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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » What now for Damian Green?

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    More over-excitable chatter from PB.

    The public couldn't give a toss about Green and this will change nothing....

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    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    TonyE said:

    TonyE said:

    Charles said:

    Good morninginformation

    Public interest defence.

    You could argue the methods here aren’t as bad than the methods that saw the expenses saga.
    Sitting on the evidence for a decade before striking when Grern was weaken. Not a good fact pattern for public interest defence
    I’m not defending the police.

    I’m just pointing out the reality.

    Iason?

    Unusual.
    He resigned specifically because he lied about being notified that the porn was found, and that he was not aware that it had been found. His solicitor was notified twice that it had been found at the time.

    And that is all.
    So he did lie. (Charles, please note.)

    Wonder why?
    I agree with @TonyE !

    You are saying something different
    My post last nite was very brief. I referred to Green as a liar. That was all. Didn't elaborate at all. You said he wasn't. Now you are fictionalising my account.

    Why?
    because i misremembered your post - conflating you with the guardian.

    At the time I thought he had omitted the fact he had been told - hadn't appreciated he'd specifically denied it

    You seem weirdly fixated on something completely unimportant, but if it really matters to you I'm sorry.
    Shit, Charles, I don't want an apolgy, ffs. If we can't have a knockabout without the need for somebody to apologise it's a sad state of affairs. This is not a Parliamentary Committee you know!

    For what (little) it's worth I generally enjoy reading your posts and was surprised at your quick defence of what I thought was an untenable position. Maybe it was too quick. He plainly lied and whilst it might be noble to defend your mates, your cred goes if you do it against all the evidence.

    I should say he's no loss and should be dropped without remorse. I expect he will be, and in the end he will matter little. Longer term, what's going on with the Plod is more important. They may not have lied, but you and I sure as hell didn't ought to be terrifically comfortable with what they did do.

    Agreed?
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    This case has striking similarities to the Stephen Byers affair. A lie, not particularly important but quite deliberate, told in relation to an essentially minor matter. Theresa May's handling of the matter compares very favourably with Tony Blair's. She has taken a difficult but correct decision. Once a minister's reputation for integrity has been compromised, whatever the surrounding circumstances, there must be consequences. Her government will benefit from her decision.

    Yes, I think this is the correct interpretation of these events.
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    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    BBC seem very excited by the word 'plausible' in the report about Kate Maltby's story.

    Do they know what it means?
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    @Charles (Sorry, Vanilla made nonsense of my attempt to follow on....)

    Shit, Charles, I don't want an apolgy, ffs. If we can't have a knockabout without the need for somebody to apologise it's a sad state of affairs. This is not a Parliamentary Committee you know!

    For what (little) it's worth I generally enjoy reading your posts and was surprised at your quick defence of what I thought was an untenable position. Maybe it was too quick. He plainly lied and whilst it might be noble to defend your mates, your cred goes if you do it against all the evidence.

    I should say he's no loss and should be dropped without remorse. I expect he will be, and in the end he will matter little. Longer term, what's going on with the Plod is more important. They may not have lied, but you and I sure as hell didn't ought to be terrifically comfortable with what they did do.

    Agreed?
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,838


    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    A constant drip of stories like those mentioned will eventually have that effect on juries, they’ll certainly be more willing to question whether the accounts of policemen are accurate and believable. Not good for justice when that change happens, of course the majority of coppers are straight and want to see justice served in the correct manner.
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    That's the Germans surrounded.....

    The Prime Minister will travel to Warsaw today for an annual summit designed to strengthen the relationship between the UK and Poland as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

    The UK-Poland bilateral summit will bring together both Prime Ministers along with a number of senior Cabinet ministers, including the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary, Defence Secretary, Home Secretary and Business Secretary.

    As an integral part of the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to announce a new joint UK-Poland Treaty on Defence and Security Co-operation. The only other European Union country we have such a treaty with is France.


    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/pm-announces-landmark-new-package-of-defence-and-security-cooperation-with-poland

    we need to strengthen ties with EVERY member state, as opposed to the EU as an institution
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,838

    BBC seem very excited by the word 'plausible' in the report about Kate Maltby's story.

    Do they know what it means?

    Does it mean that Green is an evil Tory pervert?
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    Sandpit said:

    the majority of coppers are straight and want to see justice served in the correct manner.

    Citation needed
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    Mr. Pong, disturbing news about Uganda. Cheers for posting it.
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    calumcalum Posts: 3,046
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    An apology.

