Election 2024

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How are Labour doing after their first 12 months


  • Total voters
    23
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lazy af pink haired lesbian illusion of reality that bro and that ignorance of reality is exactly why reform will storm to victory in the next ge.

Anyone supporting reform is a thick racist lol

Nothing to do with the rapes and murders we see evey day by asylum seekers

Nothing to do with the fact theres boroughs of london and parts of England that have been completely taken over and dominated by migrant populations

Nothing to do with muslim rape gangs targetting mainly white girls for all kinds of disgusting things and labour covering it up and doing everything they can today to keep it that way

I cba to go on but i fukin could <laugh> <whistle>
How can you cover something up that's been in the news since 2012?
 
What a pile of bollocks. Maybe just have MPs vote on it rather than this ****e. Ooooh the unions like this one.

Key Stages of the Leadership Election Process:
  • Triggering an Election: A contest happens when there is a vacancy (resignation) or a successful leadership challenge, with timings determined by the National Executive Committee (NEC).
  • Nominations (The "Threshold"): To appear on the ballot, candidates must be MPs and secure nominations from 20% of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP). They must also receive nominations from either 5% of Constituency Labour Parties (CLPs) or at least three affiliated organisations (two of which must be trade unions) representing 5% of the affiliated membership.
  • Voting System: Labour uses the Alternative Vote (AV) system, which is a preferential ballot. Voters rank candidates (1, 2, 3...) in order of preference.
  • Winning the Election: If a candidate wins more than 50% of the vote on the first round, they win. If not, the lowest-placed candidate is eliminated, and their votes are redistributed to the second preferences, continuing until someone passes the 50% threshold.
  • Equal Franchise: Once the nominations are met, the final vote is a one-member, one-vote system, meaning votes from MPs, members, and supporters are weighted equally

Maybe it says the Tories need to make change more difficult - Boris was changed far too easily.

All Starmers political supporters this morning came out of Number 10 and in a timely fashion one by one they walked straight over to the media to give an interview, they were the likes of Steve Reed and Liz Kendall, can't remember the others - you could see it was a planned tactical support move.

Not seen Yvette Cooper nor Shabana Mahmood do it though, in fact I've not seen them at all at the moment, but it was stated in so many words this morning that no one faced of the Prime Minister around the Cabinet table.

Clearly MP's have raised their head above the parapet now, so I can only see turmoil ensuing within the Labour Party, be interesting to see if Andy Burnham starts to make amove for a challenge around September time.

Not sure what I think of Burnham, don't know much about him and what he stands for. Wouldn't be surprised if Wes Streeting gets fired, but the risk in doing so means he'll probably come out fighting, but I really don't think he's got the support he thinks he has as Mr Debenham Suit man.

The only one other than Burnham who might be capable of a challenge is Miliband, but I don't like him. Maybe the Tortoise Cooper is the dark horse, but again I can't see it.
 
Surely we get to the first stage first than worrying about the second stage at this point, who do I trust most Fosse on the internet or Kevin Maguire hmmm let me think, Fosse I know it all or a British political journalist and associate editor of the Daily Mirror and previous Chief Reporter for the Guardian - close contest.

Try the BBC ... who knew eh? ... oh wait... me! <laugh>

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Personally, if I was Starmer, I'd jack it in ... with a '**** the lot of you' to those now 'revolting' ... but he seems determined to stay ... perhaps he's just a masochist? <laugh>
 
Try the BBC ... who knew eh? ... oh wait... me! <laugh>

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but we knew this, which is what we kept telling you, the first task was to get 81 MP's, which they still hadn't, the number stood at 79 NOT 81 until just now. Which is why you've disingenously posted it.

You came on last night and never read a comment, so didn't understand the conversation at all.

Go back and read what I told you last night. I told you last night unless Starmer is stubborn ****er, well he is so we have to wait, as was said by Kevin Maguire unless he is a political houdini, he's gone.

The day is still long, he's not survived anything yet, he's like you with Leicester City, you wouldn't get relegated, it wouldn't happen, the youth, blah, blah, blah....oh we've got ****ing relegated. <laugh>
 
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Pure Madness
I thought this was a wind up, but apparently some legacy benefits cover it, not Universal Credit though, but Pension Credit does.

This gives some AI context on it...

  • Legal Context: While bigamy is illegal in the UK, the DWP recognises polygamous marriages for benefit purposes only if they were legally contracted overseas in countries where the practice is lawful and the parties were domiciled there at the time.
  • Scope: This rule applies only to legacy benefits like Pension Credit, Housing Benefit, and Income Support. Universal Credit does not recognise polygamous marriages; under UC, additional spouses must claim separately as single individuals.
  • Household Impact: The DWP notes that very few households claim this way (estimated at fewer than 10 for Housing Benefit). Financial experts often point out that claiming as an "additional spouse" actually results in less money (around £125/week) than if that person claimed as a single individual (over £200/week).
 
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I thought this was a wind up, but apparently some legacy benefits cover it, not Universal Credit though, but Pension Credit does.

This gives some AI context on it...

  • Legal Context: While bigamy is illegal in the UK, the DWP recognises polygamous marriages for benefit purposes only if they were legally contracted overseas in countries where the practice is lawful and the parties were domiciled there at the time.
  • Scope: This rule applies only to legacy benefits like Pension Credit, Housing Benefit, and Income Support. Universal Credit does not recognise polygamous marriages; under UC, additional spouses must claim separately as single individuals.
  • Household Impact: The DWP notes that very few households claim this way (estimated at fewer than 10 for Housing Benefit). Financial experts often point out that claiming as an "additional spouse" actually results in less money (around £125/week) than if that person claimed as a single individual (over £200/week).
so can i marry 4 women and get this free hand out or do i have to be muslim to claim it?

Nope i just checked
id get thrown in jail for it

Of course <laugh>
 
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so can i marry 4 women and get this free hand out or do i have to be muslim to claim it?

Nope i just checked
id get thrown in jail for it

Of course <laugh>

I think they get less bro, not more.

But even with 4 wives and the extra sex, I reckon it would be a ****in ballache have four women to take care of

Don't get me wrong, sex with four different women has its perks, but there's more than a 1 in 4 chance that one of them is a ****in nightmare

Can you imagine getting it the neck from all four of them at once <laugh>

Better off spending your giro on prozzies I reckon.
 
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