When Corbyn hit the back of the net with that ''food bank'' - I was out of my seat and dancing round my terrace
When Corbyn hit the back of the net with that ''food bank'' - I was out of my seat and dancing round my terrace
The audience was specially selected by a polling company to be 'representative' of the country, in terms of:
-- political party support, and undecided voters
-- support for/against Brexit
Given that, why are you so convinced that the audience was largely Momentum/Corbyn cheerleaders?
When Corbyn hit the back of the net with that ''food bank'' - I was out of my seat and dancing round my terrace
When Corbyn hit the back of the net with that ''food bank'' - I was out of my seat and dancing round my terrace
There are other explanations, which I don't need to offer, but will do if you can explain what evidence you have for your position. The BBC is publicly funded and made a clear claim that the audience is/was 'representative'. I trust the BBC on this, you quite clearly don't (and probably have a problem with trust in general), but I'm more interested in hearing why you don't trust the BBC.
Or perhaps it is because during this whole Election campaign the Conservative party has had nothing to say except Teresa May saying ''Vote for me because Jeremy Corbyn is rubbish''
Tonight was no different. The same negative politics and nothing positive about how to improve peoples lives. All they talked about was how difficult the future will be and nothing about easing those difficulties. That's why no one in the room had anything to cheer when they spoke.
The part which bugs me about Teresa may not attending is not the fact that she didn't because these debates don't sway enough people to alter the course of the eventual winners. It's the fact that no one has once openly challenged her reason for not attending.
She states that she would rather be out speaking to voters on the doorstep but she is not on people's doorsteps at 8pm at night. Someone really needs to say to her - ''Why can't you do both'' ?
You know when Reading fans were on the pitch celebrating a few years ago? That's you, that is. This picture is of you goading the Tories.
Food banks, a new thing are they.
" The trust was founded in 1997 by two former UN workers, Paddy and Carol Henderson, and was originally conceived to support street children in Bulgaria. Then, in 2000, Paddy received a call from a mother in Salisbury whose children were going hungry. Her story inspired him to open his first food bank in the city, which he ran from home. In 2004, he decided to expand the model. “The simple phrase that stuck with us was that ‘if Salisbury needs a food bank, every town should have one’,” says Chris Mould, chairman of the Trussell Trust, who has worked with the organisation since 2003.
In recent years both the number of food banks and the numbers of people who use them have risen exponentially. Between April 2008 and March 2009 Trussell Trust food banks handed out 25,899 parcels. In the corresponding period in 2010-11, covering the time of the last general election, it gave out 128,697. By last financial year (2013-14), that figure had grown nearly eightfold to almost a million parcels. This year the figure is likely to be higher still: 492,741 parcels were given out between April and September 2014, an increase of 38 per cent over the same period in 2013.
This is not the full picture. The Trussell Trust’s 430 or so food banks are believed to account for roughly half the country’s network, but there is no complete database of the charities giving out emergency food aid. The lack of data is partly due to the government’s apparent lack of curiosity about how many people are falling through its welfare net. “The government does not monitor the use of food banks and has no plans to do so,” the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) confirmed in response to a Freedom of Information request in December 2013. In March, the department confirmed that this remains its position."
You know when Reading fans were on the pitch celebrating a few years ago? That's you, that is. This picture is of you goading the Tories.
Not quite true. Farron's party were running the country two terms ago. And in a recent debate, Vince Cable (to his immense credit) was apologetic and honest about the reasons behind their own decision to reverse their pledge on university tuition fees.PM's of long standing governments never do. They would spend the whole time defending a real record warts and all, whereas someone like Lucas or Farron would be on a win-win: slagging off that real record by a Tory or Labour PM, whilst promising the earth. Knowing full well that they well never have to fulfil their shopping list.
Ultimately, the only thing the recruitment company has to go on is STATED political leaning / voting intention and STATED voting record. There is no means of validating stated voting record against actual voting record. You could possibly do the due diligence on someone's social media accounts to check that their political alignment is not contrary to what they have claimed - but this is unlikely to be a commercially viable / practical option. Put simply, if an organised group of people set out to fool the recruitment company, they can do so (and did last night).
I'd have FAR more respect for the current mob if they spent time defending their own policy decisions and u turns instead of this tiresome rhetoric that Corbyn is dangerous and that we simply MUST deliver a Tory landslide because if not the country is going to the dogs.
What part of "even the BBC admit it's hard to police as people fib when applying for tickets" don't you get?
No-one is saying that the BBC clearly tried to create a left-wing bias, but if left-winger Reaminers said that in fact they were Tory leading Brexiters, how can the BBC know?
If it was balanced, then you would naturally expect more disdain towards Corbyn and more support for Rudd. But, due to the usual left-wing blinkers, you can't even see the obvious.
The left wing/Momentum are incredibly well organised. You only have to look at the numbers following JC around the country and the fact that wherever May goes is always publicised and hence there is always a counter demonstration of Corbynistas (JC keeps his speaking engagements secret, restricted to those who are knownto be supporters hence no counter-demo, not that it is in the Tory psyche to demonstrate). It is comfortably within their skill set to manipulate the BBC processes and con them into thinking they have dug up a "representative" audience whereas in reality the audience is choc full of Corbynistas. Its they way they work.
Food banks, a new thing are they.
" The trust was founded in 1997 by two former UN workers, Paddy and Carol Henderson, and was originally conceived to support street children in Bulgaria. Then, in 2000, Paddy received a call from a mother in Salisbury whose children were going hungry. Her story inspired him to open his first food bank in the city, which he ran from home. In 2004, he decided to expand the model. “The simple phrase that stuck with us was that ‘if Salisbury needs a food bank, every town should have one’,” says Chris Mould, chairman of the Trussell Trust, who has worked with the organisation since 2003.
In recent years both the number of food banks and the numbers of people who use them have risen exponentially. Between April 2008 and March 2009 Trussell Trust food banks handed out 25,899 parcels. In the corresponding period in 2010-11, covering the time of the last general election, it gave out 128,697. By last financial year (2013-14), that figure had grown nearly eightfold to almost a million parcels. This year the figure is likely to be higher still: 492,741 parcels were given out between April and September 2014, an increase of 38 per cent over the same period in 2013.
This is not the full picture. The Trussell Trust’s 430 or so food banks are believed to account for roughly half the country’s network, but there is no complete database of the charities giving out emergency food aid. The lack of data is partly due to the government’s apparent lack of curiosity about how many people are falling through its welfare net. “The government does not monitor the use of food banks and has no plans to do so,” the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) confirmed in response to a Freedom of Information request in December 2013. In March, the department confirmed that this remains its position."