Okay I’ll tackle what you are posting head on. YOU ARE UTTERLY WRONG BIG G.

    Absolutely everybody wants those struggling worse, helped first and helped most. Even those finding it difficult themselves want those worse off helped first.

    Hence I have posted the suggestions from my dad, as alternative to Starmer’s windfall tax and how labour would use it, as far superior option for the Tories - target those really struggling in June’s crisis budget.

    Not only are my posts better than your anti labour spin ones, because I explain what measures Rishi actually will take in a few weeks time outflanking labour, I even explained how it’s paid for.

    All you are doing is barking a bit of fluff up the wrong tree.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    biggles said:


    Erm, no. I loath Corbyn and his ilk more than most but that wasn’t his appeal. It might have been part of it but when you spoke to those who loved him and weren’t previously politically engaged (e.g. weren’t the usual far left mob) it was because he spoke with compassion and about hope for the future.

    Yes, that's the problem with the sober managerial approach. I absolutely think that "a serious leader for difficult times" is aa good solid argument for Labour under Starmer, but does it lift the heart? It needs compassion and hope too.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited May 2022

    Gosh, that was a big delay. I was asking whether you approved of what I saw as being pretty offensive to Irish people and what amounts to the use of the "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope. Of course you approve.
    I must say that sort of anti-Irishism would be jarring in a golf club bar, let alone emitted by the ForM in the US of all places. That is not going to make friends and influence people, which I thought naively comprised part of her job ...
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254

    Of all the stupid things the government has done, and there is a long list, this is one of the most irritating to me. In most cases there has been spending from central pockets to improve facilities. Often its a new unit (such as maternity or cancer etc). They are all shiny and new. Job done.

    And then some prick thinks 'lets call it a new hospital' and makes mugs of us all.

    A new hospital is a new hospital, with everything. A new unit at an existing hospital is not.

    One wonders who thought it was a good idea? (Or a good wheeze, in stupid, Old Etonian slang).
    It is the bus again.

    More of the voters who actually change their mind about how to vote mostly hear "new hospitals" whenever Tories announce them or Labour or the press criticise the Tories for lying exactly about how many "new hospitals" there are.
  • ApplicantApplicant Posts: 3,379

    Ha, deflection strategy foiled. 🙂

    Okay I’ll tackle what you are posting head on. YOU ARE UTTERLY WRONG BIG G.

    Absolutely everybody wants those struggling worse, helped first and helped most. Even those finding it difficult themselves want those worse off helped first.

    Hence I have posted the suggestions from my dad, as alternative to Starmer’s windfall tax and how labour would use it, as far superior option for the Tories - target those really struggling in June’s crisis budget.

    Not only are my posts better than your anti labour spin ones, because I explain what measures Rishi actually will take in a few weeks time outflanking labour, I even explained how it’s paid for.

    All you are doing is barking a bit of fluff up the wrong tree.
    The question of targeting is pretty key here. I've already seen suggestions of increasing the WFP, which is all well and good, except a fair proportion of recipients of that don't really need it - it's paid to all people over the relevant age without any sort of means testing. WHD is a better bet, but too many people who are eligible for that don't claim it (and IIRC some suppliers still don't offer it, although the market consolidation we've seen over the last year or so might have improved that).
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Carnyx said:

    I must say that sort of anti-Irishism would be jarring in a golf club bar, let alone emitted by the ForM in the US of all places. That is not going to make friends and influence people, which I thought naively were her job ...
    Absolutely. Anyone claiming they can't see that is either lying, massively ignorant or is so ingrained in their anti-Irish prejudice that they think "old paddy should just laugh it off". It is like Corbyn claiming he hadn't noticed that mural was anti-Semitic.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,503

    Sure, Windfall taxes are a terrible idea which usually end up with the customer paying.

    No good Conservative should support a windfall tax, they are the ultimate virtual signal tax.

    Which is why I expect this government to announce one soon.
    Absolutely right I fear.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    How awful, sending best wishes. The way some people drive is an absolute disgrace.
  • Gosh, that was a big delay. I was asking whether you approved of what I saw as being pretty offensive to Irish people and what amounts to the use of the "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope. Of course you approve.
    Of course I don't approve of "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope but I take that element of hearsay with a massive grain of salt.

    What I think was probably really said is the next Tweet “Most damagingly, the talking points also downplayed the consequences of Brexit for the delicate peace process in Northern Ireland, in which the US was a core stakeholder.”

    Handled sensitively, Brexit has no negative consequences for peace in Northern Ireland since neither Britain nor Ireland want to impose a hard land border and both have ruled it out all along. Anti-Brexit fanatics may want to weaponise the GFA to further their agenda, but that is bollocks which absolutely it is the Foreign Secretary's job to be dismissing and soothing tensions by patiently explaining that there are no threats to Northern Ireland and deal or no deal we won't be imposing a hard border.

