The Politics Thread
Moderator: Zulus Thousand of em
Re: The Politics Thread
Such a nice person. Labour need to stop being shit and quickly.KeyserSoze wrote:Did the shadow chancellor just quote Chairman Mao and throw the little red book across the dispatch box?
Re: The Politics Thread
Well, how is the move on from sleek New Labour professionalism going lads?
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Re: The Politics Thread
Leave the flat pack furniture alone Corbyn if this is your best example of how to assemble a cabinet
Re: The Politics Thread
it was, to put it mildly, a bit of a mis-step!Beefheart wrote:Such a tw*t. Labour need to stop being shit and quickly.KeyserSoze wrote:Did the shadow chancellor just quote Chairman Mao and throw the little red book across the dispatch box?
however...
labour have actually been remarkably effective for only a few months in opposition...
yesterday the tories did a massive U-turn on cutting tax credits - something they were previously absolutely determined to do and they scrapped their plans to slash the local policing budget...
these have been two of the things that Corbyn's opposition has focussed on...
I very much doubt that the slick mob Pru longs for would have effectively opposed the tax-credit cuts being as they were falling over themselves to agree with any statement that had the word "austerity" pinned to it for fear of being accused of not being tough enough or "realistic" enough about the economy...
Re: The Politics Thread
meanwhile...
the wonga set aside to renew trident quietly racks up a further £16billion - another £6billion just for the sake of it - and a further £10billion for "contingencies"... it's now reckoned to be £31billion to renew and £10billion contingency (which - at a third of the budget - seems like a lot of contingency!)
afford it? yeah - no probs...
oh - and - errr... sorry - the new ones won't be ready until a couple of years after the old ones have been retired.... perhaps we should have mentioned that... errrr... sorry!
the wonga set aside to renew trident quietly racks up a further £16billion - another £6billion just for the sake of it - and a further £10billion for "contingencies"... it's now reckoned to be £31billion to renew and £10billion contingency (which - at a third of the budget - seems like a lot of contingency!)
afford it? yeah - no probs...
oh - and - errr... sorry - the new ones won't be ready until a couple of years after the old ones have been retired.... perhaps we should have mentioned that... errrr... sorry!
Re: The Politics Thread
meanwhile elsewhere...
Alex Salmond skips debate on bombing syria to unveil a portrait of himself...
Alex Salmond skips debate on bombing syria to unveil a portrait of himself...
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Re: The Politics Thread
^^^ all politics apart, isn't he one of the most skappable people you've ever seen !?
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
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Re: The Politics Thread
bobo the clown wrote:^^^ all politics apart, isn't he one of the most skappable people you've ever seen !?
end the thread here ALERT!!!! Bobo and Bish in total political agreement (assuming Bobo means slappable!)
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Re: The Politics Thread
As much as I in part agree, I'm not really sure Labour had all that much to do with the U-turns....thebish wrote:it was, to put it mildly, a bit of a mis-step!Beefheart wrote:Such a tw*t. Labour need to stop being shit and quickly.KeyserSoze wrote:Did the shadow chancellor just quote Chairman Mao and throw the little red book across the dispatch box?
however...
labour have actually been remarkably effective for only a few months in opposition...
yesterday the tories did a massive U-turn on cutting tax credits - something they were previously absolutely determined to do and they scrapped their plans to slash the local policing budget...
these have been two of the things that Corbyn's opposition has focussed on...
I very much doubt that the slick mob Pru longs for would have effectively opposed the tax-credit cuts being as they were falling over themselves to agree with any statement that had the word "austerity" pinned to it for fear of being accused of not being tough enough or "realistic" enough about the economy...
But yeah. I also don't think they're a very effective opposition right now.
Re: The Politics Thread
well - before corbyn elected - labour MPs were instructed to abstain on austerity bill... after Corbyn elected - labour opposed, vigourously - and the Lords stopped them in the tracks with a one-two blow from a cross-bench peer and Labour...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
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Re: The Politics Thread
indeed.thebish wrote:end the thread here ALERT!!!! Bobo and Bish in total political agreement (assuming Bobo means slappable!)bobo the clown wrote:^^^ all politics apart, isn't he one of the most slappable people you've ever seen !?
