Is anybody surprised?! This is the name of the game nowadays. Fleece everything you can while you can, thats the way forward
Republicans take Virginia in a big FU to Biden's woke culture. But the spectre of The Donald overshadows it
Great news on U.K. imports to Europe https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/meat-eu-...Foh2VGL6hdv675BWEoj3oIYkLfKSEnINAx4HV2C1RK8iE
I thought MPs were supposed to represent their constituencies and constituants?! Im glad my MP didnt vote to overule the enquiry into the Paterson lobbying scandal. This government is corrupt, simple as that. How anyone can support acts of corruption and blatant lies is absolutely beyond me. I hope those constituants whos MP voted in favour of protecting Paterson write to them demanding a full explanation.
Zimbabwe has sent over 100 delegates to #COP26 please log in to view this image , including family members and friends, at taxpayers expense. 60 have nothing to do with climate change. Here are some enjoying a trip to Costco. please log in to view this image
Ah, i understand the whip forced the Tories to vote in favour of Paterson. Is that how democracy works? Lobbying for cash is allowed then from now on. What a state this government are turning the country into. Its like we have gone backwards and backwards. Hey ho this is what some vote for i suppose.
Patrick Moore @EcoSenseNow · 4h Bit of a cock-up in the electricity department. The UK had to start up its coal plants to keep the lights on as wind died to nearly net zero. COP26 running on coal!! https://netzerowatch.com/coal-keeps-lights-on-at-cop26-as-low-wind-strikes-again/?mc_cid=47f9a65a48&mc_eid=2c28606ca0 please log in to view this image
Burnside @BurnsideNotTosh · 11h **** financial modelling caused the financial crash. **** pandemic modelling caused unnecessary lockdowns. But the weather? Oh we can model something so complex and multifaceted with absolute precision.
I think Ms Sultana is raisin an important point. I think we should prune the number of MPs to make it safer for her next date there.
With jokes like that, you really should get back to your poncey "What tactics I fink we should use" thread. Far more relevant on a football forum
Let’s call out the Tories’ behaviour for what it is: corruption Keir Starmer 4 hrs ago Imagine for a moment that someone senior at your place of work was found to have been getting paid hundreds of thousands of pounds to act on behalf of outside interests. Imagine another person was found to have sexually harassed a junior member of staff. please log in to view this image Now imagine if, rather than slinging them out, their mates at the company decided to exonerate them and shut down the HR department instead. I think we know what we’d call it: sleaze, a cover-up, a company not fit for purpose. But today that is precisely what the government did. Tory MPs voted to let off one of their own, Owen Paterson, after he was found by the independent standards committee to have broken lobbying rules. Two days earlier, they had allowed Rob Roberts, a Tory MP who was found to have abused his power by committing sexual misconduct, back into their party. That the Tories are yet again wallowing in sleaze comes as no surprise. From the pathetic attempts to defend Dominic Cummings when he breached lockdown to David Cameron’s rebirth as a super-lobbyist, this government has always chosen to lay down with the dogs. The blase manner in which it acts, the Trump-like attempts to fix the system to its own benefit, the complicity of those who justify and enable it, shows that it is now, inevitably, covered in fleas. I am sick of people skirting around calling this out for what it is: corruption. Paterson was receiving money from a private company to ask questions on its behalf. Roberts was found to have made repeated and unwanted sexual advances toward a young staffer. Both of them should be gone – neither are fit to serve as MPs. Their continued presence in the Tory party is scandalous. It will further undermine public faith in politics at a time when we should be trying to restore decency and honesty. But the rot starts at the top. We have a prime minister whose name is synonymous with sleaze, dodgy deals and hypocrisy. This is the man who allows his ministers to breach with impunity the codes that govern public life; who thinks it should be one rule for him and his chums, another for everyone else. With his every action he signals to his MPs: do what you like. There are no consequences. He will be wrong on that last point, though. Because eventually, politicians who thumb their nose at decent people get found out – and voted out. Last week, the prime minister was pontificating on why the Roman empire collapsed. He notably failed to mention that one of the main factors was that the people grew tired of the arrogance and corruption of their rulers. More than a decade ago, I led the prosecution of MPs over their expenses. I was struck then by the hubris of those who assumed they could never be caught and how quickly it caused public anger to escalate. I am reminded of that again today, as Tory MPs enrich themselves while putting up taxes for working people already facing spiralling energy bills and prices in the shops. There are a number of simple things that could be done to clean up politics, which I believe would command overwhelming public support. If I were prime minister, I would ban anyone who holds ministerial office from selling themselves to companies that want to write legislation in their own interests. It is an absurd situation that shouldn’t be allowed. You can choose to be a lawmaker or a lobbyist – you can’t be both. I would introduce a truly independent anti-corruption and anti-cronyism commission, to ensure we never again see a situation where Tory MPs gorge their donors on billions of pounds of taxpayer money, as they did during the Covid crisis. And I would improve transparency around public spending and government contracts through a new Office of Value for Money. But instead of trying to sort things out, we have a government that wants to stitch things up. Its plan is to permanently weaken the structures that hold MPs to high standards. It has appointed its own man to oversee the process – a Tory MP who not long ago was the prime minister’s wife’s boss – and gifted itself a majority on a committee to set the new rules. It would be laughable if it wasn’t so serious. The Labour party won’t have anything to do with this complete and utter sham process. What we need now is to restore public faith in our democracy, not cynically exploit it. Because long after this government has gone, we will still be living with the consequences of its flagrant disregard for honesty and accountability in high office. The sooner we get on with cleaning up our politics, the better.
Even the Daily Mail and several Tory MPs agree. One of your mates gets caught cheating so you change the rules so he can get away with it. **** me, these creeps and their apologists deserve nothing but scorn, mockery and Chinese burns until they cry and beg forgiveness. Sadly ‘analysts’ reckon that the electorate, despite this explicit statement of contempt for them, don’t really expect anything else from the Tories (and in my case politicians full stop*), so it won’t make any difference. * of course many, mainly those you have never heard of, are saints. Even though they all have the basic trait of thinking they are sufficiently superior to the rest of us to be able to ‘represent’ us without any consultation except a poxy election every few years. I don’t want to be ‘represented’ by some one , however saintly, that I have never met, let alone had a conversation with, on the assumption that my views sit neatly into some outdated and moronic political party system. At worst I want a delegate to reflect my and my neighbours views, but preferably I want a direct say, along with everyone else. Kwarteng on the Today programme swinging like a decaying corpse on a gibbet. Asked to name anything this government has done to improve the conduct of individuals in public life he answered ‘Brexit’ and ‘climate change promises’. You get what you deserve I suppose.
It’ll be forgotten by the weekend. Sooner if there’s another ‘look over there’ on migrants and/or France. Maybe Starmer will wear his poppy at the wrong angle. This isn’t going to be the straw that breaks the camel’s back for anyone when it comes to this government.