    Last weekend, I tipped Green not to be next minister out. Sorry if anyone lost money on this.

    In mitigation, if the silly sod had been honest about knowing that there was porn on his computer - however it got there - he'd probably still be in post. But he's not and it's often the cover-up that gets you. That being so, the possibility that Green might have been economical with the truth in his explanations should have been a factor worth taking into account. Was he value at 1/3 knowing then what we did? Hard to say. It's a good rule of thumb that the favourite in this market is usually significantly under-priced (I remember Vince Cable once being 1/7 to be next to go, which would have been a loser), though Green was clearly an exception.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578
    Let's get this clear.

    The Prime Minister who assured the nation that there would be no early general election, and then called an early general election, sacks her Deputy PM for lying.

    'Oh we make the standards and we make the rules
    And if you don't abide by them you must be a fool
    We have the power to control the whole land
    You never must question our motives or plans'
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    An apology.

    Last weekend, I tipped Green not to be next minister out. Sorry if anyone lost money on this.

    In mitigation, if the silly sod had been honest about knowing that there was porn on his computer - however it got there - he'd probably still be in post. But he's not and it's often the cover-up that gets you. That being so, the possibility that Green might have been economical with the truth in his explanations should have been a factor worth taking into account. Was he value at 1/3 knowing then what we did? Hard to say. It's a good rule of thumb that the favourite in this market is usually significantly under-priced (I remember Vince Cable once being 1/7 to be next to go, which would have been a loser), though Green was clearly an exception.

    I thought it was a good tip and 1/3 was too short on the basis of the information we possessed at the time. No one can always be right.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,691

    This case has striking similarities to the Stephen Byers affair. A lie, not particularly important but quite deliberate, told in relation to an essentially minor matter. Theresa May's handling of the matter compares very favourably with Tony Blair's. She has taken a difficult but correct decision. Once a minister's reputation for integrity has been compromised, whatever the surrounding circumstances, there must be consequences. Her government will benefit from her decision.

    I think Damian Green has some basis for feeling he has been treated harshly, not just by the police, but also by Theresa May. Although Green has no comeback on the precise point you make, the unimportant lie was in the context of a policeman acting unethically and possibly illegally.
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    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578

    That's the Germans surrounded.....

    The Prime Minister will travel to Warsaw today for an annual summit designed to strengthen the relationship between the UK and Poland as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

    The UK-Poland bilateral summit will bring together both Prime Ministers along with a number of senior Cabinet ministers, including the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary, Defence Secretary, Home Secretary and Business Secretary.

    As an integral part of the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to announce a new joint UK-Poland Treaty on Defence and Security Co-operation. The only other European Union country we have such a treaty with is France.


    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/pm-announces-landmark-new-package-of-defence-and-security-cooperation-with-poland

    Tezzie is going mob-handed in case any of them need to resign before the end of the meeting.
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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
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    Don't like Damian Green much, but it's so obviously a smear campaign by some dodgy coppers.

    Leaking perfectly legal information years after an investigation and after any evidence to the contrary is long gone.

    And did you notice it went from "extreme porn" to "porn" and eventually to "porn thumbnails". The last of which used to get downloaded all the time by viruses and malware in crappy web browsers without the user knowing.
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    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    I'd have thought that it's worth punters having a target price for laying Jeremy Hunt. There are far too many preening politicians who fancy themselves in the top job for him not to come under friendly fire fairly soon if the Hunt bandwagon starts rolling too fast.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,691
    Maybe we need a market on who will be the LAST original minister to leave the cabinet, not the next one. Theresa May might outlast them all.
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    I suppose he was sacked because it was taking too long for him to type his resignation letter one-handed?
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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
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    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    I'd have thought that it's worth punters having a target price for laying Jeremy Hunt. There are far too many preening politicians who fancy themselves in the top job for him not to come under friendly fire fairly soon if the Hunt bandwagon starts rolling too fast.
    6/1 I will zero him on a green book, 3/1 I'll go deep red
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    An apology.

    Last weekend, I tipped Green not to be next minister out. Sorry if anyone lost money on this.

    In mitigation, if the silly sod had been honest about knowing that there was porn on his computer - however it got there - he'd probably still be in post. But he's not and it's often the cover-up that gets you. That being so, the possibility that Green might have been economical with the truth in his explanations should have been a factor worth taking into account. Was he value at 1/3 knowing then what we did? Hard to say. It's a good rule of thumb that the favourite in this market is usually significantly under-priced (I remember Vince Cable once being 1/7 to be next to go, which would have been a loser), though Green was clearly an exception.