    I can understand why hearsay fanatics would want to spin that into being "damaging downplaying" but calling out BS as BS is entirely appropriate.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072
    Carnyx said:

    I must say that sort of anti-Irishism would be jarring in a golf club bar, let alone emitted by the ForM in the US of all places. That is not going to make friends and influence people, which I thought naively comprised part of her job ...
    If there is footage of it she resigns.

    Maybe Big Dogs whips have got the footage, and this story is a gentle reminder 😆
  • UnpopularUnpopular Posts: 913

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    Christ, hope she's okay and they catch whoever drove off. Definitely doing the right thing by getting it checked out.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Humdinger of an article by Martin Wolf in the FT where he notes, inter alia, that core inflation (ie excluding gas and food) in the UK is double that of the EU.

    https://www.ft.com/content/1390c053-2740-40c6-9e4e-525f7c4cad71
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    That's appalling, every sympathy. I hope she's OK, and also that she gets past the shock soon. That sort of thing can shake one's whole confidence in getting around.
  • londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,641

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    Sorry to hear this - hope she is fine and gets home today
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    That's dreadful! I hope she's fine and recovers from the shock.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,254

    I see Big G has seamlessly moved onto his next synthetic Labour attack line.
    Is the need to bash Labour down to a realisation that the Conservative party have moved so far that he is now closer in views to Starmer than Johnson perhaps?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Of course I don't approve of "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope but I take that element of hearsay with a massive grain of salt.

    What I think was probably really said is the next Tweet “Most damagingly, the talking points also downplayed the consequences of Brexit for the delicate peace process in Northern Ireland, in which the US was a core stakeholder.”

    Handled sensitively, Brexit has no negative consequences for peace in Northern Ireland since neither Britain nor Ireland want to impose a hard land border and both have ruled it out all along. Anti-Brexit fanatics may want to weaponise the GFA to further their agenda, but that is bollocks which absolutely it is the Foreign Secretary's job to be dismissing and soothing tensions by patiently explaining that there are no threats to Northern Ireland and deal or no deal we won't be imposing a hard border.

    I can understand why hearsay fanatics would want to spin that into being "damaging downplaying" but calling out BS as BS is entirely appropriate.
    It's a direct and verbatim quote as presented.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Of course I don't approve of "thick Irish turnip farmer" trope but I take that element of hearsay with a massive grain of salt.

    What I think was probably really said is the next Tweet “Most damagingly, the talking points also downplayed the consequences of Brexit for the delicate peace process in Northern Ireland, in which the US was a core stakeholder.”

    Handled sensitively, Brexit has no negative consequences for peace in Northern Ireland since neither Britain nor Ireland want to impose a hard land border and both have ruled it out all along. Anti-Brexit fanatics may want to weaponise the GFA to further their agenda, but that is bollocks which absolutely it is the Foreign Secretary's job to be dismissing and soothing tensions by patiently explaining that there are no threats to Northern Ireland and deal or no deal we won't be imposing a hard border.

    I can understand why hearsay fanatics would want to spin that into being "damaging downplaying" but calling out BS as BS is entirely appropriate.
    Except that you are guessing. As to your opinion on no-deal Brexit, I can tell you that the vast majority of economists and business people think you are spouting bollox. Thankfully we just avoided it. Brexit has been damaging enough as it is. Pointless and damaging, but you still believe. Quaint really.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,370
    Nigelb said:

    Loving it that the Senate Republican Pennsylvania primary will be decided by late counted mail in ballots.

    There's a certain humour that the Pennsylvania Republican candidate is likely to have been (until very recently) quite vehemently pro-Choice, in one of the few swing States where that would be vote loser.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018

    Ha, deflection strategy foiled. 🙂

    Okay I’ll tackle what you are posting head on. YOU ARE UTTERLY WRONG BIG G.

    Absolutely everybody wants those struggling worse, helped first and helped most. Even those finding it difficult themselves want those worse off helped first.

    Hence I have posted the suggestions from my dad, as alternative to Starmer’s windfall tax and how labour would use it, as far superior option for the Tories - target those really struggling in June’s crisis budget.

    Not only are my posts better than your anti labour spin ones, because I explain what measures Rishi actually will take in a few weeks time outflanking labour, I even explained how it’s paid for.

    All you are doing is barking a bit of fluff up the wrong tree.
    I actually liked that post and sensible

    That however does not negate the fact that at £100 per household admitted by Rachel Reeves in the house cannot equate to most having £200 and some £600

    And no , I do not give labour a free pass on this and it is not a synthetic criticism
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    EXC UK must accept border on Irish Sea is inevitable, says ex-WTO chief Pascal Lamy in interview with the Guardian. But dispute can be solved if Boris Johnson stops mixing “oil and vinegar issues”. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/may/18/uk-has-to-accept-border-irish-sea-inevitable-ex-wto-chief-pascal-lamy-brexit-boris-johnson?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

    As ever the biggest single obstacle to resolving the problems in Ireland caused by BoZo is the continued presence of BoZo...
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Liz Truss’s comments are disgraceful.

