:sunglasses: 50 % :pray: 6.3 % :laughing: 34.4 % :cry: 3.1 % :poo: 6.3 %
User avatar
By Samanfur
#86905
I'm currently reading the memoirs of Simon Hart, the former Tory Chief Whip. The amount of sexual indiscretions that seemed to be unearthed under the Johnson, Truss and Sunak administrations but didn't get any attention beggars belief.

Some weren't publicised for legal reasons, but the rest just seems to be an unwillingness to report.
By Youngian
#86909
I'm currently reading the memoirs of Simon Hart, the former Tory Chief Whip. The amount of sexual indiscretions that seemed to be unearthed under the Johnson, Truss and Sunak administrations but didn't get any attention beggars belief.
Nevermind Adolescence, perhaps it's time for a conversation about the sickness lying in adult generations.
Cut off their goolies.
Boiler liked this
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#87296
If this is true then Unite and Sharon Graham can fuck off.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cedyy520v32o
A deal between striking bin workers and Birmingham City Council could have been reached were it not for the interventions of the Unite union's national leadership team, the BBC has been told.

A message seen by the BBC also appears to suggest some local union members are dissatisfied with how the dispute has been handled.

Unite said claims national union figures had scuppered a potential deal were "entirely without merit".

Speaking on a visit to Birmingham on Thursday, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner urged the union to accept what she said was a "significantly improved" offer from the council.

Thousands of tonnes of rubbish have built up on the city's streets over more than four weeks and Ms Rayner said the situation was "causing misery and disruption to residents".

A number of senior Labour figures outside the council, including some MPs, said they understood the purported deal with local reps would have been reached during the rolling strike in January and February.

However, individuals with knowledge of the situation said while the alleged deal was backed by refuse workers at two of Birmingham City Council's three bin lorry depots, National Unite figures were involved at the third site where it was rejected.

Sources, including some with extensive union experience, say the handling of the dispute is being influenced by power struggles within Unite.

A longstanding Unite member from the West Midlands told the BBC that while commissioners at the council bore some of the responsibility for the dispute, the regional office of Unite was unhappy it had been bypassed.

They said: "Unions traditionally have been about the art of the deal on behalf of their members. Instead, Unite and some others seem to be in the grip of people for whom disruption, disputes and revolution are their priority."
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