It’s not really. They take a pasting every election despite the wicket being rolled perfectly for them. They’re barely relevant to the news cycle and people clearly aren’t going to vote for them
Stop voting for fucking Tories
- Paddington Bear
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Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
Not wholesale, strategised stuff, no. But when you see proposals around voter registration, which have a known negative effect on poorer people voting, that looks like exactly the kind of thing JM2K6 is talking about.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 9:53 amJM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 8:59 amWe're talking about completely different things here.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 8:39 am
The Tories haven't had to do a thing, the success in the 2019 GE and the gains overnight today are coming to them gift-wrapped on a plate from their opponents, principally Labour.
Whether it's calling huge swathes of the population thick, xenophobic and racist or the SNP destroying the Labour vote in Scotland or presenting Corbyn as the answer, the Tories have had to do nothing other than to keep reloading the gun that Labour use to shoot themselves with.
I don't think we are.
Point is that the Tories aren't doing any 'baking'.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
And was Labour donor Greg Dyke picked because of a career in media leading up to that point, or was he a political appointee brought in to shape the corporation towards he government's wishes? .
Dyke's career:
London Weekend Television
The Six O'Clock Show
Programme Director at TV-am
Programme Director at TVS
Programme Director at LWT (again)
Chairman + CEO of Pearson Television
Chairman of Channel 5
then DG of the BBC
It's a pretty straightforward progression, and he was a fair pick. The accusations of cronyism bear some scrutiny, because of course there should be scrutiny if a donor to the government gets a job. There's no evidence that Dyke was picked to bring a brand of politics to the role, to turn the corporation into something to win votes for the government.
If Richard Sharp, new Chairman of the Board at the BBC, was a guy who was an otherwise obvious pick for the BBC outside of his >£400,000 (!!!!) of Tory donations, I'd have just rolled my eyes. But given he's Rishi Sunak's former boss, and a former director of the fucking Centre for Policy Studies, which has long been publishing anti-BBC studies, accusing the BBC of being biased to the left, and railed against the licence fee, then it's a really strange appointment unless he's there to enact the current government's wishes.
Tim Davie is the new DG. That's former Conservative Party councillor Tim Davie. The same Tim Davie who was fine with Andrew Neil's every utterance, but banned everyone else from expressing their own views on "controversial" topics, and banged on about virtue signalling.
It's another way to fight the culture war, but this time it bakes it into our national broadcaster and is a blatant attempt to remove impartiality.
Add in the fact that they want Paul fucking Dacre, chief scumbag of the Daily Mail, as head of Ofcom, and their strategy is pretty clear.
Any idea why?Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 10:45 amIt’s not really. They take a pasting every election despite the wicket being rolled perfectly for them. They’re barely relevant to the news cycle and people clearly aren’t going to vote for them
Given the movement of Labour voters away from that party and the undeniable corruption in the Tories, one would expect them to be a much better option.
The Greens are pretty much a single issue party; I'm a bit surprised to see you promote them as a superior option.
- Paddington Bear
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I think there's an element of being everyone's second choice, tuition fees and their traditional strongholds in England being quite brexity.Rinkals wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:05 amAny idea why?Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 10:45 amIt’s not really. They take a pasting every election despite the wicket being rolled perfectly for them. They’re barely relevant to the news cycle and people clearly aren’t going to vote for them
Given the movement of Labour voters away from that party and the undeniable corruption in the Tories, one would expect them to be a much better option.
The Greens are pretty much a single issue party; I'm a bit surprised to see you promote them as a superior option.
Greens aren't my cup of tea but can see the market they're appealing to in Germany existing over here as well.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
That's a good one. Shall we look at this? "Tony's Cronies" and all that.
Blair created 200-odd life peers, and removed hereditary peers (undeniably a good thing in modern politics - there's no room for hereditary power like that in Government). As a result, the Tories still had a majority in the House of Lords. Eh? Oh. That's strange, isn't it.
Eventually, he added enough that Labour had the most peers in the House for the first time ever. That's a House that's supposed to represent a balance on the Government; a Government that has been overwhelmingly Tory before and after Blair.
