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Paul Waugh tweeted
@paulwaugh Extraordinary low blow at @Keir_Starmer from @BorisJohnson, giving Parliamentary credence to the false online smear about Starmer not prosecuting Jimmy Savile. It's just not true. And surely the PM knows it? |
Why didn’t the Speaker ask Johnson to withdraw that outrageous slander immediately?
Also how does he get away with calling female opposition MPs 'She' or 'Her' and not 'Honourable Friend' like he is supposed to? |
Ian Blackford tweets
@Ianblackford_MP · 2h This is what truth to power looks like at Westminster. A liar is allowed to keep his place- I am forced to leave for telling the truth. He misled the house, he must go. Tories must look themselves in the mirror and ask if they can allow this to go on much longer? Remove him now. |
Zahawi and Truss have declared they have covid today. How many more of the Cabinet will also get it now?
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Interesting interview with Dorries on Sky news
https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1...7GPjVGtYBymVQg She's swaying all over the place - literally not metaphorically. I'm not saying she's drunk, but I have seen drunk people look more sober than that. |
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What a colossal bunch of *****. |
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Was it Paul Whitehouse exceedingly drunk? Or Stanley Unwin? |
Yes, I put it in youtube tags and it isn't on there lol
Here's a link that works https://twitter.com/TheFastShow1/sta...64588000854017 |
Well it looks like Sue Gray did her job and Tory MPs have just enough of a fig leaf to keep Boris Johnson in post. The British public have short enough memories that this will all be forgotten when they're distracted by the successes of Brexit, the next big Covid news or the extra bank holiday in June to mark the queen's 70th jubilee. :rolleyes:
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Perhaps Central Office told her to do a bit of ducking and weaving, and she didn’t realise it was a metaphor. |
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Julian Smith (Tory MP for Skipton and Ripon, former Chief Whip and Secretary of State for Northern Ireland) tweeted
@JulianSmithUK The smear made against Keir Starmer relating to Jimmy Saville yesterday is wrong & cannot be defended. It should be withdrawn. False and baseless personal slurs are dangerous, corrode trust & can't just be accepted as part of the cut & thrust of parliamentary debate. |
remember, the rules are: Lies are ok. Truthfully pointing out lies is not allowed
Existing protocol is unfit to deal with liars, it was drawn up in the days when telling a lie in Parliament was thought to be dishonorable. The current speaker is very weak and is effectively shielding Johnson. Dominic Raab tells Radio 4 Today that Boris slur against Starmer was ‘normal cut and thrust’ of Parliamentary debate. |
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https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics...pproval-rating Partygate broke in late November. I'm not sure I see much of a falling off a cliff in support. It's more like there has been a downward trend since April/May last year |
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Realistically, given that around 10% of people seem to be perpetually undecided, I'm not sure how much lower it can go - there are always Tory loyalists. That said, the British public seem to have pretty malleable opinions and we've got some extra bank holidays coming up, Covid will likely go into abeyance over the summer, foreign holidays will be back on the cards and I'm sure that there'll be some EU nonsense to drum up support for Boris "the best PM since Churchill" Johnson. :rolleyes: |
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The likes of Boris Johnson (and Donald Trump) have discovered that so long as you don't believe yourself to be governed by the "rules" you can simply ignore them safe in the knowledge that there isn't the political will among your cowed political allies to enforce them. Personally I'd rather live in a republic than even a constitutional monarchy and think that the amount of power and influence that the gentry have is obscene in a country that considers itself (or at least should consider itself) a modern democracy. The likes of Boris Johnson benefit from this residual feudal mentality in the UK IMO. |
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The difference with Boris and Trump is they make far less of a pretence about it. There probably are leaders who would feel honour bound not to break the rules, Theresa May would perhaps be an example, but do such people make good Prime Ministers? I think many people would take Johnson over May any day of the week. I think that if one insists on politicians complying with middle class morality, then middle class morality gets baked into the political assumptions. You end up being governed by dry moral prudes like May and Starmer, or PR men like Blair. Quote:
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Was there a big drop following "Partygate" ? No, but as you pointed out, it didn't have that far to fall Quote:
IMO he is driven solely by his belief that he is destined to lead the country. He will I suppose in one way it's quite refreshing. Too many people paint themselves into a corner because of some deeply held beliefs - that can never happen to Boris Johnson because he doesn't care for anything other than his own personal power, comfort and welfare. If any policy affects any of those things, it'll be dropped immediately without regret. On the other hand it means that there's no underlying backbone. |
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No, but seriously, the rich in the US wield even more political influence. |
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The presumption these days is that positions 100-67 in the pecking order (whether that's income or wealth or a combination) is working class, 66-33 is middle class and 33-1 is upper class. IMO it's more like 100-15 is working class, 15-2 is middle class and the top 1 or 2 percent are upper class. Again IMO... If you rely on your next salary or pension payment to pay the bills and/or have little in the way of wealth beyond equity in your primary residence then you're working class. AIUI a frightening proportion of people in the UK don't have enough financial resources to withstand even a few months without income. OTOH if you have a comfortable income from your employment (or pension), considerable assets and substantial long-term savings then you're middle-class. If you live from the income generated from your assets - and as a consequence you choose whether to work, then you're upper class. My parents were both teachers. At the start of their married life, they were definitely in the working class. By the time they retired, thanks to living well within their means, good occupational pensions and diligent saving, I reckon they just about snuck into the middle class. Mrs Don and I are both the children of teachers, we went to university and got great-paying jobs with the same large American Management Consultancy. Apart from the first 5 years out of University when we were finding our feet financially, I'd say we've been comfortably middle class due to our decent income, modest spending, not having children and a big, big slice of dumb luck. :o |
