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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » PaddyPower clearly doesn’t understand the CON leadership rules

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    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419

    Mr. Pulpstar, aye. Federer's record is an order of magnitude more impressive than Serena Williams'. She's very good, but who's her rival? She has a crushingly strong record against Sharapova. Henin and Clijsters retired fairly early, I think, into Williams' career.

    Federer's been there with Nadal, Djokovic and Murray. Before them Roddick (no mean player) was perhaps his greatest challenger.

    Perhaps she didn't have serious rivals because she was more than "very good"?
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799

    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    Have to say Gin, you've called all of her big mistakes correctly. I remember when it was me, you and SeanT telling the rest of PB that her dementia tax was a disaster for our election chances. I did think the petty nature of the taxi stuff would come back and bite her in the bum as well, but not this badly.
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    XenonXenon Posts: 471
    And on topic May has got to go.

    We need someone who doesn't play poker with all their cards face up.
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Truly?
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    It's a serious time when both the British and German governments could conceivably collapse at any time. We probably haven't had that combination since 1945.
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    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Well she's had practice.
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,287
    If he hadn't resigned in a fit of pique, he might have been up there in The Commons asking the questions.

    https://twitter.com/timoncheese/status/1016333654832943105
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    surbysurby Posts: 1,227
    There is no better blood sport than Tories tearing themselves apart ! Where is SeanT ?
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    volcanopetevolcanopete Posts: 2,078
    Fantastic performance from Mr Corbyn today in the HoC.He is ready to serve.
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    old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    David Miliband would have been a poor choice for Labour leader. He would have endeavoured to help May with her broken promises to Brexit voters whereas Corbyn is happy allowing her to swing in the wind.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,891
    edited July 2018

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    It works both ways. May should have treated them with more respect - see Chequers for example: phones confiscated, taxis for resignees, papers shared with Berlin before the cabinet etc.
    Yeah, because their disloyalty only started on Friday ...

    The hardcore have been plotting and scheming against her since she became PM.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,902
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Ermm err errm
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Forgive me if I am sceptical
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,902
    @Sean_F No fake news please !
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,920
    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
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    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Xenon said:

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    Geez are people still going on about US chicken?

    We're continually told how great free trade in the EU is, but for some reason the same with the US is a terrible idea because of their (completely safe to eat) chicken.
    The quality of food here in the US is far, far below that in the UK.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    edited July 2018
    Roger said:

    Jonathan said:

    Some pretty killer lines from Jezza.

    Pretty average I thought Chuka Umuna spoke immediately after the news came through and he was career destroying. Think Robin Cook. Corbyn's problem is that his history on Brexit is so mixed that all the 'killer' lines made him look like a hypocrite
    If Chuka Umunna was Labour leader now he would almost certainly win the next general election, luckily for the Tories Corbyn is Labour leader, who turns off both centrists and many Remainers so if the Tories rally their hard Brexit base they could still yet get another term in power.

    It needed Blair to finally beat the Tories last time, Kinnock the sequel was not enough, the same may be true for Corbyn the sequel
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    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    MaxPB said:

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    Have to say Gin, you've called all of her big mistakes correctly. I remember when it was me, you and SeanT telling the rest of PB that her dementia tax was a disaster for our election chances. I did think the petty nature of the taxi stuff would come back and bite her in the bum as well, but not this badly.
    Well to be fair we haven't actually got any evidence that it was a contributing factor.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Are you joking?
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. Herdson, better (in relative terms) than Federer, Nadal, Djokovic?

    Only a casual tennis watcher, but don't believe that for a moment.
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    we allow lower standards in from Poland, Italy the Netherlandswhy arbitrarily pick on the yanks
  • Options
    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419
    Pulpstar said:

    Might be an error, but I've redded out Mayxit 2018 (For a loss of £40). Also laid Corbyn to zero for next PM - he's still 6.6 to lay in that market - surely surely May will go before the next GE now.

    6.6 is too short for Corbyn but there is a scenario where the DUP withdraw confidence from the Tories and, hence, the government loses a Commons VoNC, leading to Corbyn being invited to the Palace. Also the risk of defections, though I think that low. I'd say Corbyn's odds should be around low teens at the moment.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,920
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Fortunately, you jape. Right?