The real criticism of what Blair did is that he was rewarding friends and donors. That as far as I know is correct, and deserved criticism - and that's why there was a big stink about it, and why laws were introduced to reduce his power to do so. Strangely, no such stink has sprung up over Boris stuffing the Lords with friends, donors, a family member, a son of KGB operative, Brexit campaign stalwarts - several of whom were appointed in defiance of the advice from the House itself! And the result is that the Tories went from being in the majority in the Lords, to having a huge majority boosted by many people who are there purely for their political alleigance to the Government. Despite Boris having committed to reducing the size of the House.
You see the difference between "Labour finally gets enough peers to be top dog, briefly" and "Tories cement their dominance of the House, breaking campaign promises and previous commitments to do so" in terms of how it impacts something that is supposed to be something other than a lapdog for the Tories? Thanks to Boris, the Tories now have 84 more members in the House than Labour. 75 more than the crossbench/independent lot. That's huge. They have almost of a third of the entire House of Lords! Now, can anyone explain to me why the Tories would stuff the Lords with more political appointees, most of which are Brexit ultras or fanatical Tories, when they already had a healthy lead over everyone else, and had promised they would do the opposite?
(I am taking it on faith that Blair's appointees were similar fanatics to Boris' lot - though I'd be surprised if there were people like Claire Fox in Blair's group. I have no way of knowing/finding out, so...)
Then you look at threats to the various arts - threatening museums with funding cuts if they remove statues, threatening punishment for accurately reporting on British History (or as Dowden called it, 'airbrushing British history' - some proper newspeak there), or for anything deemed 'political' (i.e. politics the government doesn't like) and it's very clear that they're trying to establish a long term environment where this particular brand Conservatism is the only game in town, promoted by previously independent organisations, and boosted by a captured media.
That's playing the long game. Add in the standard voter suppression tactics, and the stated aim of the Government to reduce the power of Parliament and politicise the judicial process, and we're essentially seeing an attempt to Trumpify the UK.
That's playing the long game. Add in the standard voter suppression tactics, and the stated aim of the Government to reduce the power of Parliament and politicise the judicial process, and we're essentially seeing an attempt to Trumpify the UK.
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:08 amThat's a good one. Shall we look at this? "Tony's Cronies" and all that.
Blair created 200-odd life peers, and removed hereditary peers (undeniably a good thing in modern politics - there's no room for hereditary power like that in Government). As a result, the Tories still had a majority in the House of Lords. Eh? Oh. That's strange, isn't it.
Eventually, he added enough that Labour had the most peers in the House for the first time ever. That's a House that's supposed to represent a balance on the Government; a Government that has been overwhelmingly Tory before and after Blair.
The real criticism of what Blair did is that he was rewarding friends and donors. That as far as I know is correct, and deserved criticism - and that's why there was a big stink about it, and why laws were introduced to reduce his power to do so. Strangely, no such stink has sprung up over Boris stuffing the Lords with friends, donors, a family member, a son of KGB operative, Brexit campaign stalwarts - several of whom were appointed in defiance of the advice from the House itself! And the result is that the Tories went from being in the majority in the Lords, to having a huge majority boosted by many people who are there purely for their political alleigance to the Government. Despite Boris having committed to reducing the size of the House.
You see the difference between "Labour finally gets enough peers to be top dog, briefly" and "Tories cement their dominance of the House, breaking campaign promises and previous commitments to do so" in terms of how it impacts something that is supposed to be something other than a lapdog for the Tories? Thanks to Boris, the Tories now have 84 more members in the House than Labour. 75 more than the crossbench/independent lot. That's huge. They have almost of a third of the entire House of Lords! Now, can anyone explain to me why the Tories would stuff the Lords with more political appointees, most of which are Brexit ultras or fanatical Tories, when they already had a healthy lead over everyone else, and had promised they would do the opposite?
(I am taking it on faith that Blair's appointees were similar fanatics to Boris' lot - though I'd be surprised if there were people like Claire Fox in Blair's group. I have no way of knowing/finding out, so...)
When the son of a KGB operative won't even vote Labour then it really is time to call it a day.
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:13 am Then you look at threats to the various arts - threatening museums with funding cuts if they remove statues, threatening punishment for accurately reporting on British History (or as Dowden called it, 'airbrushing British history' - some proper newspeak there), or for anything deemed 'political' (i.e. politics the government doesn't like) and it's very clear that they're trying to establish a long term environment where this particular brand Conservatism is the only game in town, promoted by previously independent organisations, and boosted by a captured media.