    I do think that racism is less of a problem in the UK than in almost every country in the world, but anti-Irish sentiment is depressingly common.

    See too Priti Patel’s comments about starving the Irish into submission.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,503

    This is a succinct account of why the Tories are in real trouble and likely to lose next time. Nothing revelatory, just common sense, really. They need to remove Boris, but won't be able to.

    https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/cure-for-the-blues-the-tories-mid-term-plight-in-perspective

    This is a good, final, point:

    "Ted Heath and Jim Callaghan lost elections after struggling to manage the fallout from the oil shocks of the early and late 1970s. There are many differences between then and now. But the problems of energy and prices could prove to be just as unmanageable, and just as politically devastating for the government. If so, its current blues could prove less mid-term than terminal."
    There's hope for the country in the long term, though, if Johnson is Ted Heath. Because the minority Labour Government that replaced him had no solutions to inflation or exogenous cost shocks and staggered from crisis to crisis for five years before losing to perhaps the greatest peacetime government this country has ever had.

    I'd take that.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624
    Unpopular said:

    Christ, hope she's okay and they catch whoever drove off. Definitely doing the right thing by getting it checked out.
    If you need to check out if there is CCTV nearby. My wife was involved in a road rage incident a while back. CCTV showed it all, including that the prick was completely in the wrong (at a roundabout). Plod called in to visit him...
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979

    Indeed, HYUFD continues to harp on about yesterday's battles (Brexit), as though those will inform how people will vote next time, when last time they swapped votes quite easily. My best guess is that the Conservatives are fecked at the next election, and Boris Johnson's legacy will be one of dishonesty and incompetence. They will lose a lot of the red wall to Labour and a lot of southern seats to LDs. The Tories need to get rid of Johnson and fast to stand any chance of averting Labour led governments in perpetuity.
    "in perpetuity"? Don't think so. The next election would be a good one to lose. Like '92.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    If there is footage of it she resigns.

    Maybe Big Dogs whips have got the footage, and this story is a gentle reminder 😆
    Indeed, if it's true and can be seen to be so. It is, of course, an old story from 2021 about events in 2019, but it is coming back to life.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/liz-truss-ireland-brexit-farmers-b2081876.html
    https://www.rte.ie/news/world/2022/0518/1299709-protocol-brexit/

    She wasn't FM in 2019, of course but was President of the Board of Trade & Secretary of State for International Trade from 24 July 2019. And the alleged event was 8 August 2019.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Is the need to bash Labour down to a realisation that the Conservative party have moved so far that he is now closer in views to Starmer than Johnson perhaps?
    I think possibly.
    He’s a lifelong Tory - fine - who seems to be struggling to find reasons to stay Tory.

    In reality the Tory Party Big G campaigned for has vanished.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018

    Completely off topic but a bit shaken up, just got back from dropping my wife off at the hospital. She seems to be OK but thought it best to get her in to be checked up. When she was crossing the road this morning to go into work she was hit by a car in a hit and run accident. They pulled out from a car park as she was already crossing the road, drove on the wrong side of the road, hit her and then swerved and sped off. She was knocked over.

    A member of the public who witnessed the accident stopped to check she was OK. They got a partial reg-plate so hopefully the Police can identify whoever it was that did it.

    She seems to be OK but in shock. At first she didn't even tell people at work she'd been hit by a car and continued working for a few hours before asking her manager if she could go home as she was in pain from the accident. She didn't want to go to A&E but is there now just in case she needs an x-ray or anything. Fingers crossed she's OK but utterly despicable anyone who hits a pedestrian and then just speeds off in response.

    I am so sorry to hear this and really hope your wife recovers quickly

    My 13 year old grandson was knocked down 6 months ago by his school and the car ran over his foot

    It was not broken but badly bruised and to this day he is very cautious crossing the road
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Carnyx said:

    Indeed, if it's true and can be seen to be so. It is, of course, an old story from 2021 about events in 2019, but it is coming back to life.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/liz-truss-ireland-brexit-farmers-b2081876.html
    https://www.rte.ie/news/world/2022/0518/1299709-protocol-brexit/

    She wasn't FM in 2019, of course but was President of the Board of Trade & Secretary of State for International Trade from 24 July 2019. And the alleged event was 8 August 2019.
    Boris is on manoeuvres again.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624
    Scott_xP said:

    EXC UK must accept border on Irish Sea is inevitable, says ex-WTO chief Pascal Lamy in interview with the Guardian. But dispute can be solved if Boris Johnson stops mixing “oil and vinegar issues”. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/may/18/uk-has-to-accept-border-irish-sea-inevitable-ex-wto-chief-pascal-lamy-brexit-boris-johnson?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

    As ever the biggest single obstacle to resolving the problems in Ireland caused by BoZo is the continued presence of BoZo...