    No apology needed, it was a good call on available evidence, even with the benefit of hindsight.
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    We will now discover if Damian Green is a true friend of Theresa May or not.
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    That's the Germans surrounded.....

    The Prime Minister will travel to Warsaw today for an annual summit designed to strengthen the relationship between the UK and Poland as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

    The UK-Poland bilateral summit will bring together both Prime Ministers along with a number of senior Cabinet ministers, including the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary, Defence Secretary, Home Secretary and Business Secretary.

    As an integral part of the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to announce a new joint UK-Poland Treaty on Defence and Security Co-operation. The only other European Union country we have such a treaty with is France.


    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/pm-announces-landmark-new-package-of-defence-and-security-cooperation-with-poland

    Tezzie is going mob-handed in case any of them need to resign before the end of the meeting.
    This would be the Poland that is slipping into outright authoritarian, non-democratic government?
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    Mr. Herdson, obviously tips that don't come off aren't great but we all get them wrong and an apology is not required. Everyone makes their own judgements, after all.
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    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    I'd have thought that it's worth punters having a target price for laying Jeremy Hunt. There are far too many preening politicians who fancy themselves in the top job for him not to come under friendly fire fairly soon if the Hunt bandwagon starts rolling too fast.
    6/1 I will zero him on a green book, 3/1 I'll go deep red
    These are marvellous days for us Huntsters!
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    calumcalum Posts: 3,046
    PMs/Presidents at odds with law enforcement:

    - Trump
    - Netanyahu
    - Rajoy

    and now May
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    The black spot of praise from Johnny McT is not invariably thought of as good news.

    https://tinyurl.com/ycer2hdz

    McTernan won 81% of the votes in the 'Who'll be the WORST at predicting politics in 2017?' poll at the bottom of that piece.

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    We will now discover if Damian Green is a true friend of Theresa May or not.

    He must realise she had no choice - once he was in breach of minister's code?
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    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    edited December 2017

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    I'd have thought that it's worth punters having a target price for laying Jeremy Hunt. There are far too many preening politicians who fancy themselves in the top job for him not to come under friendly fire fairly soon if the Hunt bandwagon starts rolling too fast.
    "I have no ambitions for high office but if called upon to serve my party and my country then I will of course do what is needed." might be what Hunt will say.

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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    More over-excitable chatter from PB.

    The public couldn't give a toss about Green and this will change nothing....

    Green did rather well out of May winning. A bit like Hammond he seems to have got up to near the top without doing much at all.

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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
    Which kind do they have doing security in Downing Street?
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    TonyE said:

    TonyE said:

    Charles said:

    Good morninginformation

    Public interest defence.

    You could argue the methods here aren’t as bad than the methods that saw the expenses saga.
    Sitting on the evidence for a decade before striking when Grern was weaken. Not a good fact pattern for public interest defence
    I’m not defending the police.

    I’m just pointing out the reality.

    Iason?

    Unusual.
    He resigned specifically because he lied about being notified that the porn was found, and that he was not aware that it had been found. His solicitor was notified twice that it had been found at the time.

    And that is all.
    So he did lie. (Charles, please note.)

    Wonder why?
    I agree with @TonyE !

    You are saying something different
    My post last nite was very brief. I referred to Green as a liar. That was all. Didn't elaborate at all. You said he wasn't. Now you are fictionalising my account.

    Why?
    because i misremembered your post - conflating you with the guardian.

    At the time I thought he had omitted the fact he had been told - hadn't appreciated he'd specifically denied it

    You seem weirdly fixated on something completely unimportant, but if it really matters to you I'm sorry.
    Shit, Charles, I don't want an apolgy, ffs. If we can't have a knockabout without the need for somebody to apologise it's a sad state of affairs. This is not a Parliamentary Committee you know!

    For what (little) it's worth I generally enjoy reading your posts and was surprised at your quick defence of what I thought was an untenable position. Maybe it was too quick. He plainly lied and whilst it might be noble to defend your mates, your cred goes if you do it against all the evidence.

    I should say he's no loss and should be dropped without remorse. I expect he will be, and in the end he will matter little. Longer term, what's going on with the Plod is more important. They may not have lied, but you and I sure as hell didn't ought to be terrifically comfortable with what they did do.

