It depends upon whether the Labour voters can stomach voting for the Lib Dems tbh.
Hopefully in this election and the GE the anti Tory vote will
Unify and decimate the Cult of Boris et al and the sleazy corrupt bastards
It depends upon whether the Labour voters can stomach voting for the Lib Dems tbh.
Labour supporters are too busy fighting the Magic Grandpa Fans vs Sir "Keith" war to organise themselves.C69 wrote: ↑Sat Jun 18, 2022 2:39 pmIt depends upon whether the Labour voters can stomach voting for the Lib Dems tbh.
Hopefully in this election and the GE the anti Tory vote will
Unify and decimate the Cult of Boris et al and the sleazy corrupt bastards
Mystery surrounds Times exclusive claiming Boris Johnson wanted to give Carrie Symonds a £100,000 role
Why did one of the scoops of the year suddenly disappear from newspapers friendly to the prime minister?
You might have thought it one of the scoops of the year – the allegation that when he was foreign secretary, Boris Johnson wanted to install his then-lover Carrie Symonds as his chief of staff on a salary of at least £100,000 a year, before senior colleagues made it clear that such a “flagrant abuse of ethics” would have been unacceptable.
Yet the story was turned down by one leading newspaper, then picked up and printed by another before disappearing altogether.
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.
...
Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.
As you say it only had to be out there for 5 minutes, & that's enough.Hal Jordan wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 9:57 am Another superinjunction (I wonder how many that makes), but it's pointless because the socials have it all over the place.
Just one point of order, Boris has confirmed he was not in fact married to Marina Wheeler, nor actually to anyone prior to his nuptials with Princess NutNuttabascoboy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 8:37 amMystery surrounds Times exclusive claiming Boris Johnson wanted to give Carrie Symonds a £100,000 role
Why did one of the scoops of the year suddenly disappear from newspapers friendly to the prime minister?
You might have thought it one of the scoops of the year – the allegation that when he was foreign secretary, Boris Johnson wanted to install his then-lover Carrie Symonds as his chief of staff on a salary of at least £100,000 a year, before senior colleagues made it clear that such a “flagrant abuse of ethics” would have been unacceptable.
Yet the story was turned down by one leading newspaper, then picked up and printed by another before disappearing altogether.
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.
...
Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.
Neither
Wow! Ok, that certainly is a interesting idea.
Quite a lot to unpick with this post, Chilli.
What, one of the very, very few times when his philandering actually WASN'T while he was married???Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 1:52 pmJust one point of order, Boris has confirmed he was not in fact married to Marina Wheeler, nor actually to anyone prior to his nuptials with Princess NutNuttabascoboy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 8:37 amMystery surrounds Times exclusive claiming Boris Johnson wanted to give Carrie Symonds a £100,000 role
Why did one of the scoops of the year suddenly disappear from newspapers friendly to the prime minister?
You might have thought it one of the scoops of the year – the allegation that when he was foreign secretary, Boris Johnson wanted to install his then-lover Carrie Symonds as his chief of staff on a salary of at least £100,000 a year, before senior colleagues made it clear that such a “flagrant abuse of ethics” would have been unacceptable.
Yet the story was turned down by one leading newspaper, then picked up and printed by another before disappearing altogether.
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.
...
Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.
More the only time he's ever been married is now, to his third wife. His first two marriages never existed in the first place, that or the Catholic Church is full of shit, and it could be the Catholic Church is full of shit in fairnesstabascoboy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 4:14 pmWhat, one of the very, very few times when his philandering actually WASN'T while he was married???Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 1:52 pmJust one point of order, Boris has confirmed he was not in fact married to Marina Wheeler, nor actually to anyone prior to his nuptials with Princess NutNut
He wouldn't be the first guy to find a dodgy Priest to certify that he wasn't married, when he was.Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 4:41 pmMore the only time he's ever been married is now, to his third wife. His first two marriages never existed in the first place, that or the Catholic Church is full of shit, and it could be the Catholic Church is full of shit in fairnesstabascoboy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 4:14 pmWhat, one of the very, very few times when his philandering actually WASN'T while he was married???Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 1:52 pm
Just one point of order, Boris has confirmed he was not in fact married to Marina Wheeler, nor actually to anyone prior to his nuptials with Princess NutNut
So basically if the UK can make use of you, you're in._Os_ wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 3:30 pmQuite a lot to unpick with this post, Chilli.