    Right?

    Right?

    (Nervously bites fingers.)
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    old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238

    AndyJS said:

    Anazina said:

    The Conservative Party are an utter shambles – a national embarrassment. Please, someone make it stop.


    If only Labour had a decent electable leader...

    Where's David Miliband when you need him.
    A Miliband electable???
    For Labour? Isn't he Jewish?
    That was what the Tory press was saying about his father and by implication, Ed Miliband. And who can forget the bacon sandwich reporting?
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,573
    rcs1000 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
    +1
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799
    rcs1000 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
    That's very sensible.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,902
    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,891
    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    As I said in the last reply, that was hardly the start of it, was it? Though it may be the end.

    A leaver PM is going to have awful troubles within the party - and they'll deserve it, too. I'm quite looking forward to it. Major, Cameron and May all damaged or brought down by the same group of people within the party.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    Having seen the showtime documentary on the NYT, they don't have a clue about their own country, let alone commenting on another.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,902
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,902
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    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    What an evening to be going to the Cambridge Shakespeare Festival and to have run out of mobile data on my phone ...

    (I'm too cheap to buy some more.)

    Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
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    old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    Pulpstar said:

    MaxPB said:

    ****BETTING POST****

    Penny Mordaunt is available with Coral at 66/1

    ****BETTING POST****

    Right, time for May to go and make way for Penny.

    Single
    Next Prime Minister
    Penny Mordaunt
    Next Prime Minister
    Odds: 80/1

    Total Stake
    £15.00
    Total Potential Returns
    £1215.00
    Penny wise. Pounds in. :lol:
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    RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 27,176
    Question - with Her Majesty's Government tearing itself apart and potentially removing the PM in the next day or two, what advise do you give the President if you are a senior White House staffer about whether to come on Thursday?
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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,320
    Foxy said:

    Charles said:



    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU

    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    Yes, it's generally-accepted that US standards for chicken production have much lower minimum animal welfare (though some companies are improving) with intense overcrowding. The chlorination and high use of antibiotics are about fighting the diseases that arise from close-packing the birds. Neither chlorine nor antibiotics do you any harm in themselves, but they mask real problems.

    British standards are better than some European countries and worse than others - generally speaking, Sweden and Netherlands come top, but certainly Britain is generally better than, say, Italy.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Dr. Spyn, what else would she say?
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,525

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    we allow lower standards in from Poland, Italy the Netherlandswhy arbitrarily pick on the yanks
    Because theirs are lower still.

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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    = Downing Street confirming the required number of letters have gone in......
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    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787

    Question - with Her Majesty's Government tearing itself apart and potentially removing the PM in the next day or two, what advise do you give the President if you are a senior White House staffer about whether to come on Thursday?

    That is one advantage of being a monarchy. The royals can do all the gladhanding while the politicians keep fighting each other.
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    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    I guess she has to fight, however, the plotters will all be sending YouTube videos of her dodging the debates, the damning articles about the dementia tax and the video of Dimblebot revealing the exit poll result at 10pm. That's all they really need to bring her down. Brexit is a side show compared to her inability to win an election and her hubris in throwing away a working majority.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,367

    What an evening to be going to the Cambridge Shakespeare Festival and to have run out of mobile data on my phone ...

    (I'm too cheap to buy some more.)

    Comedy of Errors ?
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    Pulpstar said:

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    Much as I know you're a hardcore leaver and so would wish it to be so, I think you're right.

    Actually I could probably live with Theresa's deal if that was the end point - But her starting position is basically at the point where I'd say no more.

    I know she'll give even more to the EU from here.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,920
    edited July 2018
    Xenon said:

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    Geez are people still going on about US chicken?

    We're continually told how great free trade in the EU is, but for some reason the same with the US is a terrible idea because of their (completely safe to eat) chicken.
    That's not the reason.

    The price for a UK-US FTA is unfettered access to the UK for US agricultural products. Because UK meat requires significantly higher levels of animal welfare than the US, its cost of production is much, much higher. British farmers cannot both produce under current standards, and compete with US produce.

