Do you want to discuss boring politics? (29 Viewers)

Grendel

Well-Known Member
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
He did but on the flip side, he said he planned to raise the pension age during the presidential election campaign and was re-elected 🤷‍♂️

I’m no fan of Macron or the presidential system but he’s not doing this for his own benefit. Difficult decisions are rarely popular. Many people prefer for the can to be kicked down the road, leave the problem for someone else to deal with and that’s when you end up with the Johnson’s of this world promising the Earth and delivering very little
I'm not arguing the decision to raise it, I'm arguing the bypassing of a democratic prrocess to do it.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I'm not arguing the decision to raise it, I'm arguing the bypassing of a democratic prrocess to do it.

I assume he has powers to do it in their republican constitution surely?
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
I'm not arguing the decision to raise it, I'm arguing the bypassing of a democratic prrocess to do it.

Yeah, mine was a general point about the French really. They chose to have a republic, they re-elected a president who said he planned to reform pensions/raise pension age…and now they’re rioting when their elected president uses his presidential powers to implement the changes he forewarned them about 🤷‍♂️

Also general point that unfortunately as we all live longer there’s going to have to be more tough calls to be made surrounding pension age, higher taxes for social care and health etc, the sooner politicians are honest with the public about this, the better
 
Last edited:
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
As a small aside, I read the headline and thought yes, it was ridiculous she was doing a list.


Then I read the list and it's... four people. OK, I don't like them, but would I like anybody Liz Truss nominated? And at least it's not her Mum - it's not exactly on a Johnson level, is it?
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
As a small aside, I read the headline and thought yes, it was ridiculous she was doing a list.


Then I read the list and it's... four people. OK, I don't like them, but would I like anybody Liz Truss nominated? And at least it's not her Mum - it's not exactly on a Johnson level, is it?
Littlewood getting a nod after bigging up the mini-budget is pretty funny.
 

Northants Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Thing is those 4 were architects of a catastrophic budget which will cost us taxpayers billions and billions

Instead of becoming law-making Lords they should be doing a long stretch in Broadmoor
As a small aside, I read the headline and thought yes, it was ridiculous she was doing a list.


Then I read the list and it's... four people. OK, I don't like them, but would I like anybody Liz Truss nominated? And at least it's not her Mum - it's not exactly on a Johnson level, is it?
 
Last edited:

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Used to deal with one of his companies where I worked.
. He had cash flow problems, got special payment terms but eventually we took the work of him.
We took half the process in house and out sourced the other half to a firm down south. The fella that owned that company made very serious money out of it.
God knows how Godfrey fucked it up, I think he maynot be quite as shrewd as he thinks, not sure why anyone would listen to him about anything!

Tony probably stopped voting for ukip when they removed the whip from him
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
@shmmeee approves of the HoL, with its unelected, partisan membership (Clergy and Cronies basically).

Go figure.

As you approve one assumes of a republic where a little napoleon can do what he likes
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
When did “unelected” become the worst possible thing in the world? The vast majority of people in any democracy aren’t elected and never have been. We hear it about the civil service, the EU, the HoL.

Where does it end? Elections for teachers and bin men?
 

JAM See

Well-Known Member
When did “unelected” become the worst possible thing in the world? The vast majority of people in any democracy aren’t elected and never have been. We hear it about the civil service, the EU, the HoL.

Where does it end? Elections for teachers and bin men?
Nobody has a 'job for life', except the lawmakers in the HoL.

It's a crony riddled gravy train that has actual embedded political power.

It's not fit for purpose. It was a temporary solution enabled by the Parliament Act 1911, and the fact that it's still bumbling along today is a disgrace.
 
Last edited:

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Nobody has a 'job for life', except the lawmakers in the HoL.

It's a crony riddled gravy train that has actual embedded political power.

It's not fit for purpose. It was a temporary solution enabled by the Parliament Act 1911, and the fact that it's still bumbling along today is a disgrace.