There's a difference between an immigrant, illegal immigrant, refugee, asylum seeker, seasonal worker. Those things are all so different, tourist could be added to the list. It's normal in the UK to make no distinction between any of these categories (from the PM down) on purpose, purely to keep the debate stupid and stoke hatred. One example is Johnson recently saying Ukrainians can pick fruit (seasonal workers aren't the same as refugee with settlement) or Hong Kongers can apply for a visa (a legal immigrant) and this shows that the UK treats asylum seekers well (when seasonal workers and legal immigrants, aren't asylum seekers). Always this will be said in interviews without any push back from the interviewer. Other even more meaningless phrases like "economic migrant" are thrown into the mix, when no one moves to a place they're less able to make a living.
Of the two categories you mention. An asylum seeker is someone looking for refuge in another country because they fear they'll have their human rights violated, a refugee is an asylum seeker who has been given that protection/refuge status in another country. An illegal immigrant is someone who has no asylum seeker or refugee status, who hasn't followed the visa requirements to settle in another country (or in the UK's case, because the UK's immigration is a massive mess, the system was changed and turned legal immigrants resident in the UK for years into illegal immigrants).
The first problem is that most of the reporting of the Rwanda scheme, which starts at government level, is that it conflates different categories of immigrant. The vast majority of those crossing the channel on small boats have their asylum applications accepted. Most illegal immigrants are probably entering legally and overstaying on their visas.
The Rwanda flight randomly selected different asylum seekers (I don't think there were illegal immigrants, as they can be sent to their home countries, the whole point of the Rwanda plan is the UK can't send people to places like Syria/Iraq/Afghanistan/Libya and pretend to be doing something morally right), regardless of their cases or background. There were people the UK recognises have been tortured or were slaves, on that flight to Rwanda. In other words the UK tried to send people they knew were legitimate asylum seekers to Rwanda and deny them the status of a refugee in the UK.
Once in Rwanda they're in the hands of the Rwandan state and the Rwandan asylum system. They don't get flown anywhere else after that. Which really means they will be on the road again, maybe to Kenya or SA, maybe back to Europe. The Rwandan motivation is to make money transporting desperate people against their will across the world to their country, knowing also that those people will not stay in their country. Rwanda is a dictatorship, so Rwanda also has the added benefit of the UK cleaning its image and saying it's a really great place.
On the UK side it's about wanting to ruin the lives of some people (100s? 1000s?), so the UK government can claim to their supporters that they're tough on immigration. It's the exact same calculation as the Windrush Scandal, when legal migrants were turned into illegal migrants. There's never been anything approaching a sensible debate on migration in the UK, and probably never will be because there's too much that can be gained politically from keeping it stupid. Migration into the UK is at record breaking highs from non-EU nations, because the UK has put up barriers to EU migrants which means less competition for non-EU migrants. There's still a lot of Tories who really believe "immigrants are/were Labour's fault", in other words something bad that could be controlled, even after they've failed at controlling it or even understanding it.
No.
The irony is that the PM and a load of the Cabinet have a lineage being immigrants.fishfoodie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 6:29 pmNo.
That implies they actually have a plan, & right now what they have is as coherent as fever rantings, enforced by a clown troop of SS members.
EU immigrants contributed £1.10, for every £1 they cost the UK economy !
Why on earth would you drive these people out of your Country, for anything other than xenophobic & racist reasons ?
No, but one might feel it speaks to character that he declares so happily to his previous wives and his children from those marriages that he was never part of any previous marriage. Or one might feel he's done no such thing and he's merely lied to the Catholic Church and his new wife, which would also be fairly contemptiblefishfoodie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 5:14 pmHe wouldn't be the first guy to find a dodgy Priest to certify that he wasn't married, when he was.Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 4:41 pmMore the only time he's ever been married is now, to his third wife. His first two marriages never existed in the first place, that or the Catholic Church is full of shit, and it could be the Catholic Church is full of shit in fairnesstabascoboy wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 4:14 pm
What, one of the very, very few times when his philandering actually WASN'T while he was married???
It's hardly unusual thinking in immigrant populations that once they've arrived at safety it's time to pull up the drawbridge as they shift from wanting access to wanting to protect what they have. At times those feelings would even be stronger than in the domestic population as they know what they've left behindC69 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 6:54 pmThe irony is that the PM and a load of the Cabinet have a lineage being immigrants.fishfoodie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 6:29 pmNo.