That's playing the long game. Add in the standard voter suppression tactics, and the stated aim of the Government to reduce the power of Parliament and politicise the judicial process, and we're essentially seeing an attempt to Trumpify the UK.
I think Twitter is more your thing JM. You'll love it there in fact.
I guess you don't appreciate the irony of telling me to move to Twitter when I've used our disagreement to respond with in-depth replies, in an attempt to explain my position and expand the reasons behind it, only to be met by a pithy and pointless one-liner. One of us would definitely fit in on Twitter.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:17 amI think Twitter is more your thing JM. You'll love it there in fact.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:13 am Then you look at threats to the various arts - threatening museums with funding cuts if they remove statues, threatening punishment for accurately reporting on British History (or as Dowden called it, 'airbrushing British history' - some proper newspeak there), or for anything deemed 'political' (i.e. politics the government doesn't like) and it's very clear that they're trying to establish a long term environment where this particular brand Conservatism is the only game in town, promoted by previously independent organisations, and boosted by a captured media.
That's playing the long game. Add in the standard voter suppression tactics, and the stated aim of the Government to reduce the power of Parliament and politicise the judicial process, and we're essentially seeing an attempt to Trumpify the UK.
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:19 amI guess you don't appreciate the irony of telling me to move to Twitter when I've used our disagreement to respond with in-depth replies, in an attempt to explain my position and expand the reasons behind it, only to be met by a pithy and pointless one-liner. One of us would definitely fit in on Twitter.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:17 amI think Twitter is more your thing JM. You'll love it there in fact.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:13 am Then you look at threats to the various arts - threatening museums with funding cuts if they remove statues, threatening punishment for accurately reporting on British History (or as Dowden called it, 'airbrushing British history' - some proper newspeak there), or for anything deemed 'political' (i.e. politics the government doesn't like) and it's very clear that they're trying to establish a long term environment where this particular brand Conservatism is the only game in town, promoted by previously independent organisations, and boosted by a captured media.
That's playing the long game. Add in the standard voter suppression tactics, and the stated aim of the Government to reduce the power of Parliament and politicise the judicial process, and we're essentially seeing an attempt to Trumpify the UK.
You can mark your own homework and say you have scored an A* explaining why the Tory conspiracy theory is true as much as you like JM. You'll just find more adherents to it on Twitter than you will here.
My "conspiracy theory" is essentially a list of the things the Tories are on record as doing. It's hardly QAnon, but if you want to be willfully blind, that's on you. I'm sure these are all just incredible conspiracies that by pure happenstance would benefit the Tories for years to come, as well as helping them fight their current culture war. Those lucky scamps!Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:21 amJM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 11:19 amI guess you don't appreciate the irony of telling me to move to Twitter when I've used our disagreement to respond with in-depth replies, in an attempt to explain my position and expand the reasons behind it, only to be met by a pithy and pointless one-liner. One of us would definitely fit in on Twitter.
You can mark your own homework and say you have scored an A* explaining why the Tory conspiracy theory is true as much as you like JM. You'll just find more adherents to it on Twitter than you will here.
Just a few more bits of completely unconnected, coincidental, and unplanned actions.
- Uzma Hasan and Fru Hazlitt were dropped from the Channel 4 board (against the advice of both the board and Ofcom)
- Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden refused to reappoint Dr Aminul Huque as a trustee of the Royal Museums Greenwich, leading to the immediate resignation of its chair, Sir Charles Dunstone. Huque’s fate is presumably connected with his work calling for the decolonisation of the curriculum.
This is a pretty good article talking about all these random events - and more - that have nothing to do with any Tory attempts to secure power, including direct quotes from prominent Tories about making nakedly political appointments
https://bylinetimes.com/2021/05/05/post ... ts-system/
It ends thusly:
- Uzma Hasan and Fru Hazlitt were dropped from the Channel 4 board (against the advice of both the board and Ofcom)
but they extended the term for the Conservative peer Chris Holmes, whos term was supposed to end.The government has vetoed the reappointment of two women to Channel 4’s board of directors, including one of only two women of colour, in a sign ministers are continuing to assert their authority over senior media appointments.
