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@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
NSFW
I actually think Pie has gotten a bit boring & repetitive over the last two years. Mainly because
- Half the media is actually Pie these days.
- He's had too much material to work with.
He's now a bit like an old man yelling at the clouds.
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@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
NSFW
I actually think Pie has gotten a bit boring & repetitive over the last two years. Mainly because
- Half the media is actually Pie these days.
- He's had too much material to work with.
He's now a bit like an old man yelling at the clouds.
Yeah used to love his rants, then it just got a bit Laura K in drag.
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@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
NSFW
I actually think Pie has gotten a bit boring & repetitive over the last two years. Mainly because
- Half the media is actually Pie these days.
- He's had too much material to work with.
He's now a bit like an old man yelling at the clouds.
Well if he stops who else is going to call the Tories fluffybunnies and call (Prince) Andrew's actions for what they are?
No fucker
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@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
NSFW
I actually think Pie has gotten a bit boring & repetitive over the last two years. Mainly because
- Half the media is actually Pie these days.
- He's had too much material to work with.
He's now a bit like an old man yelling at the clouds.
Well if he stops who else is going to call the Tories fluffybunnies and call (Prince) Andrew's actions for what they are?
No fucker
Apart from 3/4 of twitter, pretty much so every political commentator and of course, Piers Morgan!
Ultimately, I'm bored of the abuse and I want to see the solutions.
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@MajorRage said in British Politics:
Ultimately, I'm bored of the abuse and I want to see the solutions.
Solutions & pragmatism don't matter. It's what you feel which is important.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in British Politics:
@MajorRage said in British Politics:
Ultimately, I'm bored of the abuse and I want to see the solutions.
Solutions & pragmatism don't matter. It's what you feel which is important.
Does offended count?
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@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@Victor-Meldrew said in British Politics:
@MajorRage said in British Politics:
Ultimately, I'm bored of the abuse and I want to see the solutions.
Solutions & pragmatism don't matter. It's what you feel which is important.
Does offended count?
Of course. But you can only be offended if you feel in the correct way.
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@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
@MajorRage said in British Politics:
@MiketheSnow said in British Politics:
NSFW
I actually think Pie has gotten a bit boring & repetitive over the last two years. Mainly because
- Half the media is actually Pie these days.
- He's had too much material to work with.
He's now a bit like an old man yelling at the clouds.
Well if he stops who else is going to call the Tories fluffybunnies and call (Prince) Andrew's actions for what they are?
No fucker
Apart from 3/4 of twitter, pretty much so every political commentator and of course, Piers Morgan!
Ultimately, I'm bored of the abuse and I want to see the solutions.
👏
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Right, popcorn at the ready. No confidence vote in Boris tonight by the Conservatives. This is brought on by 15% all Conservatives MP's confirming they have no confidence in him.
In my view, Boris will survive this. But I'm not sure this is a good thing. It really feels ike the Conservatives are quite directionless at the moment. Yes, there have been good patches (Ukraine response, Vaccine rollout) but the amount of parliamentary time wasted on partygate etc has really pissed off the wider population. You only need to see the boo's accompanying Boris in his public appearance during the Joobs to know where he currently stands with the wider pop.
Yes, Thatcher had similar, but lets face it, she had an aim, a vision and made it clear to all what she was doing. Boris simply hasn't done this.
Votes go in at 6pm-8pm with results expected soon after (I think) ...
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This post is deleted!
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I think you're right and Boris will survive - just, but in the longer term he's toast I feel. In fact if Rishi hadn't had the furore about his wife's non-dom status landing on top of the cost of living "crisis", then having a viable alternative to Boris might have endangered his position a little more.
I'm a bit torn on this myself as I quite like Boris as a "chap" whilst understanding that he's really probably not a nice person and of course more importantly is morally bankrupt to an extent that he's become a complete embarrassment as a leader of our country.
He's fast becoming our Trump IMO, whilst we can see some good points, to outsiders there is a high degree of disbelief that he is anywhere near the best we've got.
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@Catogrande like Trump, I'm just bored of the baggage that comes with.
You can't have real discussions / debate about cost of living / energy caps, debt borrow, tax etc when PM questions solely exists to ask questions about lying & parties.
I mean are the general public even aware that despite all the inflation carnage out there, that April was the highest ever (outside self assessment collection months) monthly HMRC receipts? That they were higher than expected by a considerable amount?
These are big things. Huge macro indicators of governments ability to move. But all anybody wants to talk about is Boris having a pint.
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All a game
He’ll win and be bulletproof for another 12 months
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@MajorRage Yes. Too many distractions. Much of it though has to be laid at Boris' door. Having a pint in the office is no big thing but the perceived attitude that goes with it is another thing. Then there is the lying to follow. Such blatant lying too, that anyone with an ounce of nous can see right through. This brings a further perception of arrogance in that he/they feel they can just do what they want.