That implies they actually have a plan, & right now what they have is as coherent as fever rantings, enforced by a clown troop of SS members.
EU immigrants contributed £1.10, for every £1 they cost the UK economy !
Why on earth would you drive these people out of your Country, for anything other than xenophobic & racist reasons ?
Starne lot these right wing racist reactionaries.
It's a completely broken system, they have no means of determining who is useful and who isn't (even if that were possible). They're simply incompetent.
No. No evaluation done in the UK.Chilli wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 5:42 pmSo basically if the UK can make use of you, you're in._Os_ wrote: ↑Sun Jun 19, 2022 3:30 pmQuite a lot to unpick with this post, Chilli.
There's a difference between an immigrant, illegal immigrant, refugee, asylum seeker, seasonal worker. Those things are all so different, tourist could be added to the list. It's normal in the UK to make no distinction between any of these categories (from the PM down) on purpose, purely to keep the debate stupid and stoke hatred. One example is Johnson recently saying Ukrainians can pick fruit (seasonal workers aren't the same as refugee with settlement) or Hong Kongers can apply for a visa (a legal immigrant) and this shows that the UK treats asylum seekers well (when seasonal workers and legal immigrants, aren't asylum seekers). Always this will be said in interviews without any push back from the interviewer. Other even more meaningless phrases like "economic migrant" are thrown into the mix, when no one moves to a place they're less able to make a living.
Of the two categories you mention. An asylum seeker is someone looking for refuge in another country because they fear they'll have their human rights violated, a refugee is an asylum seeker who has been given that protection/refuge status in another country. An illegal immigrant is someone who has no asylum seeker or refugee status, who hasn't followed the visa requirements to settle in another country (or in the UK's case, because the UK's immigration is a massive mess, the system was changed and turned legal immigrants resident in the UK for years into illegal immigrants).
The first problem is that most of the reporting of the Rwanda scheme, which starts at government level, is that it conflates different categories of immigrant. The vast majority of those crossing the channel on small boats have their asylum applications accepted. Most illegal immigrants are probably entering legally and overstaying on their visas.
The Rwanda flight randomly selected different asylum seekers (I don't think there were illegal immigrants, as they can be sent to their home countries, the whole point of the Rwanda plan is the UK can't send people to places like Syria/Iraq/Afghanistan/Libya and pretend to be doing something morally right), regardless of their cases or background. There were people the UK recognises have been tortured or were slaves, on that flight to Rwanda. In other words the UK tried to send people they knew were legitimate asylum seekers to Rwanda and deny them the status of a refugee in the UK.
Once in Rwanda they're in the hands of the Rwandan state and the Rwandan asylum system. They don't get flown anywhere else after that. Which really means they will be on the road again, maybe to Kenya or SA, maybe back to Europe. The Rwandan motivation is to make money transporting desperate people against their will across the world to their country, knowing also that those people will not stay in their country. Rwanda is a dictatorship, so Rwanda also has the added benefit of the UK cleaning its image and saying it's a really great place.
On the UK side it's about wanting to ruin the lives of some people (100s? 1000s?), so the UK government can claim to their supporters that they're tough on immigration. It's the exact same calculation as the Windrush Scandal, when legal migrants were turned into illegal migrants. There's never been anything approaching a sensible debate on migration in the UK, and probably never will be because there's too much that can be gained politically from keeping it stupid. Migration into the UK is at record breaking highs from non-EU nations, because the UK has put up barriers to EU migrants which means less competition for non-EU migrants. There's still a lot of Tories who really believe "immigrants are/were Labour's fault", in other words something bad that could be controlled, even after they've failed at controlling it or even understanding it.
If not, you're on flight 375 to Rwanda?
I was think more like having his Septum repaired after too much of Bolivias finest ?
And the idiot Dorries excelling herself againDowning Street has confirmed that members of Boris Johnson’s team intervened following the publication of a story about his wife Carrie in The Times, but denied that the prime minister himself contacted the paper to complain.
Dominic Cummings, a former adviser to Johnson who has become an arch critic of the prime minister, backed up the original story and went further, suggesting Johnson also attempted to appoint his wife to a government job in late 2020.
The prime minister’s spokesperson said they were unable to comment on Johnson’s activities before he became prime minister but said “others have made clear this story is untrue”.
The spokesperson denied Cummings’s claim that Johnson tried to get his wife a Downing Street job while prime minister.
