So how many are left in Corbyn's cabinet? He must have lost 2/3rds of them by now.
With apologies to Oscar Wilde
[Lady Bracknell]To lose one third of your cabinet is unfortunate, to lose two thirds suggests carelessness !!! [/Lady Bracknell]
So how many are left in Corbyn's cabinet? He must have lost 2/3rds of them by now.
I wouldn't call it settled, no, there is a very long road with a lot of negotiation to go before the UK (or some of it) is not a member of the EU.Yes, thank you, as it happens I was aware of that. Are you aware that the question of Britain's membership of the EU is now settled?
Because all parties really ought to have a policy on something as significant to the UK economy.If yes, can you suggest why any political party would therefore have a policy on said membership? If no, do you understand the concept of democracy?
The Tories are the only party which will emerge intact (even strengthened in the medium term) from this situation: they now don't have anything to argue about amongst themselves.
Yes, thank you, as it happens I was aware of that. Are you aware that the question of Britain's membership of the EU is now settled?
There's the small matter of what kind of deal the Tories will negotiate with the EU.........
I wouldn't call it settled, no, there is a very long road with a lot of negotiation to go before the UK (or some of it) is not a member of the EU.
Because all parties really ought to have a policy on something as significant to the UK economy.
But settled will of the people would seem to surely apply.I wouldn't call it settled, no, there is a very long road with a lot of negotiation to go before the UK (or some of it) is not a member of the EU.
If we (as seems likely at the moment) end up in EFTA then, frankly, they'll still argue amongst themselves. Believing that this has somehow lanced some EU boil from the Tory party is wishful thinking, frankly.....
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Quite a good writer.
Nah, he's appointed a bunch of replacements.So how many are left in Corbyn's cabinet? He must have lost 2/3rds of them by now.
Quite a good writer.
Nah, he's appointed a bunch of replacements.
I'm not aware of any comparable losses.Has there ever been that much of a staff-loss in any cabinet, official or shadow, in british political history?
Most of these shadow minister jobs are really non-jobs designed to let ambitious politicians begin their slow climb up the greasy pole.
Not "New Labour" either.It will be the 'gang-of-X' all over again. I guess they will chose a different name than SDP this time around.
The up-coming sell-out by the new Tory leadership over freedom of movement (it's economy first for the Tories, immigration first for UKIP), non-EU immigration, and re-patriation. That's my bet.Interesting to watch how they have morphed. They were the nutty right wing of the Conservative party to start with, and yet now they seem to be taking the white ill-educated working class from Labour. If Labour had any strength or credibility at all, UKIP would be dead in the water. They have achieved what they set out to achieve (in fact, it was achieved pretty much without them, but that's by-the-by), so what will they be campaigning on at the next general election?
Perhaps just of those who don't resent being his second choice.He's a few posts short - no shadow Scottish secretary or shadow justice secretary yet. No shadow leader of the commons and no shadow attorney general. Has he run out of MPs that backed his leadership?
I'm in my seventh decade and have never seen anything remotely like it.So we have effectively no government as BoJo, Gove, Osborne and May jockey to become the not the next leader of the Tories (who has to push the article 50 button) but the one after the next, and no opposition. Not that Corbyn's opposition ever was very effective.
I'm not writing anything off.Maybe Tim Farron will lead the Lib Dems to a resurgence?*
*No, I didn't think so either![]()
Hope they will sell-out over that yesThe up-coming sell-out by the new Tory leadership over freedom of movement (it's economy first for the Tories, immigration first for UKIP)
No, it isn't.Yes, thank you, as it happens I was aware of that. Are you aware that the question of Britain's membership of the EU is now settled?
I understand the sovereignty of Parliament. If Parliament - this one or a newly-elected one - wishes to stop the process it can. I, for one, hope it does.If yes, can you suggest why any political party would therefore have a policy on said membership? If no, do you understand the concept of democracy?