Like Watergate, it was not the tin pot break in that sunk Nixon, it was the lying and cover up to follow.
Edit: And further and in line with the view that there are annoying distractions, I was reading a piece from an investment guru who gives a weekly overview of things in an approachable manner and I thought this part might chime:-
"The Conservative MPs vote this evening probably only matters in the short-term. A vote of confidence is never a good thing, but Boris’ quest for power and legacy means that he is the least likely person to walk away until he is absolutely forced to. Until something changes, the UK is greatly challenged. We have a ‘tax and spend’ government, prepared to change policy on a whim wherever there is a sniff of popularity. We have a Central Bank that, to the eyes of certain observers, appears to be clueless about the causes of the UK’s inflation, or how to rein it back without causing recession. And this is without starting to take into account our unique position in having cut ourselves off from the European labour force that has contributed to the economy for so long. One can understand the spleen vented by the estimable Lord Rose, currently chairman of Asda, about the proposed reinstatement of imperial measurements into UK retailing. The idea appears to have been dreamt up by someone who believes that the Hovis advert was real life, that the residents of Lambeth all wear pearly clothes while dancing in the street and that the Queen really did have tea with Paddington Bear".
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My two cents
I mean are the general public even aware that despite all the inflation carnage out there, that April was the highest ever (outside self assessment collection months) monthly HMRC receipts? That they were higher than expected by a considerable amount?
Tax receipts were about £11bn more than the previous year. But Sunak borrowed £18.6Bn - and committed to borrowing £15Bn extra to ease the Cost of Living crisis. Welcome your thoughts on this.
I don't think it's actually Boris, though he be a lightning rod. The Conservatives are split all over the place on way too many issues - Europe, tax-cutting or spending, public-v-private, Red Wall v Blue Wall. They look to be in a total, disunited mess as a party. I read over the weekend that some rebels put in a letters for a no-confidence vote 4 months after he won in Dec 2019...
Meanwhile the elephant in the room is the economy and, like the other parties, they are in total denial that there's a big problem. We have the highest taxes for 70 years, a national debt that has tripped to £50k per person in ten years and is still growing plus every time there's some economic pain, the standard response is to borrow even more.
Partygate probably gave these factions something to coalesce around and I think he's probably toast. When he does go, the party squabbling will still carry on and they will get hammered at the next election. Which, if the economy seriously tanks after that, may not be a bad thing for them.
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@Catogrande said in British Politics:
One can understand the spleen vented by the estimable Lord Rose, currently chairman of Asda, about the proposed reinstatement of imperial measurements into UK retailing. The idea appears to have been dreamt up by someone who believes that the Hovis advert was real life, that the residents of Lambeth all wear pearly clothes while dancing in the street and that the Queen really did have tea with Paddington Bear".
Utterly bonkers - up there with the £120Bn white elephant that is HS2
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@Victor-Meldrew said in British Politics:
My two cents
Tax receipts were about £11bn more than the previous year. But Sunak borrowed £18.6Bn - and committed to borrowing £15Bn extra to ease the Cost of Living crisis. Welcome your thoughts on this.
I'm quite far from a macro-economist, but this doesn't concern me that much. The stupidity of putting up interest rates to curb inflation which is not primarily caused by demand > supply is of a bigger worry to me.
The point is more is that when you put taxes up and then get much higher than expected tax receipts, this should be debated. The opposition should be asking why taxes were put up when receipts were higher than expected and then solutions offered. Thats a real democratic process working.
I don't think it's actually Boris, though he be a lightning rod. The Conservatives are split all over the place on way too many issues - Europe, tax-cutting or spending, public-v-private, Red Wall v Blue Wall. They look to be in a total, disunited mess as a party. I read over the weekend that some rebels put in a letters for a no-confidence vote 4 months after he won in Dec 2019...
The only plus side is that they seem more united than Labour!
Meanwhile the elephant in the room is the economy and, like the other parties, they are in total denial that there's a big problem. We have the highest taxes for 70 years, a national debt that has tripped to £50k per person in ten years and is still growing plus every time there's some economic pain, the standard response is to borrow even more.
I think you need to step back and take a look at the size of the event that was the pandemic & the subsequent knock on effect. These things are pretty natural responses after something of this magnitude.
You are correct though, the standard response needs to change. Which I think is something that most true Conservatives are consistently pointing out.
Partygate probably gave these factions something to coalesce around and I think he's probably toast. When he does go, the party squabbling will still carry on and they will get hammered at the next election. Which, if the economy seriously tanks after that, may not be a bad thing for them.
Economy next few months will be very very interesting. The UK has a history of having an extremely resilient economy. It has defied bear forecasts for years. If it does it again this time (and with good management, it will), it will prove Brexiters right.
If it doesn't. Well, may God be with us all.
British Politics