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[Politics] Tory meltdown finally arrived [was: incoming]...



Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,624
from state of social media, looks like their biggest threat is from the left that dont like Starmer. i can see him picking up votes from the centre and losing from the traditional core.
I don't see the remaining Corbyn lot who would rather see the tories win again than vote for Starmer having the numbers to make any difference.

The young are overwhelmingly backing Starmer and huge efforts will need to be put in to getting them registered and out to vote, but I think the tories are riling them so much this will happen. The election date is likely to take into account the dates when youngsters might be at university
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,015
like the police?
that would be silly. suggesting he mentions it to people in confidence and someone lets it out. fact is there is footage from couple of cameras directly on him, several others around, stewards watching him and a police Inspector no less right there ready. seems all a bit peculiar for a moment of spontenous heckling.
 


rogersix

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2014
8,202
that would be silly. suggesting he mentions it to people in confidence and someone lets it out. fact is there is footage from couple of cameras directly on him, several others around, stewards watching him and a police Inspector no less right there ready. seems all a bit peculiar for a moment of spontenous heckling.
beware the edit
 


Stato

Well-known member
Dec 21, 2011
7,367
By the way, whilst thinking of 1997 and hoping for anything close to a repeat, I'd highly recommend Brian Cathcart's book 'Were You Up For Portillo?' It's a stunning and often hilarious description of the TV coverage of the 1997 election night. Okay, Blair was ultimately a disappointment, but for lefties like me who grew up under the cloud of Thatcher, its fantastic schadenfreude, and a reminder of the 'happy ever after' feeling experienced that week. The description of the Thursday night into Friday morning, also reminds me of the following day at Hereford. The whole week seemed like what my kids refer to as a 'Jim Carey ending', the type of over the top Hollywood wrap up where the goodies win and the baddies finally all get their comeuppance.

The book has so much more though. There were quite a lot of sub plots going on that night: Martin Bell ousting Neil Hamilton, David Mellor losing and trying to make a speech whilst James Goldsmith and his cronies clapped and barked like seals, TV cameras repeatedly returning to watch Barbara and Ken Follett failing to open a bottle of champagne. Portillo was interviewed by Paxman after his defeat and part way through the usual exchange, had a moment of realisation and, seeming human for the first time ever, just said with huge relief 'Jeremy, I don't have to do this anymore.' There was also a great bit of gallows humour from Cecil Parkinson, who was on with David Dimbleby watching the early results come in and realising what kind of night it was going to be. After quite a while, Dimbleby informed him that the tories had their second held seat of the night and Parkinson deadpanned 'Oh good. We'll have a leadership election.'

Who would have thought that I'd be looking back fondly on Portillo and Parkinson? I can't imagine that kind of humility and honesty coming from dead eyed zealots like Braverman, Truss & Anderson. Fingers crossed there'll soon be a chance to find out.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,771
Farage, as in the hours after the Brexit vote, looks like the cat that got the cream.

I was always under the impression, confirmed by writers, that Tory grandees, PM’s and former PM’s couldn’t stand the person and everything about him. They probably still do. But they’ve either retired or like Sunak/Hunt are about to in effect be booted out. Leaving weirdo’s such as Patel and Braverman to welcome him back. Analysed on LBC today that they’re planning for 2029.

I bet they want that vote winning stardust. Sadly he is still popular among many, many millions in England and Wales.

In a media and social media age it’s weird to watch this in real time, caught on smart phones. The dinner dance, part of an insurrection to boot Sunak and Hunt out.
A rare visitor to such threads. Just seen the Farage dancing :facepalm:. So he’s back in the mainstream fold then.

That seals a Tory party for years to come that’ve morphed into the Sarah Palin / Trump Party of the UK. The coup d’etat has taken place in stages. The Rudd’s etc were ousted, then it will be Sunak and Hunt booted out, leaving total control to a rabid cabal. Who’ll eventually deny climate change etc.


Is that the same moderate Sunak who introduced the deadly 'eat out to help out' campaign, resided over this whole economic disaster as either number 2 to Johnson, or Prime Minister. The same one who was fined over partygate and now can't find his whtasapp messages relating to COVID. The same one who appointed Suella Braverman as Home Secretary.

Is that the same Sunak who has been PM/Chancellor and right at the centre and head of the 'rabid cabal's' existence throughout ?

THAT Rishi Sunak, really ???
 




Bakero

Languidly clinical
Oct 9, 2010
14,886
Almería
Is that the same moderate Sunak who introduced the deadly 'eat out to help out' campaign, resided over this whole economic disaster as either number 2 to Johnson, or Prime Minister. The same one who was fined over partygate and now can't find his whtasapp messages relating to COVID. The same one who appointed Suella Braverman as Home Secretary.

Is that the same Sunak who has been PM/Chancellor and right at the centre and head of the 'rabid cabal's' existence throughout ?

THAT Rishi Sunak, really ???

That's the one. The self-confessed coke addict with middle-class friends. I guess when you stand him next to the lunatic fringe he associates with he does seem moderate.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,771
My nature is to like certainty and clarity. So I’m glad the cat’s out of the bag. Since 1992 there’s been a struggle with the Redwood’s & pals fighting from within. Mass immigration (I’m not a Brexiteer or close the borders person btw …. just that the numbers don’t lie) gave these fringe characters their opportunity. They’ve almost ‘won’ in taking control of the party.