Former Number 10 adviser Dominic Cummings claims the story is accurate & "the truth is worse"
Rumours circulating that the Johnsons threatened a super-injunction if The Times didn't pull the story?tabascoboy wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:02 pm Downing Street continuing its transformation into The Kremlin
this is in a few sources, many are paywalled though...
Downing Street has confirmed that members of Boris Johnson’s team intervened following the publication of a story about his wife Carrie in The Times, but denied that the prime minister himself contacted the paper to complain.
Dominic Cummings, a former adviser to Johnson who has become an arch critic of the prime minister, backed up the original story and went further, suggesting Johnson also attempted to appoint his wife to a government job in late 2020.
The prime minister’s spokesperson said they were unable to comment on Johnson’s activities before he became prime minister but said “others have made clear this story is untrue”.
The spokesperson denied Cummings’s claim that Johnson tried to get his wife a Downing Street job while prime minister.
Former Number 10 adviser Dominic Cummings claims the story is accurate & "the truth is worse"
The story about Johnson trying to ease Princess Nut Nut into a well-paid job at the foreign office first appeared in Lord Ashcroft’s book about her that was published earlier this year. He claimed that Johnson had tried to appoint her to a £100,000-a-year government job when he was foreign secretary in 2018, and that the appointment was only stopped when her relationship with Johnson was discovered by an MP who found them in a “compromising situation” in Johnson’s parliamentary office.SaintK wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:16 pmRumours circulating that the Johnsons threatened a super-injunction if The Times didn't pull the story?tabascoboy wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:02 pm Downing Street continuing its transformation into The Kremlin
this is in a few sources, many are paywalled though...
Downing Street has confirmed that members of Boris Johnson’s team intervened following the publication of a story about his wife Carrie in The Times, but denied that the prime minister himself contacted the paper to complain.
Dominic Cummings, a former adviser to Johnson who has become an arch critic of the prime minister, backed up the original story and went further, suggesting Johnson also attempted to appoint his wife to a government job in late 2020.
The prime minister’s spokesperson said they were unable to comment on Johnson’s activities before he became prime minister but said “others have made clear this story is untrue”.
The spokesperson denied Cummings’s claim that Johnson tried to get his wife a Downing Street job while prime minister.
Former Number 10 adviser Dominic Cummings claims the story is accurate & "the truth is worse"
Not sure how true that is, as the whole thing fits with what this pair get up to.
I'd certainly believe Cummings now before anything that comes of Downing St
No super-injunction but a handy Downing St link to News UK!Lobby wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:44 pmThe story about Johnson trying to ease Princess Nut Nut into a well-paid job at the foreign office first appeared in Lord Ashcroft’s book about her that was published earlier this year. He claimed that Johnson had tried to appoint her to a £100,000-a-year government job when he was foreign secretary in 2018, and that the appointment was only stopped when her relationship with Johnson was discovered by an MP who found them in a “compromising situation” in Johnson’s parliamentary office.SaintK wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:16 pmRumours circulating that the Johnsons threatened a super-injunction if The Times didn't pull the story?tabascoboy wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 4:02 pm Downing Street continuing its transformation into The Kremlin
this is in a few sources, many are paywalled though...
Not sure how true that is, as the whole thing fits with what this pair get up to.
I'd certainly believe Cummings now before anything that comes of Downing St
The Sunday Times story (at least before it was pulled) appeared to confirm Ashcroft’s claims, and added some further details, which makes it all the more odd that No 10 have leant on the Sunday Times and the Mail (which initially repeated the Sunday Times story, and then also removed it) to delete the stories.
Given Johnson’s and No. 10’s previous relationship with the truth, their categorical denials would seem to prove the story beyond doubt.
A News UK spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on suggestions the company’s chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, was also involved in the discussions.
Guto Harri, the current Downing Street director of communications, was an adviser at News UK, the owner of the Times, between 2012 and 2015.
Contrary to online speculation, there is no superinjunction or specific legal issue preventing reporting of the story.
He knows that they are only helping the Tories,if they just unilaterally support every strike.I like neeps wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 7:44 pm Sir Beer is banning labour front benchers from picketing during the strikes.
If we ignore the hypocrisy - he used to call himself a proud trade unionist - it's maybe not sensible as the unions give labour the monies and labour are going bust. I predict a very difficult few months as more and more strikes happen. As a former DPP it's going to be fascinating to see where he stands on the barrister strike.
