Suella Braverman - sacked as Home Secretary (p394)

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If Labour don’t get in at the next election, they may as well just disband. Any credible alternative party would absolutely wipe the floor with this shower.
 
6 letters. Begins with B.

He was a remainer. The vote wasn’t really foreign policy in the true sense more to put the internal debate to bed, he never expected to lose - he never should have. Brexit wasn’t even lost because we had a vote (although the wisdom to ask us to vote on monumental decisions is very questionable) but rather because remain got dragged in to leaves orbit. The EU costs us £x million, no it doesn’t it only costs us £y million. The vote was won or lost on this. Remain should have said for the money we get and said it loud and proud.

We’re not generally a radical group of people on this fair isle and remain grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory.
 
Most of them don’t need to but that doesn’t stop the greedy bankers.

Sunak will be getting his rewards for oil licenses and £500m bung to Tata.

Everything in this country is smoke and mirrors. If I said “let’s become communists” then, aside from @Rascal I’d probably get a lot of negative answers but the reality is every single penny we earn eventually goes to the state. Every single penny. The only difference between capitalism and communism is time.
 
Clarke would be an excellent choice (perhaps he was approached). Not sure about Heseltine, he’s a bit more divisive.

And just like Cameron they belong in the past.

Although the Conservative Party will soon exist only in history books, so perhaps it's fitting that Rishi has one last tour of his Tory supergroup.
 
He was a remainer. The vote wasn’t really foreign policy in the true sense more to put the internal debate to bed, he never expected to lose - he never should have. Brexit wasn’t even lost because we had a vote (although the wisdom to ask us to vote on monumental decisions is very questionable) but rather because remain got dragged in to leaves orbit. The EU costs us £x million, no it doesn’t it only costs us £y million. The vote was won or lost on this. Remain should have said for the money we get and said it loud and proud.

We’re not generally a radical group of people on this fair isle and remain grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory.
I know he was a remainer and his foreign policy in relation to Europe failed disastrously. He went there to try and secure concessions that he could present to the British people as justification for our future full participation in the EU and failed miserably.
 
To my mind, this is Sunak figuring out the Government needs to be more 'left' (in Tory terms) to attract moderate voters, especially those in prosperous southern areas.

It's a gamble because the populist right is so strong in his party (especially at the grass-roots level, given that most members are septuagenarian UKIP types) that it could shatter the Conservative Party 'coalition' completely. Voters tend not to support parties that are engaged in civil war.

Sunak is showing unexpected strength here. I didn't think he had the bottle. However, his party may well now smash itself. Will some desert, either to Reform or to some sort of new, populist party?
 
He was a remainer. The vote wasn’t really foreign policy in the true sense more to put the internal debate to bed, he never expected to lose - he never should have. Brexit wasn’t even lost because we had a vote (although the wisdom to ask us to vote on monumental decisions is very questionable) but rather because remain got dragged in to leaves orbit. The EU costs us £x million, no it doesn’t it only costs us £y million. The vote was won or lost on this. Remain should have said for the money we get and said it loud and proud.

We’re not generally a radical group of people on this fair isle and remain grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory.
Brexit was won on one theme: immigration.
 
To my mind, this is Sunak figuring out the Government needs to be more 'left' (in Tory terms) to attract moderate voters, especially those in prosperous southern areas.

It's a gamble because the populist right is so strong in his party (especially at the grass-roots level, given that most members are septuagenarian UKIP types) that it could shatter the Conservative Party 'coalition' completely. Voters tend not to support parties that are engaged in civil war.

Sunak is showing unexpected strength here. I didn't think he had the bottle. However, his party may well now smash itself. Will some desert, either to Reform or to some sort of new, populist party?
I think it’s more desperation than strength.
 
He was a remainer. The vote wasn’t really foreign policy in the true sense more to put the internal debate to bed, he never expected to lose - he never should have. Brexit wasn’t even lost because we had a vote (although the wisdom to ask us to vote on monumental decisions is very questionable) but rather because remain got dragged in to leaves orbit. The EU costs us £x million, no it doesn’t it only costs us £y million. The vote was won or lost on this. Remain should have said for the money we get and said it loud and proud.

We’re not generally a radical group of people on this fair isle and remain grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory.


We would have still been in the EU if the sneering bastards running the remain campaign didn't stoop to jingoism like leave.

When I saw that runt on the boat Geldof putting the v's up and the constant slurs from remain I had a feeling my vote was going to be wasted.
 
And just like Cameron they belong in the past.

Although the Conservative Party will soon exist only in history books, so perhaps it's fitting that Rishi has one last tour of his Tory supergroup.

I’m not convinced the Tory party will exist in the past… unless the Labour Party want to exist in the centre for eternity?

100% out next election which is why having Cameron in is smart. Hopefully the current government can start to clear up some of the mess before a changing of government. Look on the bright side we’ve got rid of a highly divisive figure and replaced her with someone who doesn’t want to mine the English Channel.
 
To my mind, this is Sunak figuring out the Government needs to be more 'left' (in Tory terms) to attract moderate voters, especially those in prosperous southern areas.

It's a gamble because the populist right is so strong in his party (especially at the grass-roots level, given that most members are septuagenarian UKIP types) that it could shatter the Conservative Party 'coalition' completely. Voters tend not to support parties that are engaged in civil war.

Sunak is showing unexpected strength here. I didn't think he had the bottle. However, his party may well now smash itself. Will some desert, either to Reform or to some sort of new, populist party?
Poundland Hitler and Braun of Reform will be running their campaign on their talk TV show from today.
 
We would have still been in the EU if the sneering bastards running the remain campaign didn't stoop to jingoism like leave.

When I saw that runt on the boat Geldof putting the v's up and the constant slurs from remain I had a feeling my vote was going to be wasted.

They felt so sure they’d win. May was the same when she had her first run with corbyn… maybe minus the V’s…thought no one would vote for him so she didn’t campaign. Nearly lost it.
 
Everything in this country is smoke and mirrors. If I said “let’s become communists” then, aside from @Rascal I’d probably get a lot of negative answers but the reality is every single penny we earn eventually goes to the state. Every single penny. The only difference between capitalism and communism is time.

A very strange take. Is this a quote or your own original thought?
 
So when a conservative, does a conservative thing, they get flinged out. Makes me laugh when people opine how right wing of a government they are.

You think it's the job of a conservative home secretary to confect a public feud with the Met police and incite a baying mob to start kicking off at the Cenotaph on armistice Day?

Admit it, you're just annoyed cos she a bit fash and you like that.
 
Ok, thanks Denis for again not answering the question I asked.

Hope you are well.
FFS!
No he isn’t accountable directly to the commons.
He can be called to answer questions in the Lords.
There is nothing unusual about this.
You seem surprisingly ignorant of U.K. constitutional procedures.
 

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