Boris
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- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
A new photo being prepared for release to the press thats going to rock Bodge more than anything gone before according to ch4 news .
Oo-er misses .
Oo-er misses .
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Re: Boris
only that they are protecting the picture taker , before release , it sounded like it would prove rules were broken . on ch4 catch up im sure
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Re: Boris
Boris needs to go and following the review it may well happen. Hope it does.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
- StillSpike
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Re: Boris
Very true - however, any of the current ministers who've nailed their colours to his mast - Dorries, Raab, Javid, JRM et al - will be forever tainted, so the cleanliness of the slate will depend, to some extent, on how many of the new Cabinet were blindly defending the indefensible. Boris isn't the only one to have lied to Parliament and - more importantly - to the people, you'd imagine.Dohnut wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:06 pm Boris needs to go and following the review it may well happen. Hope it does.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
Except for the fact it was the tory party who put him there . people will forget mistakes but they wont forget 170k deaths & 2 years of misery !Dohnut wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:06 pm Boris needs to go and following the review it may well happen. Hope it does.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
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Re: Boris
Representing those number that way is too stupid for further comment. If Boris goes, in 2 years all this stuff will be forgotten enough for it to make a difference. Other things will take over, like employment, inflation, etc.tuffers#1 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:31 pmExcept for the fact it was the tory party who put him there . people will forget mistakes but they wont forget 170k deaths & 2 years of misery !Dohnut wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:06 pm Boris needs to go and following the review it may well happen. Hope it does.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
Inflation will be the sinker as.the remembered tory partys covid fiasco & partying while everyone else made sacrifice. Employment wont be such a biggy as.most peoples wages.will.go.on fuel.costs.!Dohnut wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:44 pmRepresenting those number that way is too stupid for further comment. If Boris goes, in 2 years all this stuff will be forgotten enough for it to make a difference. Other things will take over, like employment, inflation, etc.tuffers#1 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:31 pmExcept for the fact it was the tory party who put him there . people will forget mistakes but they wont forget 170k deaths & 2 years of misery !Dohnut wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:06 pm Boris needs to go and following the review it may well happen. Hope it does.
Looking at the longer term, to the next election, Boris staying is Labours best chance of winning. Should he be replaced, the new PM will be able to claim all this stuff has been resolved and the new party (political party) is a very different animal. Clean slate stuff. Much the same with Labour and it’s review problems once Starmer came in.
If Boris stays, all this stuff can be given new life in the campaign and it is guaranteed to cost him votes and seats.
- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
As long as the.electorate.keep letting the press.fool them why would the story party care ?Chicken Dhansak wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:52 pm Do you honestly, for one moment, think that this Sue Grey inquiry will find this Wooden Top guilty as charged. I think the odds are 1-3 on
him being exonerated.
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Re: Boris
This Sue Gray? https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/dark-m ... -grenfell/Chicken Dhansak wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 8:52 pm Do you honestly, for one moment, think that this Sue Grey inquiry will find this Wooden Top guilty as charged. I think the odds are 1-3 on
him being exonerated.
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Re: Boris
just re-watched the clip , The Daily Telegraph have a photo of the Par ahem work meeting & it is they who are trying to protect the taker. its from the night before Greek Phils funeral . i hope they arent doing a drunken rendition of k.u.m.b !!
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Re: Boris
Seems to me that Johnson believed himself to be born with entitlement to rule.
He wasn't a Brexiteer but calculated that taking this stance would be politically advantageous to himself. He rode roughshod over parliament, even getting the Queen to announce his plans for government when he had no majority to govern.
He became something like 'the Pied Piper of Hamelin' and the rodents happily followed their leader .... (do a google search for this tale)
Glory for Johnson's ego again. He was the world ruler and promised that Brexit would bring untold riches and freedom to all the downtrodden who voted for him (and those who weren't keen on 'foreigns'). His own life would be never ending flying around the world, being wined and dined while the foot soldiers at home sing his glory.
Just 2 years on: things didn't quite work out that way for him. The sh*t pandemic was just so much hassle and whatever he decided, he would be in the wrong: letting many thousands of minions die or impact on profit for his political masters? No problem, always fudge but look after number one. When disastrous consequences became apparent, go for sympathy: get sick, get married, have babies.
He still believed himself to be invincible. So much so that at COP26 he used his responsibility as leader of the hosting nation to tell all delegates about the wonders of Peppa Pig! https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/11/24 ... 344529.jpg
And then he took on parliament again. Having previously succeeded to get all his MPs to vote in support of his unlawful intention to breach an international treaty (re. Northern Ireland), this time he pushed it just too far when demanding that they vote for Owen Patterson not be penalised with a 30 day suspension even though that was quite a normal penalty for his proven wrongdoing.
Seems that this was 'a step too far' and now lots of information is coming to light about what has been going on at No.10. Now even information is coming to light about the party whips and their bullying which had always been cloaked in secrecy. Good on those who are daring to speak out. But will those with power now fudge it again?
He wasn't a Brexiteer but calculated that taking this stance would be politically advantageous to himself. He rode roughshod over parliament, even getting the Queen to announce his plans for government when he had no majority to govern.
He became something like 'the Pied Piper of Hamelin' and the rodents happily followed their leader .... (do a google search for this tale)
Glory for Johnson's ego again. He was the world ruler and promised that Brexit would bring untold riches and freedom to all the downtrodden who voted for him (and those who weren't keen on 'foreigns'). His own life would be never ending flying around the world, being wined and dined while the foot soldiers at home sing his glory.
Just 2 years on: things didn't quite work out that way for him. The sh*t pandemic was just so much hassle and whatever he decided, he would be in the wrong: letting many thousands of minions die or impact on profit for his political masters? No problem, always fudge but look after number one. When disastrous consequences became apparent, go for sympathy: get sick, get married, have babies.
He still believed himself to be invincible. So much so that at COP26 he used his responsibility as leader of the hosting nation to tell all delegates about the wonders of Peppa Pig! https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/11/24 ... 344529.jpg
And then he took on parliament again. Having previously succeeded to get all his MPs to vote in support of his unlawful intention to breach an international treaty (re. Northern Ireland), this time he pushed it just too far when demanding that they vote for Owen Patterson not be penalised with a 30 day suspension even though that was quite a normal penalty for his proven wrongdoing.
Seems that this was 'a step too far' and now lots of information is coming to light about what has been going on at No.10. Now even information is coming to light about the party whips and their bullying which had always been cloaked in secrecy. Good on those who are daring to speak out. But will those with power now fudge it again?
- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
Boris Johnson facing backlash over 'desperate' false Jimmy Savile attack on Keir Starmer
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-02-01/pm- ... on-starmer
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-02-01/pm- ... on-starmer
- tuffers#1
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Re: Boris
A point bought up by Doh in Lab' Watch .
I do wonder why doh didn't create a thread
For the post he made .
Boris gets his own page even though
He's leader of the t*ries .
I do wonder why doh didn't create a thread
For the post he made .
Boris gets his own page even though
He's leader of the t*ries .
- Rich Tea Wellin
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Re: Boris
Jim finally fixed it for metuffers#1 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 12:41 pm Boris Johnson facing backlash over 'desperate' false Jimmy Savile attack on Keir Starmer
https://www.itv.com/news/2022-02-01/pm- ... on-starmer