Thanks for the warning, Ellers. For an Owen Jones article to be more interesting, the other piece has got to be a suicidal read. Owen Jones? I’d gladly throw him off the top of a tall building. Ghastly little gobshite.
why dont the people who are elected by the people to make decisions make them could they not decide on the eu
M&S food sales slide over Christmas http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-42646021 Cost savings prop up House of Fraser despite weak Christmas https://www.ft.com/content/b9e7d8b4-caed-30b7-8e33-9f90f17a0b87 Not so good for these 2 though. I went in M&S before I went away, the food looked nice and packaged well but was a bit expensive. I noticed the shop was full of older people. Both need to appeal more to a wider population or they will fall
how about keith vaz please log in to view this image Keith Vaz - Too ill to be investigated by the Parliamentary Standards Office, but well enough to chair the Yemen Parliamentary Group.
Excellent research Kiwi. O'Mara posted some unpleasant tweets and was suspended from the Labour party, but he really isn't in Young's league in that regard. Plus he was a teenager when we posted them - Young was in his forties. Worse than Young's juvenile tweets though, are his support for Eugenics and the fact that he considers education to be wasted on the lower classes.
More fine research Kiwi, but *****phile politicians - really? There would be a very long list of Tories that you could post some stuff on if you chose (I can't be arsed). Unfortunately, Theresa May 'lost' the files on them.
O'Mara was accused by Sophie Evans, a Sheffield bar worker whom he had met through an online dating app, on BBC Two's Daily Politics of having "made transphobic slurs" towards her in March 2017, and of saying in the same incident that she was an "ugly bitch
young sounds like a juvenile he looks like a celebrity chef i will look up claudia winkleman myself strols Writing on Tuesday, Young said: “The caricature drawn of me in the last seven days, particularly on social media, has been unrecognisable to anyone who knows me.” But he conceded: “Some of the things I said before I got involved in education, when I was a journalistic provocateur, were either ill-judged or just plain wrong – and I unreservedly apologise.” Besides the judgment of the prime minister, Young’s decision to resign also called into question that of some of the most senior members of the cabinet – including the foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, and the environment secretary, Michael Gove – who had defended him. In an interview with Andrew Marr on the BBC on Sunday, May appeared to back Young. But she warned that any future offensive language would result in him being “no longer … in public office”.