    Um - I don;t agree that we MUST accept any border as inevitable. Its only there because of the GFA. Its intolerable that a company selling produce from one part of the country to another, with no intention of leaving the UK, has to have checks imposed. There needs to be fair more movement on trusted trader status and simple certification. How about a bit of trust?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    Oh, come off it, that is ridiculously partisan.
    Yes indeed. We all love Big G, but he’s hopped on here this afternoon like a dog let out into a yard, to bark at a bit of paper flapping in the breeze. It’s just a bit of paper flapping around, it’s not pure evil.

    In this national crisis Even those finding it difficult themselves want those worse off helped first. Whatever any party suggests, those struggling worse, helped first and helped most, is built in to all the ideas.

    The important thing is to better Labours opportunistic but regressive windfall tax plans, the dozy Tories seem to be sleepwalking into by default of not coming up with anything better.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Absolutely. Anyone claiming they can't see that is either lying, massively ignorant or is so ingrained in their anti-Irish prejudice that they think "old paddy should just laugh it off". It is like Corbyn claiming he hadn't noticed that mural was anti-Semitic.
    It's not even as if turnip farming is easy or trivial. The buggers are hard to grow and a real pain, as well as being essential fodder for animals.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited May 2022
    Although it is PB wisdom that UK inflation is exogenous and out-of-our-control, there seem to be quite a few counter-arguments which are starting to be noticed.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Liz Truss’s comments are disgraceful.

    I do think that racism is less of a problem in the UK than in almost every country in the world, but anti-Irish sentiment is depressingly common.

    See too Priti Patel’s comments about starving the Irish into submission.

    It is ingrained. As many will know, historically it goes back to the reformation. The Irish largely steadfastly remained loyal to Rome, and the fear of Catholicism in England & Scotland, combined with the largely rural nature of Ireland spawned the tropes that are still with us today. I can see it between the lines with some of the posters on here when they dribble on about Northern Ireland, as though Paddy really does need to be put in his rightful place.
  • I am so sorry to hear this and really hope your wife recovers quickly

    My 13 year old grandson was knocked down 6 months ago by his school and the car ran over his foot

    It was not broken but badly bruised and to this day he is very cautious crossing the road
    Thanks for the nice responses everyone.

    My sympathies for your grandson, in some ways it must be even worse for a child whose confidence could be knocked like that.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Um - I don;t agree that we MUST accept any border as inevitable. Its only there because of the GFA. Its intolerable that a company selling produce from one part of the country to another, with no intention of leaving the UK, has to have checks imposed. There needs to be fair more movement on trusted trader status and simple certification. How about a bit of trust?
    I certainly don’t trust Boris.
    Why would the EU?

    Nobody trusts Boris, not his ex-wife, nor his ex-employers, his children, none of the political parties in Northern Ireland, and large numbers of ex-Tory voters.

    Northern Ireland will not be resolved until Boris goes.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    Um - I don;t agree that we MUST accept any border as inevitable. Its only there because of the GFA. Its intolerable that a company selling produce from one part of the country to another, with no intention of leaving the UK, has to have checks imposed. There needs to be fair more movement on trusted trader status and simple certification. How about a bit of trust?
    Boris, Truss and the government are onto a winner with this argument. The EU “the only way is border” approach is crumbling. Cumbersome EU thinking never agile enough, always late to the party.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    https://twitter.com/OliDugmore/status/1526554720529272832

    A nice story about honouring Mrs Thatcher's entrepreneurship legacy - until the dead hand of the nanny state intervenes.
  • I certainly don’t trust Boris.
    Why would the EU?

    Nobody trusts Boris, not his ex-wife, nor his ex-employers, his children, none of the political parties in Northern Ireland, and large numbers of ex-Tory voters.

    Northern Ireland will not be resolved until Boris goes.
    Or it can be resolved by invoking Article 16 and imposing a unilateral solution that does not involve either a hard land border in Northern Ireland, nor a sea border.

    If there is neither alignment, nor a land border, nor a sea border following any unilateral actions, then from the perspective of peace what exactly is the problem with that?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018

    Yes indeed. We all love Big G, but he’s hopped on here this afternoon like a dog let out into a yard, to bark at a bit of paper flapping in the breeze. It’s just a bit of paper flapping around, it’s not pure evil.

    In this national crisis Even those finding it difficult themselves want those worse off helped first. Whatever any party suggests, those struggling worse, helped first and helped most, is built in to all the ideas.

    The important thing is to better Labours opportunistic but regressive windfall tax plans, the dozy Tories seem to be sleepwalking into by default of not coming up with anything better.
    I am glad you all love me to be fair and I have made my point about labour's policy

    Some will agree, some will not, but then that is politics though your comments about your father's attitude does mirror mine
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    "in perpetuity"? Don't think so. The next election would be a good one to lose. Like '92.
    I might have engaged in slight hyperbole. However, Johnson has so trashed the reputation of the Conservatives that, though it might not be in perpetuity, it could certainly be generations. Coalitions work well, and Johnson has made the Tories "uncoalitionable".
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    I certainly don’t trust Boris.
    Why would the EU?