    We can lower animal welfare standards to allow UK farmers to compete, or we can choose not to have an FTA with the US. What we cannot do is have a situation where we hobble our farmers and drive them out of business.
  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    In that case May's lost her marbles.
  • Options
    Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    we allow lower standards in from Poland, Italy the Netherlandswhy arbitrarily pick on the yanks
    Because theirs are lower still.

    So objectively where is the line drawn and why?
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,367

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    As I said in the last reply, that was hardly the start of it, was it? Though it may be the end.

    A leaver PM is going to have awful troubles within the party - and they'll deserve it, too. I'm quite looking forward to it. Major, Cameron and May all damaged or brought down by the same group of people within the party.
    And probably will not be able to rely on votes from across the floor as May has.
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    DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    Damn. I've just lumped on the Nigel Farage tip.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    I agree.

    But you seem to believe that the UK, which has consistently fought for higher standards in Europe, will suddenly lower them for the US.

    (I hope they don't. And I would happily vote against any government minister who did so. But I want to be able to vote against them rather than have things decided in some unaccountable committee in a smoke-filled room in Mitteleuropa)
  • Options
    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    rcs1000 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
    yup

    Brexit is a process not an event

    in 5 years all the main players will have changed and the needs of both parties will be different

    who knows maybe our leading PPE course might have produced somebody who can do sums and understands what negotiation entails

  • Options
    llefllef Posts: 298

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    we allow lower standards in from Poland, Italy the Netherlandswhy arbitrarily pick on the yanks
    food hygiene seems to be a problem in both the EU and the USA - so this tit-for-tat point scoring seems a bit pointless to me

    In the last week,

    https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/09/more-than-200-hit-by-parasite-from-del-monte-vegetables.html?__source=twitter|main

    https://metro.co.uk/2018/07/09/supermarket-frozen-veg-recalled-nine-deaths-listeria-7693886/

  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. B, Taming of the Shrew?
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092

    = Downing Street confirming the required number of letters have gone in......
    On a practical level, when the last letter goes in, who decides when that gets announced publicly? Is there some time limit?
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    Pulpstar said:

    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.

    The one resignation that would kill off May now would be Javid.....
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,017

    rcs1000 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
    yup

    Brexit is a process not an event

    in 5 years all the main players will have changed and the needs of both parties will be different

    who knows maybe our leading PPE course might have produced somebody who can do sums and understands what negotiation entails

    Are all your political positions predicated on personal antipathy to some bloke or other on the other side of the argument?
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Anazina said:

    Scott_P said:
    He can hardly complain since he wasn't at a conference the UK was hosting with him as host - 'Where's Boris'?
    Bone idle, irresponsible, self-serving.

    Has there ever been a worse Foreign Secretary in the modern era?
    None springs to mind. Ma Beckett may not have been inspiring but was a 'safe pair of hands' and Miliband may not have been as clever as he thought he was (India) - but none come remotely close - heck - even Fox would be an improvement.
    100% agreed – even your latter point – which is faint praise indeed!
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    Fantastic performance from Mr Corbyn today in the HoC.He is ready to serve.

    Corbyn forgot to ask a question. So open goal for May response.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    F1: conspiracy theorists receive blow as Hamilton acknowledges he was dumb to suggest Raikkonen deliberately hit him.

    "Lewis Hamilton says he was "dumb" to imply Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen might have deliberately collided with him at the start of the British Grand Prix."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/44766343
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited July 2018
    Former Swedish PM:

    "Carl Bildt
    ‏Verified account @carlbildt

    Tragic to see how the UK is lost in the post-referendum chaos. This used to be a nation providing leadership to the world. Now it can’t even provide leadership to itself."
  • Options
    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754

    rcs1000 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Foxy said:

    Morgan and Soubry being nice to May.

    Are they still traitors?

    Reaminers love Theresa's Chequers deal. Tells you exactly why Leavers (who won the referendum and with who May owe's her job to) are currently pulling the plug on her government.
    I think that hardcore Remainers like williamglenn and Scott_P like it because they think it will result in the fall of the government, and the end of Brexit. I think hardcore Leavers hate it, because it leaves us in close orbit around the EU.

    But a lot of moderate leavers - like Casino, MaxPB, Richard_T, and myself - seem largely unbothered by it. Could it be a better deal? Yes. But we are where we are. We have done a poor negotiating job. We could have done better, specifically by not accepting sequencing, nor the Northern Ireland backstop. I also think we should have got our tone right at the start of the process.

