TWOCHOICEStom
Well-known member
has he completely lost the plot?
I don't believe he's even been in the same universe as the plot for a very long time...
has he completely lost the plot?
what on earth was trump talking about when he said hillary stooges were being paid to be violent at trump rallies to the tune of $1500 ....has he completely lost the plot? you cant accuse another presidential candidate of being a part of this sort of stuff with no proof
....... She's hardly Michael Foot with tits, now is she?
..........
Hilary seemed to come out on top. Trump's hint at refusing to accept the result won't do him any favours
All in all a shocking spectacle on both side, hardly any policies
Sounds familiar ...
Miliband and Clegg are just as arrogant as Donald Trump
Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg ostensibly have little in common with Donald Trump. Unlike Labour’s ex-leader and the former Liberal Democrat grand fromage, the Republican presidential candidate has — so far — been highly successful.
Trump won a stunning victory in the Republican primaries and has made an enormous impact on his country’s politics. In contrast, Miliband lost heavily last year and Clegg’s lot were almost wiped out in the same contest. “Sad,” as Trump would put it in one of his tweets.
It may well be that Trump is on the verge of his own Miliband-style defeat, of course. And it is there, in a shared inability to accept defeat, that Mili-Clegg and the other Remainers seeking to undermine Brexit have more in common with Trump than they would like to admit.
The ghastly Trump has indicated that he will refuse to accept the people’s verdict if he loses. Is that not what the most extreme Remainers are doing, while implausibly claiming to respect the result of the EU referendum they lost?
Of course they eschew Trump’s bombastic “man-child” squealing about the unfairness of being beaten. Instead Remainers put on grave, empathetic expressions and tour the television studios to emphasise the right of parliament to be the ultimate arbiter on important decisions.
While parliament should vote on the Brexit deal when it is eventually negotiated, demands for MPs to bind the government before it even begins talks are clearly designed to deny ministers the freedom of manoeuvre they require. It is Remainer mischief-making dressed up as constitutional concern.
Such antics merely poison the already polluted democratic well, just as Donald Trump seems about to do in America. Trump is planning to set up a TV station to pursue his claim if he loses to Hillary Clinton. Mercifully there is no sign of Miliband and Clegg trying to establish their own channel here. One suspects the audience would be too small to register in the ratings.
But in refusing to accept what has been decided by the voters, the hardline Remainers are undermining a key tenet of democracy and risk further alienating angry voters. Our system rests to a large extent on the notion that we accept the result of free and fair elections with good grace, even if we’ve lost, and get on with making the best of it.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/co...rump-cxt2wwl27
They seem to be confused with referendums, elections, democracy and are comparing two very different political systems. Load of b*******ks really.
..." Remainers seeking to undermine Brexit have more in common with Trump than they would like to admit"
..." Remainers seeking to undermine Brexit have more in common with Trump than they would like to admit"
Farage and Trump won't release their tax returns. I wonder what secrets they would reveal if they did.There's a slight difference between wishing our government to use the process of parliament to implement legislation and dismissing an election or plebicite as a fraud when it doesn't go your way.
All I know is leavers folk hero Mr Farage was quite happy to speak at Trump rallies, if he didn't agree with his rhetoric he wouldn't have done it would he, or was it just financial (a bit like being an MEP)
There's a slight difference between wishing our government to use the process of parliament to implement legislation and dismissing an election or plebicite as a fraud when it doesn't go your way.
All I know is leavers folk hero Mr Farage was quite happy to speak at Trump rallies, if he didn't agree with his rhetoric he wouldn't have done it would he, or was it just financial (a bit like being an MEP)
Sounds familiar ...
Miliband and Clegg are just as arrogant as Donald Trump