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[Closed] Should Theresa May resign?

 Del
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fwiw worth jambs, in this country your house can be sold to fund your care and they'll keep taking your money until you get down to about 23k IIRC.
what was wonderful about may's u turn on that social care policy, aside from how quickly it happened and how damaging, was that actually, we do need to have that conversation. it wasn't that bad an idea.
she didn't loose because of that alone, it was because they'd done such a bang up job of making the election about her versus corbyn, but unfortunately she made it very apparent to everyone just how much vacuum there is in place of a personality. she wouldn't debate anyone, she wouldn't take any questions outside of the party faithful, and she had no answers for the difficult questions. all corbyn did, by contrast, was be consistent.
i'm not altogether sure that corbyn would do well if there was another election right now. it's not that he's great, just that the tories are shit.
after the referendum, everyone went back home from the holiday in UKIP, and the 48 voted tactically. unfortunately the lib dems weren't a credible force, so the 48 went for the least worst option, which was simply to get the tories in to a much weaker position.
mission accomplished.
if brexit does go ahead now, we'll end up retaining all the features that most stuck in the craw of the leavers, freedom of movement etc. but at least we'll still have the customs union and a lot of the other benefits. mind you, we're going to have to pay for it, and end up the ginger step child of the EU for a long, long time.
our best bet, now, really is to call the whole thing off.
i've never been so intrigued by politics.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 9:32 am
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i'm not altogether sure that corbyn would do well if there was another election right now. it's not that he's great, just that the tories are shit.

Don't agree. Corbyn was offering policies that haven't been offered for years and a lot of people like them (what they will deliver and the fairness to approach).
May was offering no policies that anyone could like and sticking to the same old we need to save money so can't improve our public services (even though tax rises are staring them in the face using money from the 'magic money tree'). They could offer the same but won't because it would upset the rich people they are there to support.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 9:37 am
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Fallon getting taken apart by Marr right now 🙂

Hypocrisy of alliance with DUP after monstering Corbyn

Turns him into a maybot soundbite machine.....


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 9:47 am
 Del
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if corbyn's policies had really chimed with the electorate he'd be measuring up no. 10 for curtains right now.
don't get me wrong, i'm delighted with this result, but being less shit than the other lot is not really a win.

i'll be amazed if boris takes the job. brexit was always a poison chalice and he's too shrewd for that. he was waiting in the wings for that to blow over before stepping up. i think the only way he could do it and pull it off would be to go for referendum 2.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:00 am
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if corbyn's policies had really chimed with the electorate he'd be measuring up no. 10 for curtains right now

Or if the knuckle draggers weren't so influenced by the right wing gutter press

Do we really need to repost the election day front pages of the Dail Heil and The Scum?


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:03 am
 dazh
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Marr was highly enjoyable this morning. Fallon didn't have a leg to stand on and he knew it. He does though seem to have a masochistic love of being monstered on live tv.

Corbyn displayed a new authority and confidence I've never seen before. He's looking quite prime ministerial in fact 🙂


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:12 am
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i think the only way he could do it and pull it off would be to go for referendum 2.

I think he has the ego to take the job and the lack of moral fortitude to then kill Brexit dead as well by saying well i tried but we could not get a good deal and this deal is better than no deal or some such

Despite all the Brexit must be honoured I do not think it would win if there was a ref now on the issue and it was won on a pack of lies that we all know wont be happening


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:16 am
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Member
Marr was highly enjoyable this morning. Fallon didn't have a leg to stand on and he knew it. He does though seem to have a masochistic love of being monstered on live tv.

Corbyn displayed a new authority and confidence I've never seen before. He's looking quite prime ministerial in fact

+1

He was incredibly relaxed and ready for the next phase

And


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:22 am
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I spoken to a few conservative supporters since Thursday. They still hold the view like some on here it was just a protest vote and once they get the right leader it'll be business as usual.

I think they've underestimated who swung this election.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:31 am
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Exactly.
IDS on Peinaar (Radio 4) at the mo:
The electorate were too stupid to understand the policies, it was just a protest vote, nothing needs to change.
Arrogant man.

Sounds like he's now left the studio before Mark Steele gets stuck into him... coward.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 10:38 am
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Seeing a few similar comments reported over that last couple of days. Not sure telling a more youthful voting body that they're too stupid to understand things will go down well...