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
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Re: The Politics Thread
I think a number of tory back benchers unhappy at the tax credit fiasco may have more to do with a U-turn than comrade/brother Corbynthebish wrote:well - before corbyn elected - labour MPs were instructed to abstain on austerity bill... after Corbyn elected - labour opposed, vigourously - and the Lords stopped them in the tracks with a one-two blow from a cross-bench peer and Labour...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
Re: The Politics Thread
hmmm... they could easily have overturned it before it got to the Lord's... they didn't.Hoboh wrote:I think a number of tory back benchers unhappy at the tax credit fiasco may have more to do with a U-turn than comrade/brother Corbynthebish wrote:well - before corbyn elected - labour MPs were instructed to abstain on austerity bill... after Corbyn elected - labour opposed, vigourously - and the Lords stopped them in the tracks with a one-two blow from a cross-bench peer and Labour...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
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Re: The Politics Thread
The real driving force is Osborne trying to carve out his route to Tory leader. He needs to make himself electable.thebish wrote:well - before corbyn elected - labour MPs were instructed to abstain on austerity bill... after Corbyn elected - labour opposed, vigourously - and the Lords stopped them in the tracks with a one-two blow from a cross-bench peer and Labour...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
Corbyn can oppose things that he believes in but I don't think the Tories are running scared of him or are overly influenced.
Re: The Politics Thread
Erm, well, Jeremy Corbyn MP didn't have a lot to do with stopping it either, did he?thebish wrote:hmmm... they could easily have overturned it before it got to the Lord's... they didn't.Hoboh wrote:I think a number of tory back benchers unhappy at the tax credit fiasco may have more to do with a U-turn than comrade/brother Corbynthebish wrote:well - before corbyn elected - labour MPs were instructed to abstain on austerity bill... after Corbyn elected - labour opposed, vigourously - and the Lords stopped them in the tracks with a one-two blow from a cross-bench peer and Labour...
I don't see what you expect Corbyn to do except oppose - and so far - the things he has opposed have been overturned... and he's only been around a few weeks...
In fairness I don't think anyone can dar he had nothing to do with it, but the evidence of the last five years shows it's definite Tory policy to leak or even announce massive cuts and then back track and so look less bay and like they've listened.
We want to cut £2bn. Let's announce cuts off £4bn then pretend we're being very reasonable and meeting people half way by eventually only making £2bn cuts. Boom.
In a world that has decided
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Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: The Politics Thread
if you seriously think that the whole tax credit cuts programme was a leak to make the actuality seem better - then you've lost the plot! the tories were committed to it - they are only not doing it cos they were stopped from doing it - and they got a very timely OBR recalculation windfall so they could save face!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done!
Re: The Politics Thread
[quote="thebish"]if you seriously think that the whole tax credit cuts programme was a leak to make the actuality seem better - then you've lost the plot! the tories were committed to it - they are only not doing it cos they were stopped from doing it - and they got a very timely OBR recalculation windfall so they could save face!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done![quote]
Mmmm clearly!
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/201 ... n-minority" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done![quote]
Mmmm clearly!
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/201 ... n-minority" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: The Politics Thread
Hoboh wrote:thebish wrote:if you seriously think that the whole tax credit cuts programme was a leak to make the actuality seem better - then you've lost the plot! the tories were committed to it - they are only not doing it cos they were stopped from doing it - and they got a very timely OBR recalculation windfall so they could save face!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done!
Mmmm clearly!
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/201 ... n-minority" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
your linked article seems to be about corbyn and syria - not tax credits...
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Re: The Politics Thread
But you're overegging the pudding a little. It was a hugely unpopular policy that was in itself a contradiction of pre-election promises.thebish wrote:if you seriously think that the whole tax credit cuts programme was a leak to make the actuality seem better - then you've lost the plot! the tories were committed to it - they are only not doing it cos they were stopped from doing it - and they got a very timely OBR recalculation windfall so they could save face!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done!
Osborne was primarily motivated (IMO) in his charge for leadership and branding himself on the left of the party. Labour opposing it obviously makes a difference. But it is a huge stretch to suggest merely doing so makes them the key driver or indeed effective opposition.
Re: The Politics Thread
You said he knew what he was doing, this proves he clearly does not.thebish wrote:Hoboh wrote:thebish wrote:if you seriously think that the whole tax credit cuts programme was a leak to make the actuality seem better - then you've lost the plot! the tories were committed to it - they are only not doing it cos they were stopped from doing it - and they got a very timely OBR recalculation windfall so they could save face!
also - if you you don't think Corbyn was involved in house of Lords strategy meetings with labour peers and cross-bench peers - you've got a little hole in your understanding of how politicians get things done!
Mmmm clearly!
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/201 ... n-minority" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
your linked article seems to be about corbyn and syria - not tax credits...
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