In the meanwhile, if you want to cast doubt on Starmer's credibility try posting exampled of his complete economic incompetence, his long history of lying in parliament and to his family, his breaking of UK laws, his constantly changing views, his ignoring International Law, his lying about borders in the Irish Sea, his lying about introducing British import controls, his and his family's avoidance of UK tax, his taking of backhanders etc etc etcI will as, by then, the chances are that he will be facing a more credible opposition than individuals the current Government offers. Johnson won a GE so hardly bogus, the other two, yes.
so for legitimacey; the toryboy only has to win one election, and self-made starmer, two. hmmmmmmI will as, by then, the chances are that he will be facing a more credible opposition than individuals the current Government offers. Johnson won a GE so hardly bogus, the other two, yes.
don't forget about the queen! did he lie to the queen!In the meanwhile, if you want to cast doubt on Starmer's credibility try posting exampled of his complete economic incompetence, his long history of lying in parliament and to his family, his breaking of UK laws, his constantly changing views, his ignoring International Law, his lying about borders in the Irish Sea, his lying about introducing British import controls, his and his family's avoidance of UK tax, his taking of backhanders etc etc etc
Hope this helps
don't forget about the queen! did he lie to the queen!
I've just googled those 10 pledges.They are both dishonest and untrustworthy (as are most politicians). Boris lies so much he forgets what he has lied about (in a Trumpian sort of way) while Starmer says whatever he needs to get power with no obvious beliefs. When he got elected to the Labour Party he made 10 pledges which helped him get elected. Hes now gone on to either renounce or conveniently forget those pledges.
Indeed, they're all the same. Self-serving self-aggrandisers.They are both dishonest and untrustworthy (as are most politicians). Boris lies so much he forgets what he has lied about (in a Trumpian sort of way) while Starmer says whatever he needs to get power with no obvious beliefs. When he got elected to the Labour Party he made 10 pledges which helped him get elected. Hes now gone on to either renounce or conveniently forget those pledges.
I've just googled those 10 pledges.
Which ones has he publicly backed down from?
So he's not a career politician but he sits on the fence because it would be the best thing for his career?This gives me hope that he offers an alternative to these career politicians that seem so out of touch and incompetent.
Those that criticise him for sitting on the fence don't understand that currently this offers him the best opportunity to be elected.
green, economic shoots won't appear til putin goes and the gas price drops, and/or we rejoin the customs union and single market. sunak will get no help from the economyA pollster (JL Partners?) was interviewed on the BBC news and stated that many focus groups that they have remain unconvinced about SKS, which seems to give more weight to the winning by default argument. He said that if some green shoots started appearing in the economy early next year, an election then would be a lot closer than the polls suggest at the moment.
You sure you're not living in a bubble? When Starmer became leader, Labour were polling around 30%; they're now polling at over 50% with every polling company. He's definitely doing something right.I voted for Starmer as leader in large part because he made the commitment to keeping (widely popular) core policies.
I definitely feel let down by the breaking of that promise. I will still vote Labour, given alternatives, but I am not particularly enthused to get out and campaign now. And there will be a lot of people, especially younger people (which I am not) feeling the same way.
I don't really know what Starmer stands for to be honest, apart from being an apparently decent chap with a very solid professional background. And nice hair. If there was no need for substantial change and all that was needed is good mangement of the status quo, then fine. But that isnt where we are. We will need a government that is proactive and has a long term vision for how we prepare for what looks like a very challenging future. The tactic seems to be wait to win by default. As weak as that position is, it would probably have worked against Johnson, and definitely against Truss.
Against Sunak? With two years in hand? I am not so sure. With a fair amount of luck, a following wind and the full force of Capital, and the right wing press, behind him, I fear Suank could really strengthen (he's no fool). Starmer and co's lack of any obvious vision may come back to bite them.
wahay! "they're all the same." BINGO!Indeed, they're all the same. Self-serving self-aggrandisers.
Are you suggesting that should he make progress then he's doing it against the odds?green, economic shoots won't appear til Putin goes and the gas price drops, and/or we rejoin the customs union and single market. Sunak will get no help from the economy
I got the impression from the original post that he had specifically backtracked on all the points of his 10 pledges which would be weird as some of them were as follows:Keir Starmer Confirms He Has Ditched All Of The Pledges In Labour's 2019 Manifesto
"We’re starting from scratch, the slate is wiped clean," he says.www.huffingtonpost.co.uk