I wonder if we could end up with several Commons in a row with say Labour 60% of seats, New Right Wing Tory 25%, others 15%? Other than squeezing out the Right, I don’t know if that’s a good thing long term, other voices need real power. My preference would be a Commons dominated with parties and MP’s from social democrats to centre old Tories.

I'm afraid that the mass immigration of the early 90s is yet another long term lie from the same cabal that are now in Government and is now commonly quoted as accepted fact, despite all facts to the contrary :shrug:

migration2.jpg
 






Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,281
Withdean area
I'm afraid that the mass immigration of the early 90s is yet another lie which has now become accepted fact :shrug:

View attachment 167539

We’re in agreement. As I meant from 1997 onwards. Whilst Redwood et al was lying from 1992 onwards.

And before you jump on me, I loved and love the influx of people. Anyone who’s used hospitals see a united nations of wonderful folk. Then hard working eastern Europeans work as couriers, run catering and retail businesses, keeping the country ticking over.
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,771
from state of social media, looks like their biggest threat is from the left that dont like Starmer. i can see him picking up votes from the centre and losing from the traditional core.

It's probably your best Hope since Bob passed on :wink:
 


WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,771
We’re in agreement. As I meant from 1997 onwards. Whilst Redwood et al was lying from 1992 onwards.

And before you jump on me, I loved and love the influx of people. Anyone who’s used hospitals see a united nations of wonderful folk. Then hard working eastern Europeans work as couriers, run catering and retail businesses, keeping the country ticking over.

I wouldn't jump on you, my back wouldn't take it :kiss:

It is worth publishing actual figures around immigration, refugees, boat crossing etc, because as in this case. they rarely support the MSM narrative :thumbsup:
 




WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,771
The inference that there were under a particular special form of stress and deserved to party still makes me angry.

It takes a particular type of young self entitled privileged over ambitious twat that goes to to work in that sort on environment anyway.

I pray they feel guilty to their dying days.

Many will come out with credit, but we will never know them. Over a number of weeks I got talking to a patient in hospital in the same ward as a family member.

Their son was right in the middle of it and this was well before we knew the full details.

I think it is fair to say here that the family were from a working class and the son had clearly batted above his average to get a job in number 10.

He saw what was going on and completely avoided it. I believed his mum, I had details of how rotten it was well before the papers got the full story.

There were a lot of people there that were disgusted at the time by the lying, incompetence and partying. It was always reported in the MSM as 'Civil Servants' although the vast majority were SPADS (political appointments paid as Civil Servants - not one of Tony Blair's greatest moves) together with a few senior Civil Servants turning a blind eye or partaking.

The vast majority of the Civil Servants in Whitehall had nothing to do with it but were professional to the last and didn't leak. All of this was known at the time and if anyone could be bothered to trawl through NSC, there were plenty of references to it when it was happening :down:
 
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Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,952
Surrey
from state of social media, looks like their biggest threat is from the left that dont like Starmer. i can see him picking up votes from the centre and losing from the traditional core.
Nah. It's just that the far left shout louder than pretty much anyone else, including the nasty GB News types.
 


Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,624
We’re in agreement. As I meant from 1997 onwards. Whilst Redwood et al was lying from 1992 onwards.

And before you jump on me, I loved and love the influx of people. Anyone who’s used hospitals see a united nations of wonderful folk. Then hard working eastern Europeans work as couriers, run catering and retail businesses, keeping the country ticking over.
Well yes

Without a lot of immigration our NHS and social care sector is going to collapse entirely.

We owe these people who come here an immense debt of gratitude. But all they get is cheap racist jibes from senior government ministers
 




Moshe Gariani

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2005
12,199
Fantastic parody speech by Penny Mordaunt.
 


Peteinblack

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2004
4,135
Bath, Somerset.
People aren't satisfied when life isn't going their way, so need someone to blame.
The youngsters nowadays
Old people
Immigrants nicking jobs
Immigrants taking our benefits
Immigrants taking our place in the queue for the NHS

etc etc

Rarely do people blame politicians, apart from the 'They're all the same'

The same people who can't be bothered turning out to vote because 'it makes no difference'.
Oh, they'd be blaming a Labour government if it had been in power for the last few years; but when it's a Tory government...silence!

I still encounter people who are silent about the £ billions spaffed since Covid, but who bang on about Gordon Brown selling our gold reserves.

The same people, I expect, who tell us to 'move on from' the Johnson/Truss premierships, but who will then remind us about the 2008 crash, or 1978-79 'winter of discontent', when Labour was in power.

I've never worked out whether a lot of Tory voters are total hypocrites or just completely thick?
 


Baldseagull

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2012
11,839
Crawley
This is what happens when you quietly disagree with the Home Secretary.





Just Stop Oil ? No he's the Conservative Chair of the London Assembly :lolol:

Quite ironic that as he is being dragged out, for speaking his mind, in disagreement, in her speach she is accusing the left if having created a culture where you could be in bother if you speak your mind, in disagreement.
 


rogersix

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2014
8,202
Oh, they'd be blaming a Labour government if it had been in power for the last few years; but when it's a Tory government...silence!

I still encounter people who are silent about the £ billions spaffed since Covid, but who bang on about Gordon Brown selling our gold reserves.

The same people, I expect, who tell us to 'move on from' the Johnson/Truss premierships, but who will then remind us about the 2008 crash, or 1978-79 'winter of discontent', when Labour was in power.

I've never worked out whether a lot of Tory voters are total hypocrites or just completely thick?
I think it's cognitive dissonance, engendered by fear
 








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