Oh, you know him too, eh? A nice fella, but terrible to look at. I sat next to him on the coach on a beano to Margate. He brought egg sandwiches, worst luck.
Over a decade having dig after dig at the tories is normal, several years at having a dig at Reform, even though they've only just got 5 MP's...normal. Pointing out failure after failure of the current government, especially when they're caught banged to rights lying yet again....CRAZY... The left are just hypocritical cretins.
Of course, even though he's a Marxist, Starmer's running 'blue' Labour. They need to stick to proper left wing principles to bring some sense and order.
Ensuring its survives as something more than a Reform style cult of personality I'd guess Got my vote anyway
They claim islam is a religion, not a political ideology, yet all the evidence suggests otherwise. It's a bizarre ideology for the left to be allied with, given they are opposites on so many fundamental issues. What on earth could the attraction be?
Some of them don't want the transphobic, racist muslims involved. That's not very inclusive or tolerant is it.
Where's Bicycle Repair Man, Jeremiah Codpiece? What a ****ing joke. Better voting for Monster Raving Loony Party. Commie Codbin.
It was good to see Joby got dressed up for the Circus. ****ing smelly layabout nutters the lot of them.
If you pray to Jesus with your eyes tight shut tonight, he might (even though you denied him) make Labour go away.
You ****ing up and calling me an atheist, only for you to be stupid enough to post proof I'm not has melted your empty head. It'll melt it even more when I challenge you to post something where I've denied Jesus. You've managed to find yet another thing you're obsessed about me over, despite you not having a ****ing clue.
EXCLUSIVE Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have been accused of misleading the Cabinet by using claims that there was a black hole in the public finances to justify tax rises during the run up to the Budget One Cabinet minister told The Times: “Why did Keir and Rachel allow the country to believe for so long that we would break our manifesto by putting up income tax by 2p when they would have known that wasn’t true? 'At no point were the Cabinet told about the reality of the OBR forecasts. Had we been told, we might have been in a position to advise against setting hares running on income tax and giving the public the impression we are casual about our manifesto commitments. The handling of this Budget has been a disaster from start to finish' Another senior minister said: 'The Treasury’s operation is not exactly cutting edge. The argument about living in uncertain times and needing more headroom makes sense but the way she presented it - by saying there’s a big hole we need to fill - is frustrating. We had this hokey cokey about income taxes going up and then not going up' Another minister said Starmer and Reeves look 'weak and incompetent' in the wake of the budget but described it as 'par for the course' The chancellor repeatedly highlighted a downgrade in productivity forecasts in a series of Cabinet meetings as she made the case for raising taxes It included a meeting on November 4 that was held after a Downing Street press conference which she used to heavily signal that she was preparing to break Labour’s manifesto and raise the basic rate of income tax Reeves told Cabinet that Britain faces challenges' in the form of tariffs, unstable borrowing costs, inflation and long-term productivity'. She said she “had to respond to the World as it is now, not as she might wish it to be' Ministers emerged from the meeting convinced that the public finances were in such a dire state that a manifesto-breaking increase in the basic rate of income tax was necessary. In fact the Office for Budget Responsibility had already informed her privately that the downgrade in the public finances had been more than offset by higher than expected tax revenues It told Reeves on October 31 that she had a £4.2billion surplus, but the information was not shared with the Cabinet or the public. Only she and Starmer were aware of the improvement in the forecasts. They abandoned the plans to increase the basic rate of income tax a week later amid concerns about a political backlash https://thetimes.com/article/714550...c?shareToken=c9b9133561f54a1c16c9bbe0c8f8af48 https://t.co/RMZZFy1pb4