No but if Johnson stands as an independent he would take enough votes off the tories to ensure they lose the seat.JC has every chance to-be reelected in his current seat as an independent. Johnson doesn't.
No but if Johnson stands as an independent he would take enough votes off the tories to ensure they lose the seat.JC has every chance to-be reelected in his current seat as an independent. Johnson doesn't.
Real question is how many will be awake enough to ask "why aren't we *really* out of the EU..?"BBC QT will be at Clacton on Sea tonight at 8PM on iplayer.
The audience voted 100% for brexit in 2016.
How many would now regret their choice?
What do you reckon?
I agree, those who voted for brexit should have been contractually compelled to take the kwarteng truss roller coaster with the tory membership to its logical conclusion.Real question is how many will be awake enough to ask "why aren't we *really* out of the EU..?"
It wouldn't matter if they did. We had been failing for well over 20 years before we joined the common market, so we know only too well what being out of the EU means. As a member of the European movement we then continued to fail for the next 44 years, and we are still failing now that we are out of the EU.Real question is how many will be awake enough to ask "why aren't we *really* out of the EU..?"
BBC QT will be at Clacton on Sea tonight at 8PM on iplayer.
The audience voted 100% for brexit in 2016.
How many would now regret their choice?
What do you reckon?
Was that the episode with the idiot woman? The one who voted Brexit because people working on her house roof had to wear safety equipment, whereas in Germany and France (where she's never been), she thinks they can work on a roof without safety equipment. Unbelievable.it was a pretty forgettable episode of BBCQT. Prof John Curtice decided to make up the audience with 70% brexit and still brexit, 20% brexit now regret + 10% brexit now undecided. The first subject was how much brexit has to do with the cost of living. The remainer camp is represented by Alistair Campbell. His performance was poor. He banged on about people were lied to. Bad tactic, nobody likes the suggestion that they did not see the lies.
Speaking of seeking the truth, anybody know why Ben Wallace is really quiting? For a bloke who voluntarily dropped out as forerunner in a tory leadership race against highly impressive competition like truss, I don't buy the bbc line that it's because Biden blocked him from getting stoltenburg's post (ie i dont think hes as all consuming a narcissist as that). Nor frankly do I buy the vatnic line I was sold yesterday that "their getting rid of him because he exposed natos terrible ammunition shortages" with that throwaway comment about amazon. I guess an obvious answer is that all tory mps must be considering their positions, but as a relatively stable pair of hands (that isn't actively searching for agriporn in the hoc) I'd have thought they'd give him a safe seat en rout to a next tory leadership bid?
Yes, but other than my visceral dislike of mordaunt (how can i put it, her karma comes across as as sincere as, say, gove's), am I the only voter that's getting saturated by the sound bite culture of the likes of her, sunak, starmer following the complete inauthenticity of boris, and looking for someone who isn't as good at a dispatch box?Wallace may be popular with the army's generals and possibly also with the membership but on debates, he is pretty wooden. With his experience and contacts, a career outside parliament may be more attractive than leader of the opposition which he may not get. I reckon Mordaunt is better at the dispatch box than he ever was.