    Agreed?
    I wasn't defending him - and think May was right to sack him. It's important people know why he was sacked - and what he wasn't sacked for. The ex-police have behaved appallingly
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    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172


    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
    “.... the kind of cops they see and meet day to day ...”

    Have you walked out of an Ealing comedy from the 1930s?

    The nearest police station to the medium-seized town in Wales where I live is over 50 miles away.

    There is plenty of low-level crime, but the police don’t bother to come out.

    I don’t see a policeman from one year to the next.
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961
    calum said:

    PMs/Presidents at odds with law enforcement:

    - Trump
    - Netanyahu
    - Rajoy

    and now May

    How is May at odds with them? The Met commissioner condemned the actions of the retired officers.
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    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    edited December 2017
    calum said:
    The results seem to come out very quickly. Have they been decided in advance?
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    stevefstevef Posts: 1,044
    But he wont cause trouble for Mrs May because he is an old friend.

    Damien Green is a faceless nonentity. He will fade away onto the backbenches. The voting public doesnt really care. Only the chattering classes will still be talking about this next week.

    Nor does it weaken the government. The Tories will still be doing well in the polls (and for ANY government to be in the 40s and only a few points behind the Opposition is very unusual) because of Jeremy Corbyn, and in the long run it may benefit the government since it gets rid of another tired old face and allows new blood to enter the cabinet.

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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    It's fake

    (I have no idea whether it is or not, but you asked someone to tell it was and I like to be helpful)
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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
    I should clarify, as I was woolly in the earlier comment. I don't mean that the police in general can't be trusted based on the actions of a few individuals. I was trying to say that for these specific officers, the fact that they were willing to break some procedures - and, quite possibly, laws - has to be relevant as to whether they can be trusted to tell the truth on all matters.
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    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    Charles said:

    It's fake

    (I have no idea whether it is or not, but you asked someone to tell it was and I like to be helpful)
    What pity. I’d like a Geek passport.
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,961
    Old news. apparently it was sent by Manchester City Council, not the Home Office.

    https://twitter.com/GreekComedian/status/793487456305868801
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,691
    edited December 2017
    Sandpit said:


    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    A constant drip of stories like those mentioned will eventually have that effect on juries, they’ll certainly be more willing to question whether the accounts of policemen are accurate and believable. Not good for justice when that change happens, of course the majority of coppers are straight and want to see justice served in the correct manner.
    Public trust is very important and I am not sure the Police value it as much as they should.

    I am extremely law abiding and have had very limited exposure to the police. One of my few contacts followed a burglary in my house where I had a camera stolen. The police found a camera of the same model in a raid on a suspected burglar and called me in to identify the camera so they could link the suspect to a theft. It's curious how powerful recognition is because instantly I knew that wasn't my camera. I was put under quite a lot of pressure to say it was. I would get a camera and a thief would get the punishment he deserved. From the policeman's point of view, he was doing his job of putting bad ones away and I wasn't being helpful.
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    Mr. Herdson, obviously tips that don't come off aren't great but we all get them wrong and an apology is not required. Everyone makes their own judgements, after all.

    That's very kind of you to say, and to Alastair and others too. Still feel a bit bad about it coming off the rails so quickly though.
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/embarrassing-typo-council-form-calls-9190719
    There is no way the author of that question has English as a first language, so we should actually be praising Man City Council for its inclusiveness.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578

    Charles said:

    It's fake

    (I have no idea whether it is or not, but you asked someone to tell it was and I like to be helpful)
    What pity. I’d like a Geek passport.
    I thought that was a prerequisite for posting on PB?
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,838

    We will now discover if Damian Green is a true friend of Theresa May or not.

    He must realise she had no choice - once he was in breach of minister's code?
    Yes, once the enquiry found him guilty of a breach of the code he shouldn’t have needed to be asked for his resignation.
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    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,152
    FF43 said:

    This case has striking similarities to the Stephen Byers affair. A lie, not particularly important but quite deliberate, told in relation to an essentially minor matter. Theresa May's handling of the matter compares very favourably with Tony Blair's. She has taken a difficult but correct decision. Once a minister's reputation for integrity has been compromised, whatever the surrounding circumstances, there must be consequences. Her government will benefit from her decision.

    I think Damian Green has some basis for feeling he has been treated harshly, not just by the police, but also by Theresa May. Although Green has no comeback on the precise point you make, the unimportant lie was in the context of a policeman acting unethically and possibly illegally.
    If it was an unimportant matter, why did he lie about it? It was stupid, at the very least.

    If someone lies about something unimportant, how can one trust them not to lie about something important?

