Metal Biker
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 3 Jul 2009
- Messages
- 22,612
- Team supported
- Manchester City (and McLaren F1)
You guys should set up a victim support group.
The endless ‘poor me’ whinge fests. Relax. Take a day off. Get laid.
You guys should set up a victim support group.
The endless ‘poor me’ whinge fests. Relax. Take a day off. Get laid.
Fascinating Vic, really fascinating.That would be the pointless article a month ago which somehow expected Labour to go against its constitution and ditch its elected leader.
Same author this week:
It doesn’t matter that the psephological sage John Curtice rates Labour’s chance of winning a majority at close to zero, because Corbyn doesn’t need to win a majority. If he can just do enough to deny the Tories an overall majority, he could turn to the SNP, Plaid Cymru and others to push him across the line. He might not need to gain many seats; he might not even need the help of the Liberal Democrats. Put simply, Labour, too, has a steep and narrow path to Downing Street – steeper than the Tories’, given the polls, but smoother in the sense that while Johnson needs to win at least 321 seats to stay in No 10, Corbyn could get there with as few as 270.
He’s being helped in that effort by some jaw-dropping, unforced Tory errors. Slow to act on floods in Yorkshire, the Tories once again showed their compassionate side this week when Dominic Raab defended a government decision to seek legal costs from the parents of Harry Dunn, who was killed in a collision allegedly involving the wife of a US diplomat. And the dishonesty and deceptions keep coming.
Meanwhile, twice as many young people have registered to vote this time as in 2017 and the NHS has pulled ahead of Brexit as the most important issue for voters – both of which should make the terrain more favourable to Labour.
Apparently the report on Russian interference in the referendum cant be released because they wont give Johnson a security clearance.... so he cant sign off its release
boris johnson and his security clearance
People in glass houses eh?
That would be the pointless article a month ago which somehow expected Labour to go against its constitution and ditch its elected leader.
Same author this week:
It doesn’t matter that the psephological sage John Curtice rates Labour’s chance of winning a majority at close to zero, because Corbyn doesn’t need to win a majority. If he can just do enough to deny the Tories an overall majority, he could turn to the SNP, Plaid Cymru and others to push him across the line. He might not need to gain many seats; he might not even need the help of the Liberal Democrats. Put simply, Labour, too, has a steep and narrow path to Downing Street – steeper than the Tories’, given the polls, but smoother in the sense that while Johnson needs to win at least 321 seats to stay in No 10, Corbyn could get there with as few as 270.
He’s being helped in that effort by some jaw-dropping, unforced Tory errors. Slow to act on floods in Yorkshire, the Tories once again showed their compassionate side this week when Dominic Raab defended a government decision to seek legal costs from the parents of Harry Dunn, who was killed in a collision allegedly involving the wife of a US diplomat. And the dishonesty and deceptions keep coming.
Meanwhile, twice as many young people have registered to vote this time as in 2017 and the NHS has pulled ahead of Brexit as the most important issue for voters – both of which should make the terrain more favourable to Labour.
Looking forward to seeing BoJo on the climate debate tonight.
Also people accused him of chickening out of the BBC interview, whereas the word on the street is that he is going to do an interview. ( with Andrew Marr).
From the Foot catastrophe, It took Labour 9 years to get an electable leader (John Smith) and a further 4 years to get to a point where the voters were comfortable with the possibility of a Labour government. I have no doubt that John Smith would have won the 1997 general election had he not died, though not with the massive majority that Tony Blair got.With the Momentum grip on the party, there's a very real possibility they would seek to replace Corbyn with someone equally unelectable. Not sure they have anyone who can fill those boots quite so well - apart from Marxist McDonnell of course - but there's a couple who would give it a good shot, and she is definitely one of them.
Knowing little about this period of politics, being a mere sprog at the time, does that mean John Smith was behind the New Labour idea, or is that still uniquely Blairs?From the Foot catastrophe, It took Labour 9 years to get an electable leader (John Smith) and a further 4 years to get to a point where the voters were comfortable with the possibility of a Labour government. I have no doubt that John Smith would have won the 1997 general election had he not died, though not with the massive majority that Tony Blair got.
Incidently the two mess ups that really killed the Tories were EU related with membership of the EMU and Maastricht, both of which decimated the Tory vote with DE voters, a fact that Remainers seem to forget.
From the Foot catastrophe, It took Labour 9 years to get an electable leader (John Smith) and a further 4 years to get to a point where the voters were comfortable with the possibility of a Labour government. I have no doubt that John Smith would have won the 1997 general election under him, though not with the massive majority that Tony Blair got.
Kinnock started it with the purge of Millitant but it was a combination of Smith/Blair/Brown & Mendleson that produced the New Labour idea.Knowing little about this period of politics, being a mere sprog at the time, does that mean John Smith was behind the New Labour idea, or is that still uniquely Blairs?
Which produced the most successful Labour governments ever, which (although I am not their biggest fan) did very many good things for poorer people and for public services.Kinnock started it with the purge of Millitant but it was a combination of Smith/Blair/Brown & Mendleson that produced the New Labour idea.
Smith struck me at the time as really genuine and it's a tragedy that he died when he did. I always found Blair a bit plastic by comparison.Knowing little about this period of politics, being a mere sprog at the time, does that mean John Smith was behind the New Labour idea, or is that still uniquely Blairs?
I'm admittedly an advocate of the concept; take a little from column A and B and find a middle ground. Most of the country did too.Smith struck me at the time as really genuine and it's a tragedy that he died when he did. I always found Blair a bit plastic by comparison.
"BuT tHe IrAq WaR...!"Which produced the most successful Labour governments ever, which (although I am not their biggest fan) did very many good things for poorer people and for public services.
And which Corbyn then regarded with total disgust, and voted against at every opportunity. Says a lot, doesn't it.
"In a column in The Spectator in 1995, the Prime Minister said "blue collar" men in Britain were probably "drunk, criminal, aimless, feckless and hopeless, and perhaps claiming to suffer from low self-esteem"“Working class men are feckless, hopeless and likely to be drunk”
children raised by single mothers are “ill raised, aggressive, ignorant & illegitimate”
Just a few of today’s unearthed quotes from Boris!