Yeah jobs for life shouldn’t exist but that wasn’t your main complaint it was that they were unelected.

Its far more fit for purpose than an elected second chamber which would be an absolute joke as well as a serious weakening of the law making process IMO.

Frankly anyone anti Brexit should be glad the Lords exists.
 

JAM See

Well-Known Member
Yeah jobs for life shouldn’t exist but that wasn’t your main complaint it was that they were unelected.

Its far more fit for purpose than an elected second chamber which would be an absolute joke as well as a serious weakening of the law making process IMO.

Frankly anyone anti Brexit should be glad the Lords exists.
If I wanted your opinion, I'd give it to you.
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
The worst thing about this is not the obscene amounts of cash they're asking for, but the fact they're so easily duped into talking to a fake company. Seemingly no vetting process, just whoring themselves out to anyone with the money.


 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Yeah jobs for life shouldn’t exist but that wasn’t your main complaint it was that they were unelected.

Its far more fit for purpose than an elected second chamber which would be an absolute joke as well as a serious weakening of the law making process IMO.

Frankly anyone anti Brexit should be glad the Lords exists.
How can it be a weakening of the law-making process when it can be effectively controlled by the party in government with new appointments. Just gets bigger and bigger and costs more? Plus the government can overrule them and push legislation through anyway, using the excuse they have no mandate as they're unelected.

At least an elected chamber might better reflect the overall mood of the population and thus have a mandate.

Obviously it would depend on how it was implemented but I can't see how having an unelected upper chamber chosen by the parties in power is better. Why not just go back to making it controlled by the crown and landowners?
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
I
When did “unelected” become the worst possible thing in the world? The vast majority of people in any democracy aren’t elected and never have been. We hear it about the civil service, the EU, the HoL.

Where does it end? Elections for teachers and bin men?

yeah, would rather have some more ‘normal’ people in the HofL…rather than just packed with politicians.

ps

Yeah, mine was a general point about the French really. They chose to have a republic, they re-elected a president who said he planned to reform pensions/raise pension age…and now they’re rioting when their elected president uses his presidential powers to implement the changes he forewarned them about 🤷‍♂️

Also general point that unfortunately as we all live longer there’s going to have to be more tough calls to be made surrounding pension age, higher taxes for social care and health etc, the sooner politicians are honest with the public about this, the better

Bizarre timing but an interesting article below kind of covering some of this stuff. It’s not really about Johnson so much as how as a voting public we and most of the West, want things without the cost/consequence so end up with people like Johnson

 
Last edited:

Grendel

Well-Known Member
How can it be a weakening of the law-making process when it can be effectively controlled by the party in government with new appointments. Just gets bigger and bigger and costs more? Plus the government can overrule them and push legislation through anyway, using the excuse they have no mandate as they're unelected.

At least an elected chamber might better reflect the overall mood of the population and thus have a mandate.

Obviously it would depend on how it was implemented but I can't see how having an unelected upper chamber chosen by the parties in power is better. Why not just go back to making it controlled by the crown and landowners?

lol
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
How can it be a weakening of the law-making process when it can be effectively controlled by the party in government with new appointments. Just gets bigger and bigger and costs more? Plus the government can overrule them and push legislation through anyway, using the excuse they have no mandate as they're unelected.

At least an elected chamber might better reflect the overall mood of the population and thus have a mandate.

Obviously it would depend on how it was implemented but I can't see how having an unelected upper chamber chosen by the parties in power is better. Why not just go back to making it controlled by the crown and landowners?
But the elected chamber would just be a reflection of the other elected chamber, so completely pointless?
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Depends on what system we’d use to vote them in. If it’s FPTP then it would be pointless. If it was a different system that represented vote share then it would have a better bearing on what people voted and therefore a legitimacy.

Ah so would want a stalemate system where no legislation gets past a second chamber
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top