    Of course Green had to go. Silly man.

    But the police’s behaviour - both in failing to destroy evidence they had been ordered by a court to do, in taking a police note book from police control, in revealing confidential information, other than as required by law, and in making unsubstantiated assertions about a person’s behaviour in the context of something which was not a criminal offence - is quite outrageous and an abuse of their power.

    It is a pity that this point is being lost in the newspaper coverage. If the police can be as sloppy and as careless of their legal obligations in such a case, little wonder that they are incapable of complying with their legal obligations when a man faces a rape trial.
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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
    I should clarify, as I was woolly in the earlier comment. I don't mean that the police in general can't be trusted based on the actions of a few individuals. I was trying to say that for these specific officers, the fact that they were willing to break some procedures - and, quite possibly, laws - has to be relevant as to whether they can be trusted to tell the truth on all matters.
    I should think this particular bunch ought to be regarded as highly suspect, David!
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    calum said:
    The results seem to come out very quickly. Have they been decided in advance?

    They counts at the polling stations.

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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,319

    We will now discover if Damian Green is a true friend of Theresa May or not.

    He must realise she had no choice - once he was in breach of minister's code?
    He evidently didn't realise it - the exchange of letters makes it clear that he didn't think he should have been asked to go.

    It's always difficult if people are long-standing friends and then one is promoted to be the other's boss - they often aren't quite sure how far they can take disagreements. Where one is caught lying it must be especially awkward. But I think he'd be best advised to lie low for a bit and then take up some worthy cause, rather than lash out at May at the first opportunity.
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    Mr. Herdson, ha, well, if you'd followed my 2017 tips you'd see it more as enlightened self-interest on my part ;)
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    The police can leak false details to the press to discredit killed victims (de Menezes was running away! That Muslim was shot by his own brother and was a pedo anyway!) all they want, but when middle-aged Tory porn addicts get targeted PB for some reason takes it personally...

    Well, the terrifying thing about this is seeing how they act with cabinet ministers who could potentially get back at them and, in the Plebgate case, also CCTV, think what they must be like when dealing with poor and/or uneducated people with little or no hope of defending themselves.

    Juries really need to start routinely assuming that the police are lying to them.
    Been on a few juries, Edmund. Not one thought the police were lying and in each case the possibility was discussed and discounted, correctly in my opinion. Doesn't mean they never do. Each case should be judged on its merits, on the evidence and using common sense.

    They seem to me to have behaved badly in this case, but there is no reason to think they lied.

    Green behaved badly, and lied (whatever Charles may say!)
    Given that the police played fast and loose with procedures, that has impinge on the level of integrity one should expect of them in general.
    On the whole I think the public can distinguish between the sort of cops they see and meet day to day and those likely to be raiding Parliamentary offices.
    “.... the kind of cops they see and meet day to day ...”

    Have you walked out of an Ealing comedy from the 1930s?

    The nearest police station to the medium-seized town in Wales where I live is over 50 miles away.

    There is plenty of low-level crime, but the police don’t bother to come out.

    I don’t see a policeman from one year to the next.
    Then come to London, Dear Boy. Enter via the M4 at 90 mph. You will very quickly see a policeman.

    Ealing comedies were about 1948-1957. Similar vintage to me.
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    calum said:

    Potentially a bit of value in the Betfair Catalonian market - most recent polling points to the Cs having a good chance of getting the most seats. JxCat also seem to be staging a late surge - results due at 10pm.

    ERC 2/5
    Cs 7/4
    JxCat 8/1

    It's the seats part that's the issue.

    There are four very unequal seats, with the Barcelona seat carrying a majority, but is even then underweighted in terms of population. I think that's what's contributing to some v different views.

    I have Cs at about 2.4, only £20 though

    Normally you'd expect ERC to walk this, but Puigdemont has the recognition and the status of (former) president, so he will get a lot of votes that would normally have gone to ERC. Ciutadans has a decent chance of coming through the middle as a result.

    The thing to look out for is turnout in the dormitory towns around Barcelona where you'd expect the Unionist vote to be strongest. If voters do flock to the polls there it will be very significant.

    What is key today is not who gets how many seats, but what overall percentage the UDI parties get. If it is over 50%, it is a game-changer. Anything less and it is ongoing stand-off, assuming they do not lose their overall majority of seats.

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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,578
    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.
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    calum said:
    The results seem to come out very quickly. Have they been decided in advance?
    It seems there will be electronic voting in Catalonia - which of course is open to manipulation by Russian or other hackers.