    But it's important to realise that this is not a "path to ever closer union". The EU and the Swiss have regularly changed their treaties, sometimes moving closer together, sometimes a little further apart. What is agreed now is not set in stone for ever more, it's the first step, and one that we may be in a better position to push back on in five years time, once we're reset our economy.

    When we joined the EEC on 1 June 1973, we had a seven year transition period, as we slowly moved away from a tariff srtructure that encouraged trade with the Commonwealth to the CET. Exports to the Commonwealth were just 4% of GDP, compared to 15% or so for the EU today. Don't let great be the enemy of good, because a major recession is a much greater threat to Brexit than a deal where we are a little closer to the EU than you would like.
    yup

    Brexit is a process not an event

    in 5 years all the main players will have changed and the needs of both parties will be different

    who knows maybe our leading PPE course might have produced somebody who can do sums and understands what negotiation entails

    Are all your political positions predicated on personal antipathy to some bloke or other on the other side of the argument?
    only you
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    Mr. Maaaarsh, a good point. She gets a small advantage now, but it's petty and means she won't find out, probably, in future until the deed is done. Short term advantage for long term loss. The Way of May.


    Trying to create a Hostile Environment for Leavers.

  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    I like the word 'feckless'. It's almost onomatopoeic. One of those adjectives where nothing else will do.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRlMjotV6qg
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    Nigelb said:

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    As I said in the last reply, that was hardly the start of it, was it? Though it may be the end.

    A leaver PM is going to have awful troubles within the party - and they'll deserve it, too. I'm quite looking forward to it. Major, Cameron and May all damaged or brought down by the same group of people within the party.
    And probably will not be able to rely on votes from across the floor as May has.
    Precisely. As our great and much-lamented former Chancellor wisely said, the golden rule of politics is that you have to be able to count. Where on earth are the ultras going to find 320+ votes in the Commons for a Brexit harder than that Theressa May is aiming for?
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Mr. B, Taming of the Shrew?

    Surely, Much Ado About Nothing?
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607

    Pulpstar said:

    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.

    The one resignation that would kill off May now would be Javid.....
    Yes, one question that would kill her off is asking her to confirm whether or not EU citizens will get special treatment wrt to immigration. If she gives out a non-answer or confirms that they will I think Javid walks and brings the shitshow down with him.
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    = Downing Street confirming the required number of letters have gone in......
    On a practical level, when the last letter goes in, who decides when that gets announced publicly? Is there some time limit?
    Chair of the 1922 Committee.
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    edited July 2018
    MaxPB said:

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    Have to say Gin, you've called all of her big mistakes correctly. I remember when it was me, you and SeanT telling the rest of PB that her dementia tax was a disaster for our election chances. I did think the petty nature of the taxi stuff would come back and bite her in the bum as well, but not this badly.
    What seemed obvious to me is that if you have to threaten people with humiliation to get them to agree with you... Then something is wrong. Agreement should come from consensus, not from threats of humiliation.

    It also meant that although Theresa announced she had "agreement" on Friday that so called "agreement" could not be taken at face value but at least some of those present would be keeping quiet so that they didn't get forced to do the "walk of shame" down the drive.

    But that of course didn't stop them going away and resigning in the days afterwards....
  • Options
    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    Been in a long meeting. Got here as fast as I could to say "Bojo is go go"
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    edited July 2018
    Mr. Mark, The Tempest also fits.

    Edited extra bit: Mr. Gin, Richard II had a similar strategy. It worked well, until he was overthrown.
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,891
    Nigelb said:

    What an evening to be going to the Cambridge Shakespeare Festival and to have run out of mobile data on my phone ...

    (I'm too cheap to buy some more.)

    Comedy of Errors ?
    That would be apt. But no, a Midsummer Night Dream. Or, in May's case, a Midsummer's nightmare ...
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:



    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU

    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    Yes, it's generally-accepted that US standards for chicken production have much lower minimum animal welfare (though some companies are improving) with intense overcrowding. The chlorination and high use of antibiotics are about fighting the diseases that arise from close-packing the birds. Neither chlorine nor antibiotics do you any harm in themselves, but they mask real problems.