    Nobody trusts Boris, not his ex-wife, nor his ex-employers, his children, none of the political parties in Northern Ireland, and large numbers of ex-Tory voters.

    Northern Ireland will not be resolved until Boris goes.
    Quite possibly. I don't trust the EU either, for what its worth. Both sides use everything they can to there advantage.

    The EU used the GFA to tighten the screws. We tried to use no deal on our side.

    The EU won on sequencing, and we are now seeing the consequences of this.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,539

    "in perpetuity"? Don't think so. The next election would be a good one to lose. Like '92.
    No doubt Labour will contrive to oblige.....
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    It is ingrained. As many will know, historically it goes back to the reformation. The Irish largely steadfastly remained loyal to Rome, and the fear of Catholicism in England & Scotland, combined with the largely rural nature of Ireland spawned the tropes that are still with us today. I can see it between the lines with some of the posters on here when they dribble on about Northern Ireland, as though Paddy really does need to be put in his rightful place.
    It is still, apparently, acceptable in the UK to say “potatoes” in a funny accent when talking about Irish matters. I know cos I’ve witnessed it myself several times.

    Anti-French and anti-German sentiment is also very very common, as well as a weird patronising tone toward foreign countries generally.

    I find it very odd since Brits are well travelled and much of the UK is, objectively, a shit-hole, so I don’t really understand where it comes from.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,256
    edited May 2022

    I see Big G has seamlessly moved onto his next synthetic Labour attack line.
    The one before the one before the one before last could end up with Starmer's resignation.

    I keep reading on here how poor Starmer performs against the "charismatic" Johnson. I've just caught up with PMQs. Am I right in assuming Starmer is the shouty, portly, fair haired guy and Johnson is the calm forensic fellow in the blue suit?
  • ApplicantApplicant Posts: 3,379

    I might have engaged in slight hyperbole. However, Johnson has so trashed the reputation of the Conservatives that, though it might not be in perpetuity, it could certainly be generations. Coalitions work well, and Johnson has made the Tories "uncoalitionable".
    Just like they were in 2010, until the numbers dictated otherwise.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548

    Yes, that's the problem with the sober managerial approach. I absolutely think that "a serious leader for difficult times" is aa good solid argument for Labour under Starmer, but does it lift the heart? It needs compassion and hope too.
    The problem is those who do not like a candidate suggest the two are mutually exclusive, and overly defensive candidates buy into that too. I recall some Labour talking head after one of the 2010 leader debates, where I thought Brown had done ok, and they were so defensive about substance being more important than presentation (or words to that effect) that they were in effect saying Brown had come across crap. They also did the usual thing of suggesting if someone did present well, that meant they had no substance.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548
    edited May 2022

    A lot of voters deserve to be insulted, but the reality is that it is the system that enables a twat like Fabricant to be an MP, let alone Boris Johnson to be PM (or Mr Thicky Corbyn almost) needs serious reform.
    Can't really agree with that, unless you can point me to a system that means no twats can become parliamentarians.

    Edit: To be clear I think reform to imrpove the system we have is a good idea, but not for that reason, as it is unattainable.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    I think possibly.
    He’s a lifelong Tory - fine - who seems to be struggling to find reasons to stay Tory.

    In reality the Tory Party Big G campaigned for has vanished.
    For the time being. There are still good people in the Conservative Party. They just need to get rid of King Twat and then they might come to the fore
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited May 2022

    It is still, apparently, acceptable in the UK to say “potatoes” in a funny accent when talking about Irish matters. I know cos I’ve witnessed it myself several times.

    Anti-French and anti-German sentiment is also very very common, as well as a weird patronising tone toward foreign countries generally.

    I find it very odd since Brits are well travelled and much of the UK is, objectively, a shit-hole, so I don’t really understand where it comes from.
    The contradiction is easily resolved when you grasp HMG's general approach*, which is to define it as a "world-beating" shite-hole.

    *not necessarily to follow the anti-foreign sentiment in itself. But one does wonder sometimes.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Quite possibly. I don't trust the EU either, for what its worth. Both sides use everything they can to there advantage.

    The EU used the GFA to tighten the screws. We tried to use no deal on our side.

    The EU won on sequencing, and we are now seeing the consequences of this.
    Depends what you mean by trust.
    I have no illusions about the EU’s negotiating ruthlessness.

    You are right on sequencing.
    I’m a hardcore Remainer, but the correct approach at the outset was to reject the EU’s preferred sequencing and to threaten to stay and gum up EU proceedings until a compromise could be found.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    It is still, apparently, acceptable in the UK to say “potatoes” in a funny accent when talking about Irish matters. I know cos I’ve witnessed it myself several times.