    News at the time of the October Catalan referendum was:
    "On Saturday a Catalan government spokesman said at least four police officers had entered the centre in Barcelona which controls the regional government’s telecommunications and IT and were expected to stay there for two days.

    This followed an order by Catalonia’s High Court on Friday for police to prevent electronic voting taking place. The court also instructed Google to delete an application it said was being used to spread information on the vote. "

    Could the Spanish poloce again be present in the IT centre when electronic votes are being "counted" ?
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    VerulamiusVerulamius Posts: 1,435

    That's the Germans surrounded.....

    The Prime Minister will travel to Warsaw today for an annual summit designed to strengthen the relationship between the UK and Poland as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

    The UK-Poland bilateral summit will bring together both Prime Ministers along with a number of senior Cabinet ministers, including the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary, Defence Secretary, Home Secretary and Business Secretary.

    As an integral part of the summit, the Prime Minister is expected to announce a new joint UK-Poland Treaty on Defence and Security Co-operation. The only other European Union country we have such a treaty with is France.


    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/pm-announces-landmark-new-package-of-defence-and-security-cooperation-with-poland

    Tezzie is going mob-handed in case any of them need to resign before the end of the meeting.
    Doesn’t she trust any of them to remain at home? Isn’t there a saying keep your friends close and your enemies closer?
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    We will now discover if Damian Green is a true friend of Theresa May or not.

    He must realise she had no choice - once he was in breach of minister's code?
    But I think he'd be best advised to lie low for a bit and then take up some worthy cause, rather than lash out at May at the first opportunity.
    Police malfeasance might be a good cause.....
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    Mr. Evershed, I'll never understand the infatuation some people have with electronic voting. We have a simple, robust system that works very well (outside of Tower Hamlets). Why bugger it up with something so vulnerable to outside manipulation?
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    stodge said:

    May survives for three reasons - one, there is no single opponent who can unify a significant portion of the Party against her. There are a number of potential successors each of whom has his or her own power base within the Parliamentary Party (which is all that counts until you are one of the last two) but none of whom has a decisive advantage or knows they can strike and win.

    Second, the A50 negotiations. If the outcome is not deemed to be electorally popular, irrespective of whether it is in fact a good or bad deal for the country, May can carry the can and her successors can start with a fairly clean slate.

    Third, May is not a loser, yet. Rather, no one else would be significantly better. Thatcher fell in 1990 because polls showed first Heseltine and then Major doing much better against Labour. Dewy-eyed Thatcherites tend to forget this - had the Conservatives gone into a 1991 election led by Thatcher they would have lost because a lot of the country were sick and tired of her by then. May's problems will only begin if the polls show a number of Conservative MPs losing their seats and jobs whereas said jobs would be safe with Boris or Gove or Hunt or whoever as leader.


    Survation polling since the election indicates that May does as well as Boris and Davis against Corbyn and better than Hammond and Rudd
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    East West just as much as North South. It's the divide in England that few talk about, but which really matters politically and economically.

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    Cyclefree said:

    FF43 said:

    This case has striking similarities to the Stephen Byers affair. A lie, not particularly important but quite deliberate, told in relation to an essentially minor matter. Theresa May's handling of the matter compares very favourably with Tony Blair's. She has taken a difficult but correct decision. Once a minister's reputation for integrity has been compromised, whatever the surrounding circumstances, there must be consequences. Her government will benefit from her decision.

    I think Damian Green has some basis for feeling he has been treated harshly, not just by the police, but also by Theresa May. Although Green has no comeback on the precise point you make, the unimportant lie was in the context of a policeman acting unethically and possibly illegally.
    If it was an unimportant matter, why did he lie about it? It was stupid, at the very least.

    If someone lies about something unimportant, how can one trust them not to lie about something important?

    Of course Green had to go. Silly man.

    But the police’s behaviour - both in failing to destroy evidence they had been ordered by a court to do, in taking a police note book from police control, in revealing confidential information, other than as required by law, and in making unsubstantiated assertions about a person’s behaviour in the context of something which was not a criminal offence - is quite outrageous and an abuse of their power.

    It is a pity that this point is being lost in the newspaper coverage. If the police can be as sloppy and as careless of their legal obligations in such a case, little wonder that they are incapable of complying with their legal obligations when a man faces a rape trial.
    Yes, unimportant indeed, Cyclefree. Just a thought though. It has been regularly stated that the porn was legal, but the law changed about eight weeks after the event and a lot of pretty toxic stuff was still legal at the time and certainly isn't now. This is pure guesswork, but it may be that those who knew exactly what was on the puter were in a position to make Green's position untenable.