The decision not to renew the boardroom positions of Uzma Hasan and Fru Hazlitt at the state-owned but privately funded broadcaster was made against the advice of both the Channel 4 board and the media regulator, Ofcom.
Both women were recommended for another three-year term on the broadcaster’s board, sources told the Guardian, with such reappointments usually waved through by the government. However, ministers have instead decided to seek new candidates, as part of a wider push that has led to the appointment of Conservative allies to leading media roles.
- Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden refused to reappoint Dr Aminul Huque as a trustee of the Royal Museums Greenwich, leading to the immediate resignation of its chair, Sir Charles Dunstone. Huque’s fate is presumably connected with his work calling for the decolonisation of the curriculum.
This is a pretty good article talking about all these random events - and more - that have nothing to do with any Tory attempts to secure power, including direct quotes from prominent Tories about making nakedly political appointments
https://bylinetimes.com/2021/05/05/post ... ts-system/
It ends thusly:
Of course, Conservative organisations and Conservative-supporting publications are perfectly entitled to encourage Conservatives to apply for public appointments. However, what I have outlined here goes way beyond a mere recruitment campaign and indicates how, over the past 10 years, the Tory ecosystem has systematically laid the ground for the assault on the independence of the public appointments system now being waged by Johnson’s Government.
This isn’t simply a matter of cronyism and political patronage – it’s also a significant battleground in the Government’s wider war against the ‘liberal elite’ and in fact any institutions which stand in the way of unfettered executive power.
Meanwhile, newspapers such as the Telegraph, Sun, Mail and Express, which loudly defend press freedom (or, rather, their version of it) on the grounds that it enables them to speak truth to power on behalf of the public, have for the most part acted simply as power-fixated cheerleaders for the autocratic excesses of the executive – and especially of their creature, ‘Boris’.
At the same time, the BBC has been effectively cowed by the very processes which are the subject of this article – namely the Government’s packing of public bodies by Conservative place-men in the shape of new director general Tim Davie, chairman Richard Sharp and, most recently, board member Sir Robbie Gibb.
Welcome to the post-Nolan era.
I don't think anyone is claiming it's Just Boris. Boris like anyone else has pressure coming on him from donors, Tory grandees, other senior Tory members, his personal circle, etc. And as the article makes clear, the groundwork for this sort of thing long predates his time as PM. He's just accelerating it.
The Tory Government is not just Boris.
The Tory Government is not just Boris.
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:25 pm I don't think anyone is claiming it's Just Boris. Boris like anyone else has pressure coming on him from donors, Tory grandees, other senior Tory members, his personal circle, etc. And as the article makes clear, the groundwork for this sort of thing long predates his time as PM. He's just accelerating it.
The Tory Government is not just Boris.
Don't forget the lizards.
- tabascoboy
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It's like the PM never had a well known SPAD...
I like good faith arguments. This isn't one.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:27 pmDon't forget the lizards.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:25 pm I don't think anyone is claiming it's Just Boris. Boris like anyone else has pressure coming on him from donors, Tory grandees, other senior Tory members, his personal circle, etc. And as the article makes clear, the groundwork for this sort of thing long predates his time as PM. He's just accelerating it.
The Tory Government is not just Boris.
You'd think the conspiracy would have seen him meet with a nasty accident instead of being free to trash the PM after he left Johnson.
THE TORIES ARE LITERALLY SAYING OUT LOUD WHAT THEY'RE DOING. Jesus Christ.
?!?!
You really are weird - where the fuck did anyone talk about people being offed? It's a discussion about how the Tories are trying to ensure they keep a stranglehold on power via fanatical political appointees in important areas. It's mad enough you think that's ground for wanking on about conspiracy theories, but even madder that you think anyone is talking about assassinations.
Honestly, if you've no interest in engaging like a sane human being, why even bother?
"the Tories are trying to ensure they keep hold of power beyond the next election by making sure that fanatical tories are in positions of great control in various media, culture, and Parliamentary areas, as explicitly suggested by various influential conservative groups, and backed up by the actions of the people they've already put in place"
"hurr hurr why didn't they kill Dominic Cummings if that was true???"