    Anti-French and anti-German sentiment is also very very common, as well as a weird patronising tone toward foreign countries generally.

    I find it very odd since Brits are well travelled and much of the UK is, objectively, a shit-hole, so I don’t really understand where it comes from.
    Your last line is a bit harsh! Is that why you left for the States?

    Do you think anti-French and anti-German sentiment is that real though? Or is it more among those classes that don't meet many French and German people? (Non Uni educated for instance).

    British humour is very much mocking each other. You know you are with friends when the piss is being thoroughly ripped out of you.

    I turned up to help at the girls cricket training with a friend. First thing he said to me was an insult. The girls coach was slightly shocked! I wasn't.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548

    Although it is PB wisdom that UK inflation is exogenous and out-of-our-control, there seem to be quite a few counter-arguments which are starting to be noticed.

    I honestly have no idea, but I presume it is the regular argument of any goverment that successes are all down to their magisterial leadership, whilst failures are out of their control entirely.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,782
    edited May 2022

    I certainly don’t trust Boris.
    Why would the EU?

    Nobody trusts Boris, not his ex-wife, nor his ex-employers, his children, none of the political parties in Northern Ireland, and large numbers of ex-Tory voters.

    Northern Ireland will not be resolved until Boris goes.
    You've missed one. I don't think even Boris trusts Boris.
  • Depends what you mean by trust.
    I have no illusions about the EU’s negotiating ruthlessness.

    You are right on sequencing.
    I’m a hardcore Remainer, but the correct approach at the outset was to reject the EU’s preferred sequencing and to threaten to stay and gum up EU proceedings until a compromise could be found.
    The EU were perfectly used to and content with us staying and gumming up proceedings though.

    The reason the EU are irate is the correct approach is what we're doing and they're impotent to handle it. They weaponised the GFA to try and abuse and exploit it to get what they want, but now the government is correctly turning the tide by saying the GFA must come first and if the GFA and the Protocol are contradictory then the GFA is the higher priority. Good for them.

    The government can and should use Article 16 to impose a unilateral GFA-compliant solution that ensures there is no land border, no sea border and no alignment.

    Once that is done, what can the EU do about it? What is the threat to the GFA if that is the situation? How can the EU impose a border from a position that none exists and we're not the ones seeking change and we are OK with the status quo we have imposed?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    Depends what you mean by trust.
    I have no illusions about the EU’s negotiating ruthlessness.

    You are right on sequencing.
    I’m a hardcore Remainer, but the correct approach at the outset was to reject the EU’s preferred sequencing and to threaten to stay and gum up EU proceedings until a compromise could be found.
    There are many on PB (ok, some) who would have done a far better job negotiating than the UK government did. I def include you in this, although you may have been an inside man...
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Applicant said:

    Just like they were in 2010, until the numbers dictated otherwise.
    They were not at all in 2010, quite the contrary. They (I would have regarded them as "we" then) had a credible leader with sensible right of centre values. He had detoxed the brand. Johnson has "retoxed" it. It will take a generation for the Conservatives to recover, unless Labour are stupid enough to make someone like Corbyn leader again.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    I see that, according to our current FS, my father's family were just "farmers with turnips". Makes a change, I suppose, from being called Papist terrorists.

    In reality, part of the reason this country is as free as it is is because my father volunteered to become an RAF Squadron Leader during WW2 then worked as a doctor here all his life. My aunt also volunteered to work for the government during the same war, living in London during the Blitz. Before them, their uncle, also a doctor, who worked for a time in Wales and got a further degree from Cambridge University in 1912, volunteered for the RAMC and was killed in September 1915. There were many other Irish men and women who contributed to making this country what it is and has been.

    But hey why worry about facts when ignorant bigotry is available instead.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,637

    It is still, apparently, acceptable in the UK to say “potatoes” in a funny accent when talking about Irish matters. I know cos I’ve witnessed it myself several times.

    Anti-French and anti-German sentiment is also very very common, as well as a weird patronising tone toward foreign countries generally.

    I find it very odd since Brits are well travelled and much of the UK is, objectively, a shit-hole, so I don’t really understand where it comes from.
    Steady on! The French and Germans both gave us 12 points on Saturday night's Eurovision!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072

    The one before the one before the one before last could end up with Starmer's resignation.

    I keep reading on here how poor Starmer performs against the "charismatic" Johnson. I've just caught up with PMQs. Am I right in assuming Starmer is the shouty, portly, fair haired guy and Johnson is the calm forensic fellow in the blue suit.
    Starmer and Labour had a good PMQs today. In fact, they have had a good 7 days in Parliament. The whole front bench just seem more capable than Corbyn’s suicide squad, as a team really getting into the swing if it now.