    On your substantive point, agree wholeheartedly. The police need to wotchit, and we need to watch them carefully now to make sure they wotchit.
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    How many people worked in Greens office ?
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    Wonder how much Danegeld we had to cough up?
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    Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414
    I'll believe it when she's on the plane. But it can only be a good sign.
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    East West just as much as North South. It's the divide in England that few talk about, but which really matters politically and economically.

    Why has Merseyside got such a relatively high output growth?
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    AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621

    East West just as much as North South. It's the divide in England that few talk about, but which really matters politically and economically.

    Why has Merseyside got such a relatively high output growth?
    Massive investment on a low base. Basically, it's just a lot less shit than it was.
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    HYUFD said:

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
    Conhome polls mean absolutely diddly squat outside of an actual contest.
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    Talking of the police, I inadvertently discovered a foolproof way of getting them to come really quickly, when I rang them to say that I thought I had found an unexploded bomb on the edge of a field near our house. They arrived in minutes. They were surprisingly polite when the smooth rounded metal which had been uncovered by rain turned out to be part of an old pig-trough.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937

    HYUFD said:

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
    Conhome polls mean absolutely diddly squat outside of an actual contest.
    They show who Tory members are likely to favour and given it is members who make the final decision between the final 2 chosen by MPs that is important
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Must be hard to be Green. Decades in parliament. Reached the top of Government. Yet achieved nothing of note apart from notoriety at the end. You must ask what was the point of all that.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,215

    HYUFD said:

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
    Conhome polls mean absolutely diddly squat outside of an actual contest.
    and he is forgetting that the MPs get to pick the two that the members choose from. The order of preference of a long list of candidates amongst members - even if ConHome were representative, which it clearly isn't (just go read the comments sections!) - is pretty much irrelevant as to who the MPs might elect.
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    FWIW (not much? - ed.) Peston's take:

    https://www.facebook.com/pestonitv/posts/1967383340253068
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,215

    I'll believe it when she's on the plane. But it can only be a good sign.
    Agree. Boris must have had a fairly good hunch about the chance of success when he finally got off his fat butt. I expect we've coughed up the money we owe them for that cancelled defence deal.
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    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,215

    East West just as much as North South. It's the divide in England that few talk about, but which really matters politically and economically.

    Indeed. But what chance of the Tories coming to the aid of their new supporters?
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    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    Because it's porn and not reading the news.
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    I'll believe it when she's on the plane. But it can only be a good sign.

    Lock Boris up in a cupboard with no means of outside communication until she lands in the UK.

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    TonyETonyE Posts: 938
    Jonathan said:

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    Because it's porn and not reading the news.
    Again, the question is "What was the warrant issued for"? Would you like your own computer to be subject to a fishing expedition?
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    IanB2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
    Conhome polls mean absolutely diddly squat outside of an actual contest.
    and he is forgetting that the MPs get to pick the two that the members choose from. The order of preference of a long list of candidates amongst members - even if ConHome were representative, which it clearly isn't (just go read the comments sections!) - is pretty much irrelevant as to who the MPs might elect.
    Con Home got the 2005 Tory leadership contest ( the last contest which went to the membership) spot on.

    Given the final 2 are highly likely to come from those 8 the members polling cannot be ignored
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,838
    Good to see. Hunt’s doing a very good job in the most difficult of departments.

    The above comment is completely unrelated to him being my most profitable next PM.
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    YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    Because most organisations have an internet usage policy that you sign , when you start working for them.This includes sites which you are not allowed to view , whilst at work..Most people working in the public sector would be suspended awaiting an investigation, if they had personally logged on and accessed porn .
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    Sandpit said:

    Good to see. Hunt’s doing a very good job in the most difficult of departments.

    The above comment is completely unrelated to him being my most profitable next PM.
    Will Hunt becoming PM be one of PB's biggest ever payout days? Seems a few of us have taken the tip on this one.
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    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,905

    Sandpit said:

    Good to see. Hunt’s doing a very good job in the most difficult of departments.

