:sunglasses: 32 % :pray: 16 % :laughing: 36 % :cry: 12 % :🤗 4 %
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#58912
Just seen Ricky referred to as the 'Prime Miniature'.

Made me larf.


But the man's still a cunt.
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#58936
Crace on Sunak:
Sometimes, he’s frighteningly stupid. The rest of the time he’s just frightening. His self-destruction almost unmatched among recent prime ministers. And that’s including Liz Truss and Boris Johnson.

As each reset inevitably fails, so we have been presented with more and more. The arc of failure is ever faster. Reset piled upon reset. First once a month. Then once a fortnight. Once a week has come and gone. As has once a day. Now a reset policy is dead in the water before it’s even happened.
User avatar
By Watchman
#58981
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... -safe.html

Does this now mean that every country in Europe can now write legislation declaring that the UK is now a "safe" country, and that they can send all migrants to us?
By RedSparrows
#59018
Tubby Isaacs wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2023 12:34 pm
RedSparrows wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:22 am It's one of the most puzzling things to me, how that somehow the posturing and abject weakness of the Tories isn't seen by their hardcore as a sham...
I think it increasingly is. Sunak might as well be walking through the Home Counties holding a "Vote Lib Dem" sign.
You're right, I think. But my interest is more in not so much Sunak, but the conceit that fuels the whole modern Tory project. The issue is never 'what if our premises are wrong?', it's always 'the lad up front can't put'em away!'
Tubby Isaacs liked this
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#59019
One of the problems with politics in general. It's always "We couldn't get the message across", and not "The message got across just fine, but everyone thought it was shit"*.

*Or indeed, not the message, but the policy, or the underlying principle.
Malcolm Armsteen liked this
User avatar
By Yug
#59024
Andy McDandy wrote: Thu Dec 07, 2023 9:36 am One of the problems with politics in general. It's always "We couldn't get the message across", and not "The message got across just fine, but everyone thought it was shit"*.

*Or indeed, not the message, but the policy, or the underlying principle.
Or, indeed, not the message, or the policy, or the underlying principle, but the person saying it. (See Nationalise the railways ( yay) Vs Corbyn J says Nationalise the railways (urgh no)).
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#59025
Press conference:
It's weird. Chippy, immature, quite pathetic.

But also fascistic. He's playing to the Taleban.

And blaming Labour if it fails.
User avatar
By Abernathy
#59035
Yes, very interesting that he repeated the formulation “but the real question is, what will Labour do.” about seven times. “we have a plan, what is Labour’s plan? Will they vote for our plan?”

Labour has already indicated, several times, that it will vote against this despicable, hideous, desperate piece of legislation. And rightly so. I don’t think I’ve ever seen so much desperate casting around for a wedge issue for the election. I really don’t think this one is going to cut it.
Dalem Lake liked this
User avatar
By Andy McDandy
#59043
Is it just me, or is there something basically pathetic about the leadership of a G7 country having a collective tantrum because they cannot solve a problem of their own making in the particular way they want?
User avatar
By Spoonman
#59047
Youngian wrote: Thu Dec 07, 2023 1:23 pm
Yes, very interesting that he repeated the formulation “but the real question is, what will Labour do.” about seven times. “we have a plan, what is Labour’s plan? Will they vote for our plan?”

This doesn’t sound Iike a leader who’s in charge.
At the moment, it doesn't really matter what Labour will/would do - they are not the ones in the House of Commons with a working majority.

The whole thing reeks of the 'murican Republicans between 2017 - 2019, they had the presidency and majorities in both the House of Representatives & the Senate and yet they barely got anything done in that time thanks to either internal infighting or that they couldn't really accept that they had all the levers on power and tried to create a "deep state" boogey man to try and pass off why they could not do the things they said they would do. (Mainly that when you pitch electoral battles as being permanently in protest/against almost everything mode even when you have that power, mostly to hide either being shite legislators and/or using decoys to hide creaming off taxpayers money for yourself/party/family/donors etc.)
Last edited by Spoonman on Thu Dec 07, 2023 3:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Arrowhead liked this
User avatar
By Crabcakes
#59051
Sunak doesn’t seem to understand the difference between having a terrible, unworkable plan and that’s why it fails, and people not voting for that plan because it’s terrible and *that’s* why it fails. It’s almost as painful and difficult as watching someone trying to shit a grand piano.

Also: he has a double figures majority, yet is clearly trying to goad Labour into voting for his effort. Which says exactly how much confidence he has in it passing.
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