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Classic U Turn, Maggie will be turning in her grave!
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It's fairly simple. He's not very good at PMQs and not very good at thinking on his feet. The u turn was pretty obviously announced only a few minutes beforehand so his already prepared questions were scuppered and there wasn't time for him to prepare new ones.How the F is Corbyn not taking them to task over this in PMQs?
Literally an incredible open goal for him!
How the F is Corbyn not taking them to task over this in PMQs?
Literally an incredible open goal for him!
I don't know quite what to think of Jeremy Corbyn. I think that behind all that politician front, he's a nice bloke. I think his heart is in the right place. I don't think he's particularly ambitious for himself, relative to other politicians. But he has one problem, in that he leads a party that he may or may not believe can be a socialist government. I don't think he quite believes it, but his principles mean that he won't shift in order to make them electable. Which they are not, in the UK. Nowhere near it. Not in the 1980's and not now. That also means that they are a very weak opposition. So, by his well meaning principles, he lets a very nationalistic, ukip prodded, tory government allow the general quality of life for the majority of people in the UK to fall, whilst maintaining and broadening the gulf between the haves and have-nots. And the Liberals have to take their share of the responsibility too.Because he is useless.
I don't know quite what to think of Jeremy Corbyn. I think that behind all that politician front, he's a nice bloke. I think his heart is in the right place. I don't think he's particularly ambitious for himself, relative to other politicians. But he has one problem, in that he leads a party that he may or may not believe can be a socialist government. I don't think he quite believes it, but his principles mean that he won't shift in order to make them electable. Which they are not, in the UK. Nowhere near it. Not in the 1980's and not now. That also means that they are a very weak opposition. So, by his well meaning principles, he lets a very nationalistic, ukip prodded, tory government allow the general quality of life for the majority of people in the UK to fall, whilst maintaining and broadening the gulf between the haves and have-nots. And the Liberals have to take their share of the responsibility too.
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Imp
I am not convinced that the Tories win get a majority in a fresh general election let alone an enhanced one. They are already under investigation (bot my the police and their own internal affairs people) regarding the over-spend on their campaign bus. One MP is allegedly under caution and I believe that this would effect at l wast 24 constituencies. This includes Thanet where they stood against Farage and won. Living near Winchester, the one political party that is resurgent is the Liberals and surely they would command a big chunk of the "Remainers" as they are the only political party other than the Greens and SNP who wish to remain in the EU. I think that the Liberals will erode the Tory vote and easily take constituencies like Winchester which are generally educated and liberal.
There are some massively interesting potentials in the next election and the UKIP vote is effectively up for grabs because they no longer have a role and have elected a comedian (apologies, former Tranmere Rovers legend) as leader. I would expect Corbyn to be ousted (good bloke that he is) and replaced by a the first female leader of the Labour Party. Brexit will prove a disaster for the economy and this will erode any support for Theresa May. Assuming an election in 2020, expect the stock of the Tories to have been diminished, Labour resurgent under a new leader but dependent upon a coalition with the Liberals and Greens to hold power and UKIP to have no impact whatsoever.
I don't understand the enthusiasm for Theresa May as PM. She was a strong Home Secretary but has no real English opposition to test her abilities as PM and is repeatedly out-thought by Nicola Sturgeon to runs rings around her continually. Added to which, the associations with Trump will probe more of a disaster than Blair and Bush. Sturgeon is probably the most capable and formidable politician in Europe at the moment. I don't like her in the least but her politics cannot be challenged and she already has Scotland punching well above it's weight if you consider the size of population. It was interesting to see the Welsh Nationalists and the Greens saddle up to her in the next election as if they are hoping some of the fairy dust will rub off. Sturgeon is far more formidable than Margaret Thatcher was and has none of the negative connotations associated with her. It is a shame that she is so narrow minded as to limit her ambitions to Scotland and she would probably have made a good PM. Selfishly her actions will probably mean any future "progressive" government in the UK will have to be a coalition.
People didn;t punish the Lib Dems for going into coalition with the Tories by............voting Tory instead.
One of two things could possibly have been true the other week.
1. Upping NI made sense. Up the NI rate and be prepared to defend it through hell and high water because it makes sense.
2. Upping NI didn't make sense. Leave it as it is; no need to defend it.
Making that kind of choice is what politicians are paid for. Doing things this way (up the NI rate but don't be prepared to defend it) just makes them look utterly vulnerable to public opinion. With a huge majority. And a leader of the opposition who might as well not be there.
Pathetic.
Vin
I think you're overestimating single issue students there. A lot of them will have voted lib Dems purely as the student party. (Me included, my first election and I wasn't particularly political back then)
Those who lean right (not me) will have happily turned con after the libs betrayed them. I don't see them going back though!
He was trying to even things up after all when those NI differences were created it was because self employed didn't get the benefits that employed people do/ Self employed people do get a lot of those benefits now.
Self employed (I am self employed) already get tax benefits as well as NIC benefits which vastly outweigh what Hammond was proposing. Rules on the state pension have been changed in recent years as has parental leave and access to free childcare.
He was also trying to address the practice of some CEOs being paid through shell companies in which they are then self-employed and thus pay less tax and NI.
However it wasn't in the manifesto (quite the opposite) and if you take anything away from people they will take the headline without seeing behind it.
I think it should have been thought out much better and aimed at higher income self employed rather then all of them. I don't think many self-employed actually realise that they now get the same state pension contributions paid in as their employed counterparts.
They will hold off this now until after 2020 and then address it without a manifesto promise holding them back. Would help if media didn't just push a headline of "will be £240 worse off" without detailing how much better off self employed are compared to how they were when these tax rules were initiated.
Perfectly transparent to me - merely optimising the situation she`s been placed in.If that were Sturgeon's game, it wouldn't be very transparent or trustworthy would it?
I know plenty English folk (and numerous other nationalities) - friends and colleagues - who live in Scotland by choice. If there is another referendum, then it may well be them who swing the vote, as happened last time.I know. I was just saying there are lots of Scots in England and I don't hear them wanting to go North again. Not the ones I know anyway.