    The above comment is completely unrelated to him being my most profitable next PM.
    Will Hunt becoming PM be one of PB's biggest ever payout days? Seems a few of us have taken the tip on this one.
    Didn’t someone on here bet against Hunt at 50/1 if he makes the final 2?
    That will be a very bad day for him/her...
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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,123
    He lied about whether he had ever been told by the police on his computer. Why would he do that? Because if he was officially told he would have had to officially investigate how it got there and he obviously didn't want to do that. Its difficult not to draw a certain inference from that.

    Its dishonest but it seems a pretty minor thing to end a career. Its not hard to see why someone would have wanted to keep something like this as quiet as possible. It's not, after all, illegal. I can't help feeling that if the other allegation of inappropriate conduct was anything less than "plausible" he might have survived this. Mrs May has known him a long time. She will have her own views about how "plausible" that allegation may be and what the risk is of it being a one off.

    I suppose this is what you get for thinking you are Frank Underwood and Zoe Barnes. My guess is that he will go fairly quietly and ideally be found some form of sinecure fairly soon.
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    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    The plaudits are coming in thick and fast for Jezza Hunt after his interview today. I think he will soon become the Tories' new golden boy. Where does this leave the other leadership hopefuls, now put in the shade by Hunt's mastery? They need to to reclaim the agenda. DD should threaten to resign (again); Boris has to write another article slagging off Theresa's approach to Brexit.

    Given Hunt was 8th in the last Conservative Home Tory members leadership poll, behind Mogg, Gove, Boris, Davis, Raab, Rudd and Stewart, he has a long way to go to be even in the top tier to succeed May, let alone be favourite
    Conhome polls mean absolutely diddly squat outside of an actual contest.
    They show who Tory members are likely to favour and given it is members who make the final decision between the final 2 chosen by MPs that is important
    Do they? That can't have been put to the test since 2005, and even if it was tested then, the site and its readership will have changed significantly in the intervening years.

    Besides, a free-for-all vote is no substitute for head-to-head polling, which teases out all the transferred votes. And it's not the members who decide who's in the top tier; it's the MPs.
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    JonnyJimmyJonnyJimmy Posts: 2,548
    Yorkcity said:

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    Because most organisations have an internet usage policy that you sign , when you start working for them.This includes sites which you are not allowed to view , whilst at work..Most people working in the public sector would be suspended awaiting an investigation, if they had personally logged on and accessed porn .
    Most organisations sack people for being drunk at work. Parliament is different.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,937
    rkrkrk said:

    Sandpit said:

    Good to see. Hunt’s doing a very good job in the most difficult of departments.

    The above comment is completely unrelated to him being my most profitable next PM.
    Will Hunt becoming PM be one of PB's biggest ever payout days? Seems a few of us have taken the tip on this one.
    Didn’t someone on here bet against Hunt at 50/1 if he makes the final 2?
    That will be a very bad day for him/her...
    I only bet in a Boris/Mogg v Hunt final two the membership would back the former, that was the only circumstance that bet would apply
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,215
    Yorkcity said:

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    Because most organisations have an internet usage policy that you sign , when you start working for them.This includes sites which you are not allowed to view , whilst at work..Most people working in the public sector would be suspended awaiting an investigation, if they had personally logged on and accessed porn .
    And most such policies allow limited reasonable private use - for example doing some online shopping or banking (with a 'b') during work breaks.
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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,123

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Sorry, I hadn't seen this when adding my tuppence worth but we are in agreement.
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    DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215

    If a manager in most organisations was told by the police that there was porn on one of the office computers they would want to try to find out who was responsible. Unless they already knew - because it was them.

    Green was told, and then seemingly did not try to find out who was responsible. And then tried to cover up the fact he had been told.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    Everyone operates their office computer for personal use from time to time - even if only to view the BBC news site or political betting of course.

    Unless the porn was illegal why should/would anyone be bothered?
    For starters, you are putting your entire company's IT security at risk. Instant sacking.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,215
    HYUFD said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Sandpit said:

    Good to see. Hunt’s doing a very good job in the most difficult of departments.

    The above comment is completely unrelated to him being my most profitable next PM.
    Will Hunt becoming PM be one of PB's biggest ever payout days? Seems a few of us have taken the tip on this one.
    Didn’t someone on here bet against Hunt at 50/1 if he makes the final 2?
    That will be a very bad day for him/her...
    I only bet in a Boris/Mogg v Hunt final two the membership would back the former, that was the only circumstance that bet would apply
    Actually no. AIR your bet was effectively whether Hunt or Boris/Mogg would become leader, and you lose if Hunt does, whoever else is in the final two. This was clarified on the day you made the deal. Just my recollection.
This discussion has been closed.