    British standards are better than some European countries and worse than others - generally speaking, Sweden and Netherlands come top, but certainly Britain is generally better than, say, Italy.
    The US is finally getting the message on antibiotics. The Veterinary Feed Directive has had a major impact
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799
    Pulpstar said:
    I think she'll win, but she needs to be sacked or backed.
  • Options
    JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,214

    Pulpstar said:

    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.

    The one resignation that would kill off May now would be Javid.....
    Agree. From watching the exchanges - and tenor - from the Conservative side, I now believe May will win the no confidence vote with a sufficient majority to continue. But Javid quitting would be the end.
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    MaxPB said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.

    The one resignation that would kill off May now would be Javid.....
    Yes, one question that would kill her off is asking her to confirm whether or not EU citizens will get special treatment wrt to immigration. If she gives out a non-answer or confirms that they will I think Javid walks and brings the shitshow down with him.
    I thought Javid has already said EU citizens will get special treatment if not automatic entry with a job.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    What's the minimum gap between motions of no confidence? A year?
  • Options
    El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 3,870
    Alistair said:

    Been in a long meeting. Got here as fast as I could to say "Bojo is go go"

    "BJ has gone down"
  • Options
    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,287
    edited July 2018
    https://twitter.com/philipjcowley/status/1016347256340074496

    Perhaps Mrs May's spokesman should have added this.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799

    What's the minimum gap between motions of no confidence? A year?

    Yes.
  • Options
    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    Charles said:

    Foxy said:

    Anazina said:

    Anorak said:

    brendan16 said:

    I do despair at the level of debate....old Fat head was banging on about chlorinated chicken as the reason why we can't Brexit / do a deal with America.

    There are lots of reasons why there are lots of complications, but this nonsense on chlorinated chicken is just bollocks. When he was called on it, that we already have products that are chlorinated, but he said but the public are resistant to it....well you massive muppet, the public simply won't buy it will they.

    We coat our kids in chlorine everytime they go swimming. Not sure why it's any worse for chicken?
    NEWSFLASH: Man hospitalised after drinking four pints of shampoo. "I don't understand. I wash the kids with this every night."
    We drink chlorine every single day.

    https://www.water.org.uk/consumers/water-and-health/faqs#chlorine
    For crying out loud. It doesn't mean we should wash chicken in it. We should be moving towards less food processing, not more. Well reared free-range chicken doesn't need chlorine on it. The reason they chlorinate chicken is because it is utter shite.
    Not so much husbandry as slaughterhouse practice. There is a lot of faecal contamination because of the rate of slaughter lines in the USA. Coordination is to kill off surface contamination, so that microbiological tests are passed. It does not deal with deeper contamination.

    One of the good things about May's proposal is that the EU will continue to regulate our food standards.
    Although (as Nick I am sure will confirm) British animal welfare standards are higher than in the EU
    No problem with UK ones being higher, the objection is allowing in lower standards US chicken.
    we allow lower standards in from Poland, Italy the Netherlandswhy arbitrarily pick on the yanks
    Because theirs are lower still.

    based on what evidence ?

    you don't have millions of yanks dying from food poisoning any more than you do millions of Europeans . When you go to the states are you saying you don't eat ?

    or should we stop eating UK food if Sweden proves to have higher standards ?
  • Options
    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419
    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    There was a time when releasing false information which might affect betting was a red card offence.

    There's nothing on any of the news / social media sites?
  • Options
    BigRichBigRich Posts: 3,489
    AndyJS said:

    More seems to have happened in the last 4 years in British politics than the previous 25 years.

    The previous 22 Years, I would agree with, but Thatcher going, sterling leaving the ERM, and Major/conservatives wining a 4th term, between them are comparable ish.
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    Nigelb said:

    GIN1138 said:

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.

    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.

    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    Disloyalty?

    Theresa May was threatening her Cabinet with humiliation in order to force them to agree to her deal on Friday...

    I said it wouldn't end well for her.
    As I said in the last reply, that was hardly the start of it, was it? Though it may be the end.

