Sky_Blue_Dreamer
Well-Known Member
interesting
If Larry the cat has resigned he's fucked
Larry for PM!
interesting
If Larry the cat has resigned he's fucked
2 more from Number 10, PMs Private Secretary Martin Reynolds and Chief of Staff Dan Rosenfield
Was thinking the same. How many are resigning in faux outrage, how many are resigning because they’re culpable.Think they were off due to partygate mess anyway (agreed to resign rather than sacked)
I do agree that we should scrap VAT and the green levy on fuel bills to balance it out as much as possible but in the end this will be a reality for many other aspects of our lives. I think I read some countries in Europe - Denmark being the worst - have had even higher increases - we have not invested sufficiently in nuclear power to mitigate the need for gas fired electricity
It does go to prove though that if you vote for a clown you get the circus.
If anymore people leave No.10 tonight they’re not going to have enough for a party.
I'm not sure i agree, i think Johnson would have made as big a noise as possible about sacking them, also 2 of them are staying on until their replacements are found.Think they were off due to partygate mess anyway (agreed to resign rather than sacked)
I'd love you to be right but I can't see it. It'll damage them a bit but they'll be quick to push the "new leader, new Tories" mantra and sadly far too many people will fall for it.
Even if people are suffering with energy bills, food bills, mortgage increases there will still be this weird over-riding belief that the Tories are more economically competent.
The tories are trying to spin it that this is Johnson number 10 reshuffle, they really do think the public are idiots
Labour had more voters in 2019 than they did in 2015 or 2010.I'm naturally pessimistic but I don't see the Tories being able to form a government in 2024. They rode the "Brexit" wave in 2019 and only saw minimal increase in voters. Labour suffered from poor policy, what appeared to be general inneptitude, and Corbyn, resulting in very poor voter turnout.
They are a different proposition now and more alligned to the centre, a party many Labour voters (who didn't turn out to vote for in 2019) will feel they can vote for now. Couple that with the fact that there will be a number of Tory voters who don't turnout because of the s**t show of the previous 5 years and general corruption, I think you've got enough seats for a labour coalition government. Just look at the thousands of labour voters who didn't turn up in Coventry last time out.
Labour had more voters in 2019 than they did in 2015 or 2010.
Its problem will be that the younger voters it attracted that turned out in 2017 and 2019 probably won't bother to vote based on the current leader and policy agenda, so they have to hope enough people 'return' after having voted Tory in 2019. Might get a small majority but might not, boundary changes still to come.
Letting staff resign, rather than sacking them for misconduct, makes a leader look weak.Think they were off due to partygate mess anyway (agreed to resign rather than sacked)
Labour had more voters in 2019 than they did in 2015 or 2010.
Its problem will be that the younger voters it attracted that turned out in 2017 and 2019 probably won't bother to vote based on the current leader and policy agenda, so they have to hope enough people 'return' after having voted Tory in 2019. Might get a small majority but might not, boundary changes still to come.
We don’t run a national election. Number of votes overall means bugger all when you’re stacking them up in safe seats and haemorrhaging them in marginals.
If they get any majority at all after the 2019 bloodbath it’ll be a small miracle and more impressive than 1997.
That's just a load of bollocks.
I let you figure out why
Is it because you haven’t a fucking clue?
I haven't checked, but have you appeared in the bin strike thread yet?
Labour had more voters in 2019 than they did in 2015 or 2010.
Its problem will be that the younger voters it attracted that turned out in 2017 and 2019 probably won't bother to vote based on the current leader and policy agenda, so they have to hope enough people 'return' after having voted Tory in 2019. Might get a small majority but might not, boundary changes still to come.
Labour’s current response to the cost of living crisis is to politely enquire if the water people are drowning in is of a comfortable temperature.I want to see Labour run on what they have to offer, instead of going ‘we aren’t them’. Just offer a positive campaign based mostly on economic solutions for working people.
Labour’s current response to the cost of living crisis is to politely enquire if the water people are drowning in is of a comfortable temperature.
You and Grendel should get together, you’d have a cracking game of ping pong.
Link please.Looks like the Owen Paterson debacle still has some legs too. Apparently the government has been forced to hand over private messages between Owen Paterson and MHancock.
I'm not sure i agree, i think Johnson would have made as big a noise as possible about sacking them, also 2 of them are staying on until their replacements are found.
Link please.
I've long held the belief that the OP affair was much more insidious than partygate.
I actually wrote to my MP (Craig Tracey, CON, voted FOR the amendment) to ask his reasons. Got a blah blah blah response.
I will follow up with another mail if there are more legs in this story.
I want to see Labour run on what they have to offer, instead of going ‘we aren’t them’. Just offer a positive campaign based mostly on economic solutions for working people.
Wait for an election campaign. You don’t release policy before then for a multitude of reasons, mostly that it all gets hung around your neck later. Especially when no one knows what the economy will look like in a year or two.
Every policy announcement uses up some political capital, which until recently Labour had very little of.
The energy response of a windfall tax and removal of VAT is about all you’ll get: specific responses to “well what would you do?” When an issue arises
I’m not expecting policies right now. Just when the time comes I want an optimistic campaign