@PaulCvote@bbcquestiontime@BBCOne@BBCiPlayer@BBCSounds@BBCNews He gets rolled out because;
1. He's helps the party look less gammon
2. Needs the publicity to help get elected at some point
3. Is more literate than his colleagues (especially under pressure)
SpaceX’s decision to launch a $25bn bond sale shortly after raising $86bn from its record-breaking IPO is a clear sign that markets are entering 'bubble territory', the investment chief at insurance group Allianz has warned. https://t.co/Nq03o45sWc
The cull would mean the removal of close to one in six of the company’s roughly 625,000 roles worldwide, making it one of the biggest ever job-cutting programmes by a European company. https://t.co/M0odi2126a
By behaviour she'd probably qualify for @Official_MRLP but they have higher candidate standards than the @Conservatives so probably wouldn't let her join. Perhaps she can opt for Trumpland and join @gop
The @UKLabour traitors weren't good enough to win a general election in their own name so they rode @Keir_Starmer coat tails until a useful idiot like @CatherineWest1 was willing to start the ball rolling and the leeches could step forward.
It’s blindingly obvious Starmer was never one of the clique.
They resented his rise to office.
This coup has been long in the making.
What a shower of cunts.
They deserve everything that’s coming to them.
'Honest Bob' is confident the Tory voting constituents of Newark will re-elect him as @reformparty_uk MP despite not having the bottle to ask them before or after he defected
😂😂😂
https://t.co/ufwsuzWjok
Once you know what a scum bag this "disruptive passenger" was all sympathy should be for @jet2tweets staff and passengers and gratitude it wasn't worse and can't happen again (at least by him).
https://t.co/S2rFJD4AKz
@JaneEnever87523@theonlypeterkay That someone sees how your comment highlights your priorities over real issues isn't stupid, just observation of your obvious displacement.
@JaneEnever87523@theonlypeterkay The fact you find it disgusting that a career grifter was caught out and offended that a politician disclosed their connections according to the rules says more about you than it does the coverage.
@YOLO_TrustSelf@BBCNews Well if it's a toss up between a violent "a bare-knuckle fighter" and the safety of the plane, I'll vote for the plane and the non-aggressive passengers. 😉
GRAY BEARDS REVENGE: @Ford took a human approach to fixing stubborn quality problems: It brought back “gray beard” engineers to reprogram AI tools that weren’t getting the job done. Now Ford is the top mainstream brand in @JDPower IQS $F @lindsayblakely https://t.co/JtPv8sfi3Q
“I think it’s not really credible to say that Brexit has been a huge economic mistake...”
Jeremy Hunt, former Chancellor and Foreign Secretary, makes the case that the UK can “flourish economically” both inside or outside of the EU.
#Newsnight
After all the horror stories I can't believe people still leave their cars with complete strangers whilst on holiday 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
https://t.co/US39Vat6cW
I think it also serves as a perfect testament to how voters have grown immune to bad behaviour from those who should be role models.
Decades of financial corruption, amorality and rewarding ineptitude have instilled an apathy just begging to be exploited by extremists.
Nigel Farage's hidden £5 million gift from a crypto billionaire would instantly tank any mainstream career, but it serves as a perfect testament to the willful blindness and degraded ethical standards of populist voters who simply refuse to care.
Farage is facing an official parliamentary standards investigation after it was revealed he hid a staggering £5 million cash gift from a major cryptocurrency tycoon. While the payout itself wasn't delivered in crypto tokens, it came directly from one of the industry's big players.
Concealing that kind of cash until he was caught red-handed proves Farage knew how toxic it looked, especially since his party immediately pushed a draft bill to slash crypto taxes.
Taking multi-million-pound payouts from a tech tycoon creates an obvious conflict of interest, pointing directly toward an attempt to buy backdoor political influence.
This isn't just a British problem. We see the exact same dynamic happening in the United States with Donald Trump. Just like Trump's base, Farage's followers operate with a level of political gullibility that excuses blatant financial misconduct as long as they are fed enough anti-establishment anger.
Traditional officials are held to strict ethical codes, but populist supporters in many countries have lowered the moral bar so far that they will happily let their favorite grifters get away with pocketing fortunes from elite special interests.
Farage needs to be called out aggressively for this. He is treating the public like fools, and his base is proving him right
@ukonward@timleunig Genuine question. What happens at 'renewal'? IE my £300k home @ 0.48% costs £1440 but following year is worth £320k so costs £1536. But council says it needs £1800 or cutbacks. How are annual increases calculated?
@Channel4News Still a smug b*stard after all these years, proud that he duped the gullible, benefitted the liars and would never suffer any personal hardship for his duplicity.