Okay but if you don't support workers getting a payrise during huge inflation (and remember rent and housing costs aren't including in the figure) what do you support?fishfoodie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 9:04 pmHe knows that they are only helping the Tories,if they just unilaterally support every strike.I like neeps wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 7:44 pm Sir Beer is banning labour front benchers from picketing during the strikes.
If we ignore the hypocrisy - he used to call himself a proud trade unionist - it's maybe not sensible as the unions give labour the monies and labour are going bust. I predict a very difficult few months as more and more strikes happen. As a former DPP it's going to be fascinating to see where he stands on the barrister strike.
All they need to do is say that the strikes wouldn't be happening if the Tories hadn't fucked the economy, trashed benefits, & increased taxes to the highest level since rationing was still in effect.
Another few days & the by-election results will be in, & the Tory MPs will have more to worry about than train strikes.
He has to be a pragmatist. If he's honest about what his Government will do, then he'll join all the other failure leaders that Labour has had.I like neeps wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:23 amOkay but if you don't support workers getting a payrise during huge inflation (and remember rent and housing costs aren't including in the figure) what do you support?fishfoodie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 9:04 pmHe knows that they are only helping the Tories,if they just unilaterally support every strike.I like neeps wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 7:44 pm Sir Beer is banning labour front benchers from picketing during the strikes.
If we ignore the hypocrisy - he used to call himself a proud trade unionist - it's maybe not sensible as the unions give labour the monies and labour are going bust. I predict a very difficult few months as more and more strikes happen. As a former DPP it's going to be fascinating to see where he stands on the barrister strike.
All they need to do is say that the strikes wouldn't be happening if the Tories hadn't fucked the economy, trashed benefits, & increased taxes to the highest level since rationing was still in effect.
Another few days & the by-election results will be in, & the Tory MPs will have more to worry about than train strikes.
The RMT are potentially too militant I appreciate that. But at some point Sir Beers is going to have to support people who are being screwed by years of stagnant pay and now huge real term pay decreases.
Lying douchbags you say:fishfoodie wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:47 amHe has to be a pragmatist. If he's honest about what his Government will do, then he'll join all the other failure leaders that Labour has had.I like neeps wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:23 amOkay but if you don't support workers getting a payrise during huge inflation (and remember rent and housing costs aren't including in the figure) what do you support?fishfoodie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 9:04 pm
He knows that they are only helping the Tories,if they just unilaterally support every strike.
All they need to do is say that the strikes wouldn't be happening if the Tories hadn't fucked the economy, trashed benefits, & increased taxes to the highest level since rationing was still in effect.
Another few days & the by-election results will be in, & the Tory MPs will have more to worry about than train strikes.
The RMT are potentially too militant I appreciate that. But at some point Sir Beers is going to have to support people who are being screwed by years of stagnant pay and now huge real term pay decreases.
The UK voters are still stupid enough to vote for the same lying douch bags who've widened the gap between between rich & poor, & think thousands of food banks is, "Uplifting"
I like neeps wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:23 am
Okay but if you don't support workers getting a payrise during huge inflation (and remember rent and housing costs aren't including in the figure) what do you support?
Sure but Labour aren't in charge they don't need to enact on the policies. They just need to look like they have a plan/aren't a bunch of Johnson's who will say whatever is needed to get into power. There will be a lot of strikes this year - labour need a response.Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:57 amI like neeps wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:23 am
Okay but if you don't support workers getting a payrise during huge inflation (and remember rent and housing costs aren't including in the figure) what do you support?
Avoiding the still more damaging consequences of stagflation. It's shit, but there aren't any great options available
My parents have come round to being staunchly anti-Tory over the last decade, but they're also vehemently anti-strike/anti-union and it reveals that I've a lot of work still to do with them.fishfoodie wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 9:04 pmHe knows that they are only helping the Tories,if they just unilaterally support every strike.I like neeps wrote: ↑Mon Jun 20, 2022 7:44 pm Sir Beer is banning labour front benchers from picketing during the strikes.
If we ignore the hypocrisy - he used to call himself a proud trade unionist - it's maybe not sensible as the unions give labour the monies and labour are going bust. I predict a very difficult few months as more and more strikes happen. As a former DPP it's going to be fascinating to see where he stands on the barrister strike.
All they need to do is say that the strikes wouldn't be happening if the Tories hadn't fucked the economy, trashed benefits, & increased taxes to the highest level since rationing was still in effect.
Another few days & the by-election results will be in, & the Tory MPs will have more to worry about than train strikes.