"hurr hurr why didn't they kill Dominic Cummings if that was true???"
Follow the time line on this thread. Occam's razor suggests the Tory victories in 2019 and last night are down to the implosion of the Labour party. I also added, on this thread - today, that the Tories are still benefiting from their association with the Leave Brexit vote whereas Labour are more aligned with Remain which they have to split with other parties, especially in Scotland and London - traditional heartland Labour areas.
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:39 pm "the Tories are trying to ensure they keep hold of power beyond the next election by making sure that fanatical tories are in positions of great control in various media, culture, and Parliamentary areas, as explicitly suggested by various influential conservative groups, and backed up by the actions of the people they've already put in place"
As has already been pointed out, that is what all in-power political parties do. That's page one stuff. From the 15th century.
Like I said, you started off by arguing a completely different thing to me. I responded to tc27 saying that the Tories weren't trying to enact a sinister right wing policy/agenda. You are talking about election results. They are completely fucking different arguments, as I told you already. We actually agree on the prevalence of Brexit feeling as being a driver for Tory success in certain areas. It's just completely irrelevant to the post I was responding to, and the post of mine you replied to.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:48 pmFollow the time line on this thread. Occam's razor suggests the Tory victories in 2019 and last night are down to the implosion of the Labour party. I also added, on this thread - today, that the Tories are still benefiting from their association with the Leave Brexit vote whereas Labour are more aligned with Remain which they have to split with other parties, especially in Scotland and London - traditional heartland Labour areas.
The agenda the Tories are trying to enact and the way they are going about it is entirely separate from current and historical election results.
Except no, not like this. There hasn't been nakedly political attempts to force all these instiutions to promote the Government's perspective, for a very long time. Functional democracy cannot work like that. It's an absolute lie to say this is how it's always been done, and I've wasted far too many words pointing out how and why things have changed. You've literally no interest in discussing this normally, you just want to throw out shit one-liners.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:52 pmAs has already been pointed out, that is what all in-power political parties do. That's page one stuff. From the 15th century.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:39 pm "the Tories are trying to ensure they keep hold of power beyond the next election by making sure that fanatical tories are in positions of great control in various media, culture, and Parliamentary areas, as explicitly suggested by various influential conservative groups, and backed up by the actions of the people they've already put in place"
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:58 pmLike I said, you started off by arguing a completely different thing to me. I responded to tc27 saying that the Tories weren't trying to enact a sinister right wing policy/agenda. You are talking about election results. They are completely fucking different arguments, as I told you already. We actually agree on the prevalence of Brexit feeling as being a driver for Tory success in certain areas. It's just completely irrelevant to the post I was responding to, and the post of mine you replied to.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:48 pmFollow the time line on this thread. Occam's razor suggests the Tory victories in 2019 and last night are down to the implosion of the Labour party. I also added, on this thread - today, that the Tories are still benefiting from their association with the Leave Brexit vote whereas Labour are more aligned with Remain which they have to split with other parties, especially in Scotland and London - traditional heartland Labour areas.
The agenda the Tories are trying to enact and the way they are going about it is entirely separate from current and historical election results.
Except no, not like this. There hasn't been nakedly political attempts to force all these instiutions to promote the Government's perspective, for a very long time. Functional democracy cannot work like that. It's an absolute lie to say this is how it's always that shit to be fairbeen done, and I've wasted far too many words pointing out how and why things have changed. You've literally no interest in discussing this normally, you just want to throw out shit one-liners.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:52 pmAs has already been pointed out, that is what all in-power political parties do. That's page one stuff. From the 15th century.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:39 pm "the Tories are trying to ensure they keep hold of power beyond the next election by making sure that fanatical tories are in positions of great control in various media, culture, and Parliamentary areas, as explicitly suggested by various influential conservative groups, and backed up by the actions of the people they've already put in place"
They're not that shit to be fair.