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As for the "would you want president Johnson/Blair as head of state. It's only an accident of birth that we're not looking at the prospect of King Andrew. And Charles isn't exactly brilliant anyway. I'd rather have a President Mary Robinson than either |
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In the past it was the vast majority of people grafting, a small mercantile/professional middle class and a tiny, largely inherited, upper class. That's still pretty much the situation now in the UK IMO with the vast majority of people managing, barely managing or not managing at all, a much smaller number of people doing fairly nicely and the 1%ers doing very well indeed. Quote:
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Then again she married a multi-millionaire businessman and so whilst she may have been considered "arriviste" at a minimum she could be considered upper-middle class. IIRC Denis still had to work for a living Quote:
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Then again, many of the people I went to university with and started working with came from upper-middle class families and though they may have briefly dipped to middle-class living standards their parents were often on hand to provide a financial safety net. Looking at my middle class friends' children who are in their 20s and early 30s, their parents have provided deposits for houses and flats or a new second hand car. Regarding the idea of working through the classes over the course of a career, I'd argue that the likes of Alan Sugar have shown that it can be done but he's the exception rather than the rule. The idea that there are lots of people who started off as working class and have managed to get to the position that they and their families are living off the income generated by their wealth is IMO fanciful. Levels of social and economic mobility are comparatively low in the UK (and are falling), and falling. Many of of our neighbours are our age or older and are what I would term middle class. Most are now retired and (usually he) had a professional or upper management job. They seem to have three typical back-stories
OTOH most of the people we know and meet on a day-to-day basis through sport, music or just in the surrounding area are working class folk from a long line of working class folk. They work hard to provide for their families but haven't quite managed to have that slice of luck required to propel them into the middle class. |
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"Grammar school boy" in this context is shorthand for "clever person from the working classes with adequate access to good quality education who takes advantage of the opportunities". I'm very much against the idea of grammar schools for a variety of reasons including:
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Better late than never I suppose, but Speaker Hoyle has mildly rebuked Johnson's falsehoods about Starmer and the Labour front bench.
He also pointed out, that while it's within his powers to sanction MP's for accusing another MP of lying, he's powerless to stop an MP from lying in the first place. |
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Churchill's father was the third son of a Marquess, and as such was considered a commoner. He had to work for a living (as a politician) and scrounge money where he could. If he'd been part of the family who lived in, and lived off the proceeds of, the family estates then he'd have been upper class. Churchill's path was not unexceptional for someone born into the upper middle-classes. major public school --> army --> politics with some writing and journalism to make ends meet. An upper class person on the other hand wouldn't have had to work because they'd have had ample income from their assets. |
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If you grew up living from salary packet to salary packet with little or nothing in the bank for a rainy day, then started working in much the same way and at some point in time found yourself in the comfortable position that you've got a house bought and paid for, a nice nest egg in the bank (or in the market), comfortable pension prospects (either because of an occupational pension or a substantial pension fund) then you can reasonably consider yourself to have moved from working class to middle class. If not, you've stayed in your current "class". |
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Maybe that autistic reddit admin who went on Fox News to talk about the anti-work movement was actually an aristocrat? |
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Definition arguments are ultimately unsolvable once one has understood each others definitions and disagreed with them. I'm happy to let this drop if you are. I'll go on if you have more to say. |
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I think we have to be careful how we use the word "class". The UKs class system is a twisted, perverse system and money in many ways doesn't really come into it, you can be upper class and penniless, as rich as a Russian oligarch and still be working class. So I do think redefining class to mean "income percentile" allows us to have a better understanding of how our society is structured and a way to measure social mobility. It is a sad fact that simply putting Eton on your CV will pretty much guarantee you an interview, put Leigh CofE secondary school on your CV and it won't even be noticed. |
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If you are a person who has had a traditionally working class job, who owns their house outright, has substantial savings (say a few hundred thousand pounds) and is either drawing from, or has the prospect of, a generous private pension then IMO you're middle class. You're also almost vanishingly rare. Working class jobs tend not to have had generous occupational pensions (though there are exceptions) and working class pay packets tend not to be able to fund substantial savings and pay for houses. That's not to say it's impossible, just rare. |
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