    I thought Analise Dodds ineffective as shadow chancellor, but she was good in this video probing this at dispatch box yesterday

    https://www.itv.com/news/2022-05-17/labour-calls-for-tory-probe-over-donation-with-possible-links-to-putin-associate
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,503

    Although it is PB wisdom that UK inflation is exogenous and out-of-our-control, there seem to be quite a few counter-arguments which are starting to be noticed.

    It is a mixture of too-loose fiscal and monetary policy (demand-pull), input price shocks (cost-push) and exogenous supply-side disruption due to the late epidemic (also cost-push). The latter two the government can do very little about, and the former it can but the other parties would have had fiscal policy even looser over the last couple of years, so it has a reasonable alibi there.

    There is also a "built-in" inflation due to the poor supply-side policies governments of all colours have been pursuing since 1997 - regulation, limiting competition, increasing taxation, etc., but no party is seriously proposing to do anything about those so I'm afraid we're stuck with them for a while.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Your last line is a bit harsh! Is that why you left for the States?

    Do you think anti-French and anti-German sentiment is that real though? Or is it more among those classes that don't meet many French and German people? (Non Uni educated for instance).

    British humour is very much mocking each other. You know you are with friends when the piss is being thoroughly ripped out of you.

    I turned up to help at the girls cricket training with a friend. First thing he said to me was an insult. The girls coach was slightly shocked! I wasn't.
    Important for me to note that my father is British, I’m an Anglophile who spent 20 years in London, and I’m a unionist in that I do treasure the four corners of the UK.

    So I am speaking as a friend.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548
    I see on BBC that the Governor of Idaho defeated a challenge from his own Lt Governor, who kept coming up in the news as she would issue orders countermanding him whenever he left the state, as for historic reasons the Lt Governor got full power when that happened. Amusing stuff.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited May 2022

    Yes, that's the problem with the sober managerial approach. I absolutely think that "a serious leader for difficult times" is aa good solid argument for Labour under Starmer, but does it lift the heart? It needs compassion and hope too.
    The problem with a sober, managerial style is that after 18 months of failing to elucidate a single vision for moving forwards, onwards or upwards people start to wonder if there is any substance at all or, that rather than sober and managerial the leader is actually listless and wandering. If you're not doing Shazam you've got to offer practical stuff.
    He's already reduced to unilateral self-declarations of integrity and corny PMQs squibs
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548
    Applicant said:

    Just like they were in 2010, until the numbers dictated otherwise.
    I'm not sure I recall the Tories being perceived in 2010 as uncoalitionable in anything like they were they are now. Didn't Clegg pre announce willingness to talk to whoever came top? And 12 years on, after the LD bruising in coalition, and DUP 'betrayal', the situation is surely different.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Cyclefree said:

    I see that, according to our current FS, my father's family were just "farmers with turnips". Makes a change, I suppose, from being called Papist terrorists.

    In reality, part of the reason this country is as free as it is is because my father volunteered to become an RAF Squadron Leader during WW2 then worked as a doctor here all his life. My aunt also volunteered to work for the government during the same war, living in London during the Blitz. Before them, their uncle, also a doctor, who worked for a time in Wales and got a further degree from Cambridge University in 1912, volunteered for the RAMC and was killed in September 1915. There were many other Irish men and women who contributed to making this country what it is and has been.

    But hey why worry about facts when ignorant bigotry is available instead.

    You don't have to chat with Liz Truss to get a bit of anti-Irish prejudice, it is alive and well on PB with all the experts who think we should tell all the Paddies south of the border to go and feck themselves, because when it comes to dealing with damn foreigners and Papists we don't care what the consequences are, so long as we Get Brexit Done!
  • ApplicantApplicant Posts: 3,379

    They were not at all in 2010, quite the contrary. They (I would have regarded them as "we" then) had a credible leader with sensible right of centre values. He had detoxed the brand. Johnson has "retoxed" it. It will take a generation for the Conservatives to recover, unless Labour are stupid enough to make someone like Corbyn leader again.
    Ah, come off it. With endless "I agree with Nick"s, it was obvious that it was going to be a Lib/Lab pact. Until the numbers allowed only for a Con/Lib coalition.
  • As someone with a son on the spectrum this makes me very emotional. Autistic people are easy pickings for the terminally unpleasant. I suspect the lad looked "normal" but appeared a bit "odd" so they considered him fair game.

    Such understanding is normalised on this board too when one particular poster, supported by a couple of others accuse politicians they disagree with, and who appear "odd" to them as disparagingly being "probably on the spectrum" for example Mrs May.
    Well said, it isn't something to be taken lightly or used as a term of abuse. Anyone doing so is sickening as well as ignorant.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    The EU were perfectly used to and content with us staying and gumming up proceedings though.

    The reason the EU are irate is the correct approach is what we're doing and they're impotent to handle it. They weaponised the GFA to try and abuse and exploit it to get what they want, but now the government is correctly turning the tide by saying the GFA must come first and if the GFA and the Protocol are contradictory then the GFA is the higher priority. Good for them.

