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Re: Partygate & Beergate discussion
Watched some of the BBCQT from true blue Dorking and most of the audience replies were savage. The Tories are unravelling in front of our eyes. They just don't get the mood of the average "honest" Tory voter.
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Re: Partygate & Beergate discussion
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But, a couple of questions: 1. Would you regard me as an "honest" Tory voter? (I am a Tory voter). 2. Why did you place the word "honest" into quote marks? |
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Q2: why quotes? Well there are Tory voters who claim that their votes and their support is in the best interests of the country when the reality before them can never objectively justify that position. Why the Tory party and not just Johnson unravelling? The answer is that the contamination from his DNA and legacy is now too far gone to be rolled back. Remember we govern by Cabinet consensus plus not all the deplorable decisions have been just his. The laws that have passed that erode our civil liberties and democracy have been voted through by the Party, not Johnson. |
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The worst thing for them is most of this is self-inflicted. The Owen Paterson scandal and the Partygate ones aren't even poor political decisions - such as Brown's 10p tax rate - but extracurricular shenanigans they didn't need to do at all. What should worry the Tories is that there are more structural problems coming they can't address simply by dumping their leader. The full political impact of inflation, the cost of living and what looks to be very low growth are only beginning to be felt and will get worst over the next 12 months. NHS waiting times are also projected to increase for the next few years. For all the talk of scandal, it will pass, and people will simply have lower trust in Johnson overall. What people will vote on is their incomes, their expenses and if they're in poor health and have to wait months for an NHS appointment. |
Re: Partygate & Beergate discussion
Maybe the situation is getting to the point that we need a sort of "war footing" coalition government so the politicos stop their silly point scoring and work together to solve what looks like a really hard time coming.
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I thought the Con / Lib-Dem one worked for a good part because Cameron and Clegg got on. Johnson and Starmer definitely do not, nor could I see the rest of either front bench for the most part. |
Re: Partygate & Beergate discussion
Plus even if the politicians did get together and come up with a brilliant and workable plan the civil servants who would implement it would likely mess it up by creating a "committee for the implementation of the brilliant and workable plan" who would suck up all the resource and time.
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These are challenging economic times and the opposition should be there to question if the Government are handling it correctly, challenge them on the decisions they're making, speak out for those who are impacted the most and so on. If you have a national government representative of Parliament then who in Parliament holds them to account? |
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I got this email from Boris after he got away with his career: Quote:
I've highlighted just one paragraph - "the people's priorities". Very close to the top, if not at the top are: 1. Restoration of face-to-face doctor's appointments - at least next day; 2. Proper relief from the cost-of-living crisis - like temporary removal of VAT from fuel prices. The mentioned £37 billion says nothing as to its adequacy (which it won't be). 3. Self-sufficiency on power and food (so far as is possible) instead of the stupid "wilding" policy and not joining up power generation with electric cars (never mind the Victorian terraced streets). By all means support Ukraine, but do not hold it up as a Conservative triumph; do not claim to be anywhere near fixing social care. By now, the levelling up policy should have been formed and its basis announced. It's pie in the sky, along with Housing Benefit paying for the right-to-buy mortgage! Jeez. |
Re: Partygate & Beergate discussion
There was an interesting documentary on BBC2 last night about Bradford. Ask them about 'Leveling up'. The amount people suffering ill health through air pollution is disgraceful in 2022. And the one thing that could help, a decent rail link, the Tories promised has no been cancelled. New underground line for London though....
The red wall has disintegrated as they'll find out in the Wakefield by election. Never mind Scotland leaving the UK, the North of England might decide to too. |
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Now, you may personally think that Brexit is not the right course for this country, but it was the democratic decision. You need to swallow that. ---------- Post added at 20:52 ---------- Previous post was at 20:45 ---------- Quote:
The manifesto was delayed for legitimate reasons. Judge Boris when his time is up, and bear in mind the problems he has been up against. The manifesto is now being relaunched, so be patient. |
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