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 11:23 am
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Boris now backing Theresa '100%'.

So, let her get her hands dirty with the DUP then dump her once agreement in place?
Tis the Tory way.....


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 11:35 am
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i've never been so intrigued by politics.

The more soap opera it gets, the more people will start following it. This would be pretty good for democracy IMO. And probably good for Corbyn. See the post-election Suvation poll.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 12:18 pm
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Tories will be running scared of another election, desperate to hang on. But the more they hang on, the worse the eventual outcome will be for them.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 12:22 pm
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ot sure telling a more youthful voting body that they're too stupid to understand things will go down well...

Indeed. Too stupid to understand why they should maintain the status quo where they have nothing but debt, zero hours contracts and insecurity.

If you don't have anything to lose, why not vote for a change.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 12:39 pm
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[quote=jam bo ]ot sure telling a more youthful voting body that they're too stupid to understand things will go down well...
Indeed. Too stupid to understand why they should maintain the status quo where they have nothing but debt, zero hours contracts and insecurity.
If you don't have anything to lose, why not vote for a change.

I seem to remember EXACTLY the same argument being bandied about when all the working class heroes voted for Bresit last year.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 12:52 pm
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Yep. And the brexiteers exploited it. Now it's come back and bitten them.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 12:58 pm
 R979
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There are a lot of very smart, highly motivated kids in this country and it's very heartening to see them starting to realise they can control their own destiny.

They should have all the same opportunities that the boomers and gen xs had.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:10 pm
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Imagine if Corbyn had done the things that TM has done. The RW press would be going nuts.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:11 pm
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same way as if Hilary had got fewer votes that Trump and had links to russia who helped her win they would be going ape.

Its not really a surprise to see that self interest is the defining principle of the right wing and everything else [ including honesty and the country] is a long way after that.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:17 pm
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They should have all the same opportunities that the boomers and gen xs had.

Times have changed and the country is in a mess. I fear the best the youth can hope for now is to deliver those same opportunities to their children or grandchildren... Not sure that any party saying this is a vote winner. No magic money tree, no instant change just a hard grind for years.

Trouble is it not like the recent past with a devastating war that caused the hardship we managed to do it to ourselves


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:19 pm
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no instant change just a hard grind for years

Most people know this I reckon - but we would welcome hard grind for the benefit of each other, if it could be portrayed this way.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:26 pm
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i think if we are all init together then we acyually all have to be in it together

It personally fills me with shame that my kids will face a harder time than I did

problem is my parents generation are tied to the fact that they paid for what they are getting and thy deserved it when the reality is they rode the property bubble, got free education, free employment and then earning relate pensions that they did not pay enough to cover and they passed the bill on to us to pay more and get less

The elderly/pensioners then wrapped it all up in an EU exit to make sure we were all royally ****ed by those who had received the most whilst making sure their pensions were still triple locked

Still lets remember what we need is for the rich - the uber rich in particular to stop being enabled to avoid tax


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:32 pm
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People don't mind working hard and making sacrifices if there is a positive outcome at the end of it.

Taking the hit just to see the benefits passed on to the corporate sector and the most well off eventually sticks in the throat.

I think the electorate, especially the younger element are realising that they've been had.

You can fool some people some of the time etc.....


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:36 pm
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I agree most people understand it will take time but it is not a vote winner to say they.

No party will (or perhaps can) assign a budget outside of the final year of their term. So unless a coherent effort is made from the get go anything that is attempted seems to be tinkering over a couple of years.

Look at the insistence that the EU UK situation can be unraveled in two years when a basic trade deal normally takes 2-5 times as long. Then we spend the first few months of the time dicking around not getting on with the job.

There are enough votes on all sides that like the idea of an instant change for the better that they vote for the sound bites. Telling people you will reduce their debt and make services better will always be popular. If you follow it with the caveat that once implemented this won't be the case for 10 years and you will have to work like stink for less to make it happen those votes float away.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:39 pm
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Gideon trying so hard to suppress a grin

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-politics-40237776/general-election-2017-may-is-dead-woman-walking-osborne


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:49 pm
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[quote=Rusty Spanner ]Boris now backing Theresa '100%'.

Oh dear - he is planning a bid then?