    The government can and should use Article 16 to impose a unilateral GFA-compliant solution that ensures there is no land border, no sea border and no alignment.

    Once that is done, what can the EU do about it? What is the threat to the GFA if that is the situation? How can the EU impose a border from a position that none exists and we're not the ones seeking change and we are OK with the status quo we have imposed?
    I don’t know why you keep trying to pick an argument with me on this, it is one of the very, very rare cases where we vaguely align.

    I would not be starting from here.

    Given where we are, A16 is the least worst option. Disavowing the NIP (which the government is now pledged to do) one of the worst.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    You don't have to chat with Liz Truss to get a bit of anti-Irish prejudice, it is alive and well on PB with all the experts who think we should tell all the Paddies south of the border to go and feck themselves, because when it comes to dealing with damn foreigners and Papists we don't care what the consequences are, so long as we Get Brexit Done!
    You see it in the weird hatred toward Varadkar.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    As someone with a son on the spectrum this makes me very emotional. Autistic people are easy pickings for the terminally unpleasant. I suspect the lad looked "normal" but appeared a bit "odd" so they considered him fair game.

    Such understanding is normalised on this board too when one particular poster, supported by a couple of others accuse politicians they disagree with, and who appear "odd" to them as disparagingly being "probably on the spectrum" for example Mrs May.
    It upset me too, as I have two family members with autism. They are often such gentle and vulnerable souls. Society needs to protect them, not victimise them. These scumbags that did this should be locked up for a lot longer.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559
    BartholomewRoberts, sorry to hear about the vehicular assault on your wife. And very glad you convinced her to go to the emergency room to get checked out. Hope they catch the perp, and throw the book at 'em. AND that (if possible) you can collect some financial compensation for their hit and run. Though good chance they are some low-life without a pot to piss in BUT with plenty of previous violations and/or outstanding warrants. OR driving a stolen car.

    Don't know about your neck of the woods, but where I reside pedestrians must be VERY careful crossing busy streets ESPECIALLY during morning rush hour.

    Regarless whether they catch the hit-and-runner, best wishes for you & yours!
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Fishing said:

    It is a mixture of too-loose fiscal and monetary policy (demand-pull), input price shocks (cost-push) and exogenous supply-side disruption due to the late epidemic (also cost-push). The latter two the government can do very little about, and the former it can but the other parties would have had fiscal policy even looser over the last couple of years, so it has a reasonable alibi there.

    There is also a "built-in" inflation due to the poor supply-side policies governments of all colours have been pursuing since 1997 - regulation, limiting competition, increasing taxation, etc., but no party is seriously proposing to do anything about those so I'm afraid we're stuck with them for a while.
    I agree with all of that, but it doesn’t get the government off.

    They didn’t see it coming (many did)
    They’ve done nothing about it, in fact made it worse.

    I posted about the need for urgent supply-side intervention about 9 months ago, and the usual suspects (on here) said inflation wasn’t a problem, and if it were to be it would be the market working wonderfully.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,415
    edited May 2022

    You don't have to chat with Liz Truss to get a bit of anti-Irish prejudice, it is alive and well on PB with all the experts who think we should tell all the Paddies south of the border to go and feck themselves, because when it comes to dealing with damn foreigners and Papists we don't care what the consequences are, so long as we Get Brexit Done!
    Oh cut the crap.

    You're just as bigoted and just as ignorant as HYUFD saying that we should repartition Ireland again if there's a reunification referendum.

    Had the referendum gone against Brexit then quite obviously it shouldn't be done. If it goes for Brexit however, then it should. The opinion of other nations comes second to that not because of discrimination but because we are a democratic state - just as Ireland are.

    Democracy should be respected and the will of the people democratically expressed should come first whatever it is they choose, whether that be Brexit or Irish Unification or joining the Euro or anything comparable.

    If people vote for Irish unification we should Get Irish Unification Done because that'd be what they voted for. If people here don't like it, they should be told to mind their own business, the will of the voters should be respected. The same is the case for Brexit.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited May 2022
    kle4 said:

    I'm not sure I recall the Tories being perceived in 2010 as uncoalitionable in anything like they were they are now. Didn't Clegg pre announce willingness to talk to whoever came top? And 12 years on, after the LD bruising in coalition, and DUP 'betrayal', the situation is surely different.
    The LDs are unlikely to be in anything like as strong a position either.i see 3 outcomes possible at the moment
    1) reduced Tory majority
    2) Tory minority government down to ca 310 seats, brought down when convenient and leading to a 1997 style horror show
    3) rainbow coalition that falls apart acrimoniously within 2 years leading back to Tory majority
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Applicant said:

    Ah, come off it. With endless "I agree with Nick"s, it was obvious that it was going to be a Lib/Lab pact. Until the numbers allowed only for a Con/Lib coalition.
    I award you today's Simplicity Prize for simplistic analysis of an historical political event.
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