Churchlawtonblue
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2009
- Messages
- 16,617
True. Loving the cats analogy.He can be curt, btbh, he is trying to herd cats at times
True. Loving the cats analogy.He can be curt, btbh, he is trying to herd cats at times
Not sure why you're going off on one so much. I was only pointing out that the likes of McDonnell and Corbyn have no right to pontificate about the way Starmer deals with his MPs when it's clear that there was bullying and intimidation tactics being used against members of the Labour party when they were in charge. You can deny that it happened all you want but it was an open secret.If they were views widely shared within the party then I'd say yes. An example would be Trident renewal. We all know his personal position yet it was in both manifestos on his watch. The reason being it was a position carried at conference. If Starmer took a similar approach electoral reform would have been on the agenda.
So no the accusation that they operated in the same manner doesn't stand up to scrutiny. A reminder of McDonnell's words.
It is the absolute hollowing out of democracy in the Labour party, which enables a centralisation of power under a self-serving bureaucracy that is effectively out of control, operating with impunity.
And even though he didn't win a GE, there were plenty of stories flying around about Momentum's dubious tactics while he was leader. Maybe you were living on a different planet at the time and weren't aware of it:
Lol. More like an avalanche of 'stories', day in day out. As for "Momentum's dubious tactics", the article you cite and your interpretation of it is quite telling. You take at face value the accusations made by the likes of Neil Coyle (check out his record) that whatever push back these MP's received, whether legitimate or not, was all centrally organised by their factional opponents.
Again the point was about dissenters being silenced when the reality was anything but ... they could makeup any old shit and get a hearing.
Sure but McDonnell was making a wider point, not exclusively, but largely about selection processes. Again the article you cite is quite informative. Contrast the horror of deselection under Corbyn, which didn't happen, with the total lack of curiosity shown to the numerous deselection processes under this regime. I mean there was a sitting metro mayor removed from a list of candidates for a newly created wider jurisdiction for the heinous crime of sharing a platform with Ken Loach. At least that was the official justification.
Again comparing MP's dissenting against throwing vulnerable people under the bus with MP's cry arsing about temporarily losing factional control is pretty disingenuous imo.
What percentage of these people do you think are just lazy and need nothing more than a kick up the arse?
This is a genuine question, btw. Maybe it's an insignificant <1%? Or maybe more than that. Related, we've seen a huge change lately from people saying they feel stressed, or a bit depressed, to "it's affecting my mental health". I don't want to trivialise clinical depression which is obviously a serious condition. But it's very different from just being pissed off, and it seems to me, many people who are just a bit stressed or pissed off are jumping on the "it's affecting my mental health" bandwagon.
Which post are you referring to and what question was it in response to?It was just that Hampshire blokes inept attempt at deflection because he couldn't bring himself to answer a question on a football forum. People will pay extra if everyone is in it together. Fuck corporations and greedy fuckers getting a pass because politicians are scared of them.
Self employed too tbh.
Not to worry, all those millionaires you say are leaving in droves will leave a big hole the immigrants can fill..I think a lot of people (me included) have a problem with legal migration as well.
I am not opposed to it in principle. The issue I have is essentially pragmatic:
1. Irrespective of planning reforms, we do not have the bandwidth in terms of electricians, plumbers, plasters, roofers, bricklayers etc, to build the requisite numbers of houses. My brother-in-law is a builder and knows this all too well. Have you tried getting hold of a plumber lately? Anyone who is any good is booked up for weeks or months. We cannot continue bringing hundreds of thousands of additional people into the country every year as things stand. We can't house them, we don't have sufficient hospital or healthcare capacity or transport or anything else. The country is FULL.
2. Social integration. Surely we can all agree we want a well-integrated, socially harmonious society where sure, everyone has their own cultural heritage but we all rub along and respect what we have in common and also our differences. In far too many cases, we don't have that at the moment. We have right wing racist thugs hell bent on "taking our country back" and we have largely Muslim communities not integrating and declaring Islamic no-go areas for westerners. This cannot continue and with immigration running at current rates, it's only going to get worse until something terrible finally snaps. We could even end up in civil war unless we start to take this problem very seriously.
I suppose it’s just a shame Starmer didn’t do the same yesterday when he was asked about it. Twice.Reeves looks well, speaking well and full of energy at NHS speech in London, Good on her. Big round of applause and cheers from the staff behind her.
Starmer speaking and praising the work reeves has done this year.
I suppose it’s just a shame Starmer didn’t do the same yesterday when he was asked about it. Twice.
She shouldn't have been there if she's got personal issues...bj was forever hiding and going missing when the going got tough.
The worrying thing for me is that neither her or anyone else could see she'd be a mess on the front bench.
He was asked a direct question on whether she’ll remain as Chancellor and refused to answer it.He did, he praised the work she done at the dispatch box yesterday - he was clearly unaware of her crying yesterday and was said to be puzzled when an aide raised her visible upset with him after the Commons session.
The one thing he couldn't do was say her position was unassailable (Thatcher re Lawson). That was worse than saying nothing.He was asked a direct question on whether she’ll remain as Chancellor and refused to answer it.
He threw her under the bus and then frantically tried to change his tune yesterday afternoon. Another u-turn.
He was asked a direct question on whether she’ll remain as Chancellor and refused to answer it.
He threw her under the bus and then frantically tried to change his tune yesterday afternoon. Another u-turn.
Yes, but those Sandmen can't half run fast !!As a fatty myself. A survival of the fattest/ Logans run style competition might motivate me to lose the weight.
He ‘s been asked the same question before (in January) and said that Reeves would be in charge during the full parliament.The one thing he couldn't do was say her position was unassailable (Thatcher re Lawson). That was worse than saying nothing.
Reeves looks well, speaking well and full of energy at NHS speech in London, Good on her. Big round of applause and cheers from the staff behind her.
Starmer speaking and praising the work reeves has done this year.
How are the markets doing now? Oh, that's right - they fully recovered in next to no time and are up again so far today. One thing's for sure - the markets aren't anywhere near as spooked by all this than people like you are, and they seem quite happy with Reeves being chancellor.He ‘s been asked the same question before (in January) and said that Reeves would be in charge during the full parliament.
Which is why the question was asked yesterday.
And yesterday he gave a different response, caused a fallout across markets and then had to change his tune in the afternoon.
He’s lurching from one balls up to another.
He did, he praised the work she done at the dispatch box yesterday - he was clearly unaware of her crying yesterday and was said to be puzzled when an aide raised her visible upset with him after the Commons session.
Did you not find it strange he didn’t look at her during PMQ?
He did right to not answer it and lower his standards to Badenoughs level.He was asked a direct question on whether she’ll remain as Chancellor and refused to answer it.
He threw her under the bus and then frantically tried to change his tune yesterday afternoon. Another u-turn.