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:54 pm
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Wouldn't the Conservatives be better off at this stage just letting Corbyn have a go at running the country?

Wait for Labour to be destroyed by the poisoned chalice of Brexit, and then come in again with a fresh young leader(*) who can appeal to all those new young voters, who by then will be a little bit disillusioned by Corbyn's inevitable failures and mistakes?

(*) i.e. not BoJo or that awful Gove man.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 1:57 pm
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its one of those and it was a good election to loose

The numbers are just not there for Corbyn so the choices were this or another election for the tories

I am not sure which is the least worst option for them tbh

I assume they think a "period of stability*" is the best option

* which means enough time to get a new leader with different policies and then an election


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 2:01 pm
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Wouldn't the Conservatives be better off at this stage just letting Corbyn have a go at running the country?

it's not in their makeup to concede power, what if he canceled brexit, the daily fail would implode 🙂


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 2:06 pm
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Sometimes the only way to win is not to play.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 2:16 pm
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ok Joshua 😉 how about a nice game of chess


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 2:21 pm
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Front page of the Telegraph is hilarious today, they've got their 8 tl;drs from their political commentators, everyone else is doom and gloom, Rees-Mogg says "This is a tacit approval of May's brexit strategy" and IDS says "She's the best person to deliver stability" 😆


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 2:47 pm
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Great to hear on the World at One the 1922 Committee give full support to Maybot..

Which means she'll be out before the end of June.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 3:21 pm
 rone
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if corbyn's policies had really chimed with the electorate he'd be measuring up no. 10 for curtains right now.

I think it's worth reflecting on where he has come from in terms of campaigning in no time at all.

It's a staggering underdog story.

To actually win might take a wee bit longer.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 3:44 pm
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I think it's reflecting on where he has come from in terms of campaigning in no time at all.

It's a staggering underdog story.

To actually win might take a wee bit longer

Aye this is basically the first Rocky movie.

JC playing Rocky, plucked from obscurity, viewed as a bum, with the champ, Apollo Creed played by May, expected to blast JC out with ease.

All JC wanted to do was go the distance with the champ, which he did, but now he can taste victory and he's going for the win in Rocky II, somewhere in the next few months.

Personally I can't wait to see BoJo as Clubber Lang and Rees Mogg as Ivan Drago


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 3:54 pm
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JC's sunday jog 😉


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 4:06 pm
 rone
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JC playing Rocky, plucked from obscurity, viewed as a bum, with the champ, Apollo Creed played by May, expected to blast JC out with ease.

🙂

Great sign off from JC this morning - "Look at me I've got youth on my side!".

Who's the drunk Burt Young?


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 4:48 pm
 Del
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Wasn't the other comment from the 1922 committee ( I paraphrase ) 'accept may and the dup or we'll have another election'?
Like a teacher - 'it's not my time you're wasting' 😆


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 4:56 pm
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Cabinet Nonshuffle going on at the moment. Have we ever had a weaker PM ?


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 5:08 pm
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OK, if we're doing music now...Theresa May on Friday morning.

The final act happens quite soon I suspect.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 5:21 pm
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Indeed. Too stupid to understand why they should maintain the status quo where they have nothing but debt, zero hours contracts and insecurity.

All of those are because of the EU, obvs.

If you don't have anything to lose, why not vote for a change.

Totally agreed. But there's plenty of other ways to change rather than "I don't like my house, let's set it on fire."

I'd have thought that the first party leader to actually address people's concerns and provide sound solutions to put our own house in order would smash an election. I don't really understand why it's not being shouted from the rooftops.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 6:53 pm
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Corbyn's £11bn student loan "gibe away" was cruicial imo. It's a policy which benefits the middle class and will leave todays students having via their taxes to support a huge national debt but hey ho they are not worried about that right now.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 7:54 pm
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I'm of age to have benefitted from not having to pay fees and receiving a grant for my degree education. I haven't pulled up the ladder since, I firmly believe and always have, that if a country wants educated people it should pay for them. There is a caveat which is we don't need 50% of the population educated to degree level merely to occupy desk space in call centres.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 8:02 pm
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Oh look Gove is back as environment secretary. Let's watch him **** that uo too.


 
Posted : 11/06/2017 8:03 pm
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