The Conservative Party

Myself and the wife have an NPAB agreement, in the case of either one of us being in a situation where we are hospitalised in a terrorist, natural disaster or any situation where we are injured in a national/international crisis .
It stands for No Politician At Bedside ! No way are we doing the photo opportunity for any politician .
 
It's the Tory way, poverty is a product of poor life choices.

In this shit show the poor are on their own and that's how it should be.

Upsides it'll incentives them even more to change their ways and get their act together.

This is worth a read....

For brazen cynicism, I have seen nothing like Sunak’s plan in 40 years

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...ave-seen-nothing-like-sunaks-plan-in-40-years
He let the cat out of the bag when he said that it was a policy for ‘the hard working family’, and although it won’t be much help for them, they‘re going to be better off than the millions who still work but need the welfare state to help them.

Disgusting government make disgusting decisions, nothing shocks us anymore.
 
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how both my kids got a first is beyond me




That graph is damning.

Unsurprising, Zahawi didn't answer the question but went for the much loved Big Numbers Quoting that the ministers love. Claiming that the austerity was important because of what's happened with covid may have some merit, but doesn't answer why education was shredded as that graph shows.
 
Fixed that (what the judges said). Isn't that perjury?

I think you can correct errors made in previous statements.

It may also be different when the people are representing an organisation like the Home Office. Patel clearly didn't go to court herself.

More likely is that the HO policy is to lie wilfully and see if someone has the resources to pull them up on it.
 
how both my kids got a first is beyond me



With the recent changes in University Fee payments, it’s clear that the government want our next generation to be educated to a limited standard so that they take up all the menial jobs while the wealthy continue to take the best jobs with their graduate status.

Are we moving back to the upper, middle and working class system?
 
With the recent changes in University Fee payments, it’s clear that the government want our next generation to be educated to a limited standard so that they take up all the menial jobs while the wealthy continue to take the best jobs with their graduate status.

Are we moving back to the upper, middle and working class system?

This is the reality they yearn for

 
Rishi Sunak announces 19p tax rate for rest of the UK in 2024
( 7 years after Scotland )

You're welcome. I'm here all week.
 
I think you can correct errors made in previous statements.

It may also be different when the people are representing an organisation like the Home Office. Patel clearly didn't go to court herself.

More likely is that the HO policy is to lie wilfully and see if someone has the resources to pull them up on it.
Nevertheless, she is the defendant, not the Home Office.

And the court believes she failed in her "duty of candour" (legalese for telling the truth). And she has still to account for that to the court.

"A further hearing, following this judgment, will be required to consider what relief is required and to address also the extent and consequences of an apparent failure by the defendant (for which the court has received an apology) to comply with her duty of candour when responding to these claims for judicial review. Her initial stance was that there was no policy of the kind which is now admitted, and which is also now admitted to have been unlawful."

32 "In their grounds of claim, the claimants contend that, at the relevant times, the defendant was operating a policy of seizing all mobile telephones from migrants arriving in small boats. Although, as we shall see, the unlawfulness of this "blanket" seizure policy has been conceded by the defendant, the claimants complain that the concession is, in several respects, incomplete. They say it is extremely belated and that the defendant breached her duty of candour, not only because she failed to mention it earlier but also because the defendant in fact made statements denying the existence of the policy. In pre-action correspondence, it was said on behalf of the defendant that (claimant) HM's assertion of a "blanket policy" was "based on anecdote and surmise". Following the initiation of the proceedings, the defendant did not resile from that position in her summary grounds of defence to HM's claim. It was only in correspondence on 25 June 2021 and then in her amended detailed grounds of resistance to the claim of HM that it was accepted the defendant's position, as put forward both prior to commencement of the claim and in the acknowledgment of service, was "inadvertently inconsistent with the duty of candour". The defendant has offered "an unreserved apology" and has sought, apparently unsuccessfully, to understand how the error had come to be made.

33 "We shall need to say more about all this in due course."
 
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fucking great - the price cap on energy goes from @£1200 to £3k pa and Sunak t6hinks he can fix things by giving people a £50 rebate on CT - probably to the detriment of local services as he is unlikely to replace the funding from central coffers - the smoke and mirrors will not last the year out

 

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