Alexandole Boris de Pfeffel Johnson

Just my humble opinion. No worse or better than yours.
It's a terrible opinion and miles worse than his. What metric are you using to describe his job as a good one?
I get that Tories will defend the various shit shows they often create but even the most ardent should accept their man in charge is a laughing stock to anybody outside the Conservative bubble.
 
It's a terrible opinion and miles worse than his. What metric are you using to describe his job as a good one?
I get that Tories will defend the various shit shows they often create but even the most ardent should accept their man in charge is a laughing stock to anybody outside the Conservative bubble.

It's unfortunate for you that the Labour Party is pretty much an irrelevance and non entity nowadays.

I personally think he's done a good job of handling brexit and the Covid situation.
 
It's unfortunate for you that the Labour Party is pretty much an irrelevance and non entity nowadays.

I personally think he's done a good job of handling brexit and the Covid situation.
It's fortunate I live in Spain and don't vote either Labour or Conservative.
I personally think your bar is extremely low if that's what you really think.
 
It's a terrible opinion and miles worse than his. What metric are you using to describe his job as a good one?
I get that Tories will defend the various shit shows they often create but even the most ardent should accept their man in charge is a laughing stock to anybody outside the Conservative bubble.
Folk still like this clown because he ruffles his hair before he gives a speech goes on tv etc etc. Unbelievable but sadly true.
 
PMQ is getting farcical. Trump, however nasty, at least seemed to understand questions. Johnson, when not barefaced lying, seems in another world.


Look at this first question yesterday, and the bizarre answer.

Ronnie Cowan [SNP, Inverclyde)


I know that the Prime Minister is not a supporter of basic income, but given that Hull, Belfast, Norwich, Leeds, Lambeth, Guildford, Swansea, Glasgow and 24 other councils around the United Kingdom have expressed a desire to run pilot schemes that would enhance our knowledge of all the pros and cons, would he consider facilitating any pilot projects in the United Kingdom? Have the UK Government considered any research into basic income, and if so, what?

The Prime Minister

I am grateful to the hon. Member for his support for a UK-wide proposal. I trust that he understands the irony of that, when we consider that his party is, as I understand it, still hellbent on calling an irresponsible referendum on breaking up the United Kingdom.
 
And then this:

Fay Jones
(Brecon and Radnorshire) (Con)


Farmers in Brecon and Radnorshire have worked tirelessly to give us world-class British food throughout the pandemic. In return, the Welsh Labour and Liberal Democrat Government have given them a slap in the face with their nitrate vulnerable zone policy, which will do nothing for water quality and ignores the water companies dumping thousands of tonnes of sewage into our rivers. Does the Prime Minister agree that this demonstrates Welsh Labour’s absolute contempt for rural areas such as mine?

The Prime Minister

Yes, my hon. Friend is entirely right, because agriculture is of course devolved in Wales. If people want to send a clear signal and they want change in the way farmers are treated in Wales, then I hope they will vote Conservative in the Welsh Assembly elections in just two weeks’ time and vote for a party that actually champions agriculture and believes in it.

The background:
The Welsh Government, perhaps prompted by an incident when a farmer spread slurry on saturated ground and it got into a SSSI river, is making all of Wales a "nitrate vulnerable zone". But Johnson's government has made 55% of England NVZs - and that's 55% of all land including built-up areas. Silly too - I'd have thought there were more votes in protecting people from cowshit in watercourses than in allowing it.
 
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And then this:

Fay Jones
(Brecon and Radnorshire) (Con)


Farmers in Brecon and Radnorshire have worked tirelessly to give us world-class British food throughout the pandemic. In return, the Welsh Labour and Liberal Democrat Government have given them a slap in the face with their nitrate vulnerable zone policy, which will do nothing for water quality and ignores the water companies dumping thousands of tonnes of sewage into our rivers. Does the Prime Minister agree that this demonstrates Welsh Labour’s absolute contempt for rural areas such as mine?

The Prime Minister

Yes, my hon. Friend is entirely right, because agriculture is of course devolved in Wales. If people want to send a clear signal and they want change in the way farmers are treated in Wales, then I hope they will vote Conservative in the Welsh Assembly elections in just two weeks’ time and vote for a party that actually champions agriculture and believes in it.

The background:
The Welsh Government, perhaps prompted by an incident when a farmer spread slurry on saturated ground and it got into a SSSI river, is making all of Wales a "nitrate vulnerable zone". But Johnson's government has made 55% of England NVZs - at that's 55% of all land including built-up areas. Silly too - I'd have thought there were more votes in protecting people from cowshit in watercourses than in allowing it.

its all just blatant electioneering - trying to minimise the number of votes about to be lost to Plaid on the SNP
 

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