    A leaver PM is going to have awful troubles within the party - and they'll deserve it, too. I'm quite looking forward to it. Major, Cameron and May all damaged or brought down by the same group of people within the party.
    And probably will not be able to rely on votes from across the floor as May has.
    Precisely. As our great and much-lamented former Chancellor wisely said, the golden rule of politics is that you have to be able to count. Where on earth are the ultras going to find 320+ votes in the Commons for a Brexit harder than that Theressa May is aiming for?
    The Ultras don't need a H of C vote.

    Just drop out of the EU without a deal other than WTO terms.
  • Options
    JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,214

    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    There was a time when releasing false information which might affect betting was a red card offence.

    There's nothing on any of the news / social media sites?
    There is nothing to fear but Sean Fear himself.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,692
    Politics got cut through in the office for the first time thanks to the antics of Davis and Johnson. Conclusions: Brexit is a total shitshow. People are bored by it and angry at the sheer waste of it all. Surprising support for Theresa May who is seen as the captain that stays in the wheelhouse as the ship goes down. Unlike rats Johnson, Davis and Gove who actually sunk the ship before abandoning it. Gove is seen as particularly slippery.
  • Options
    ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312

    Fantastic performance from Mr Corbyn today in the HoC.He is ready to serve.

    is he off to Wimbledon?
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    Roger said:

    I like the word 'feckless'. It's almost onomatopoeic. One of those adjectives where nothing else will do.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRlMjotV6qg
    "feckless" - contraceptive advice in Ireland
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,607
    JohnO said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I think Fox will leap ship next. Much as he's disliked by many here that is probably fatal for May.

    The one resignation that would kill off May now would be Javid.....
    Agree. From watching the exchanges - and tenor - from the Conservative side, I now believe May will win the no confidence vote with a sufficient majority to continue. But Javid quitting would be the end.
    He's also been suspiciously quiet other than to voice his support of Davis and Boris. I think he knows he's about to get stitched up on EU citizen rights because May can't be trusted to keep her word. If Gove were smart he'd be talking to Javid right now about bringing May down with a double resignation just before the first editions. They both broadly favour the deal and could retain almost all of it as a ticket with a remainer/leaver in 10/11.

    It's what I would be thinking in Gove's place anyway, it gets him into a key role in the government, he backs the winner and he gets to shape Brexit as he wants it.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799

    Sean_F said:


    Priti Patel is the new Foreign Secretary.

    There was a time when releasing false information which might affect betting was a red card offence.

    There's nothing on any of the news / social media sites?
    If I come up with an idea that is ludicrous, it really shouldn't move the betting markets.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,525
    If May wins a leadership challenge, then she gets year. If she loses, does the new leader also get a year, or are they in peril from day one?
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    May now standing behind the "national interest" rather than honouring the referendum.

    That's her future direction. National interest, national interest, national interest .........
  • Options
    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    AndyJS said:

    Former Swedish PM:

    "Carl Bildt
    ‏Verified account @carlbildt

    Tragic to see how the UK is lost in the post-referendum chaos. This used to be a nation providing leadership to the world. Now it can’t even provide leadership to itself."

    yeah but we still beat you in the footy!
  • Options
    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited July 2018

    The Ultras don't need a H of C vote.

    Just drop out of the EU without a deal other than WTO terms.

    'A deal other than WTO terms' doesn't exist. This is the point I keep repeating. There's a massive confusion between leaving with literally no deal - which is unthinkable, since the economy and much else besides would just stop - and agreeing a deal whereby we have an orderly transition to WTO terms. But the latter still requires a deal with the EU.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    The Conservative Party: more scheming than Julius Caeser and Macbeth combined, more blood than Titus Andronicus, more madness than King Lear, more big beasts exiting stage left than a Winter's Tale

    ...and as many laughs as King John.
  • Options
    PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138

    I hope whichever leaver becomes PM (and I reckon it will be a leaver) gets the same shitty 'loyalty' they've shown May. It's all they deserve; some of them have helped bring down three Conservative PMs over Europe.
    The disloyal cannot expect loyalty.
    And where does this all end up? A Corbyn government ...

    It works both ways. May should have treated them with more respect - see Chequers for example: phones confiscated, taxis for resignees, papers shared with Berlin before the cabinet etc.
    They are all an absolute disgrace and a good example only of how not to behave.
This discussion has been closed.