They are.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 1:01 pmJM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:58 pmLike I said, you started off by arguing a completely different thing to me. I responded to tc27 saying that the Tories weren't trying to enact a sinister right wing policy/agenda. You are talking about election results. They are completely fucking different arguments, as I told you already. We actually agree on the prevalence of Brexit feeling as being a driver for Tory success in certain areas. It's just completely irrelevant to the post I was responding to, and the post of mine you replied to.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:48 pm
Follow the time line on this thread. Occam's razor suggests the Tory victories in 2019 and last night are down to the implosion of the Labour party. I also added, on this thread - today, that the Tories are still benefiting from their association with the Leave Brexit vote whereas Labour are more aligned with Remain which they have to split with other parties, especially in Scotland and London - traditional heartland Labour areas.
The agenda the Tories are trying to enact and the way they are going about it is entirely separate from current and historical election results.
Except no, not like this. There hasn't been nakedly political attempts to force all these instiutions to promote the Government's perspective, for a very long time. Functional democracy cannot work like that. It's an absolute lie to say this is how it's always that shit to be fairbeen done, and I've wasted far too many words pointing out how and why things have changed. You've literally no interest in discussing this normally, you just want to throw out shit one-liners.
They're not that shit to be fair.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
- tabascoboy
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21% turnout at another district nearby. Feeble.
That's not unusual for local council elections.
- tabascoboy
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The fact it's not unusual only makes it worse.
The PCC one will probably be even lower, as no-one really cares
The PCC one will probably be even lower, as no-one really cares
tabascoboy wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 1:35 pm The fact it's not unusual only makes it worse.
The PCC one will probably be even lower, as no-one really cares
MEP elections could hit single figures.
Biffer wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 1:03 pmThey are.Kawazaki wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 1:01 pmJM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:58 pm
Like I said, you started off by arguing a completely different thing to me. I responded to tc27 saying that the Tories weren't trying to enact a sinister right wing policy/agenda. You are talking about election results. They are completely fucking different arguments, as I told you already. We actually agree on the prevalence of Brexit feeling as being a driver for Tory success in certain areas. It's just completely irrelevant to the post I was responding to, and the post of mine you replied to.
The agenda the Tories are trying to enact and the way they are going about it is entirely separate from current and historical election results.
Except no, not like this. There hasn't been nakedly political attempts to force all these instiutions to promote the Government's perspective, for a very long time. Functional democracy cannot work like that. It's an absolute lie to say this is how it's always that shit to be fairbeen done, and I've wasted far too many words pointing out how and why things have changed. You've literally no interest in discussing this normally, you just want to throw out shit one-liners.
They're not that shit to be fair.
Who is the director, or summit like that, of the Radio 4 Today programme who has links to the Tories?
Not presenter and ex-BBC political editor Nick Robinson, who was president of the Oxford University Conservative Association when Cameron and the rest of them were there, but someone else.
Not presenter and ex-BBC political editor Nick Robinson, who was president of the Oxford University Conservative Association when Cameron and the rest of them were there, but someone else.
-
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Some buzz on Twitter Shaun Bailey is doing better than expected.
If Keith Starmer's Labour party lose London he surely has to resign. Yow
If Keith Starmer's Labour party lose London he surely has to resign. Yow
- ScarfaceClaw
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He’s too disinterested and disconnected to even notice. I’d argue that he’s merely facilitating it through his own apathy and personal focuses than masterminding it in any way.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 12:25 pm I don't think anyone is claiming it's Just Boris. Boris like anyone else has pressure coming on him from donors, Tory grandees, other senior Tory members, his personal circle, etc. And as the article makes clear, the groundwork for this sort of thing long predates his time as PM. He's just accelerating it.
The Tory Government is not just Boris.
Indeed. Doesn’t time fly - only one Labour leader has gained a comfortable majority in the last fifty years, even the US has elected four Democrat presidents in that time. I recently read The Strange Death of Liberal England and I wonder whether we’re seeing the death of Labour. The realignment of the Left that’s discussed after a lot of elections seems a long way off.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Fri May 07, 2021 8:42 am We're reaching a point of asking what the Labour party is for.
- It can't unite the centre/centre left/left
- It isn't the party of the organised working class
- It doesn't represent Scotland and Wales at Westminster
- It isn't seen as a government in waiting or as a viable radical alternative
- It isn't going to win an election any time soon
At some point does it's urban and wealthier vote follow the Germans and head to the Greens?
Another thing - Labour won comfortably in 03 and 07 and one might expect that MPs elected then would be political big/hitters now but of course they’re branded as Blairite.