Just home from dealing with the consequences of tonight's lawlessness.
Perhaps some of the English right wing influencers and local politicians enthusing about these protests would explain to children I met why they have no beds to sleep in tonight.
Utterly disgusted.
@RupertLowe10 Rupert why not ask the MPs in Reform this question
The attacker entered the country and was granted asylum when Suella was Home Secretary and Bobby was Immigration minister
They might be able to answer your questions
Your reminder that this cunt is currently inciting violence on the streets of Britain from… RUSSIA.
Where he’s hanging out with Musk’s rapey dad.
Couldn’t make it up.
Just Saying:
When the North Belfast attacker was granted a 5-year visa,
Suella Braverman (Reform MP) was Home Secretary
and
Robert Jenrick (Reform MP) was immigration minister.
They are the ones that let him into the country.
There is absolutely no truth to reports suggesting that Kennet Eichhorn has rejected Liverpool. The reality is that discussions remain ongoing, with the main complexities relating to legal and regulatory structures surrounding signing-on payments and compensation mechanisms sought by the player’s camp, while Liverpool’s interest remains as strong as ever and the player’s long-term desire to join the club has never changed, with all parties continuing to explore solutions that could ultimately pave the way for his dream move to Anfield.
The original plan always envisaged Kennet Eichhorn spending time elsewhere before eventually arriving at Anfield due to the well-known legal complications surrounding underage transfers following Brexit, with Liverpool initially intending to sign the player before immediately loaning him out, while current discussions, involving Liverpool, the player’s camp and several potential destination clubs in Germany, are focused on an alternative route towards the same long-term objective, one that could see him permanently join a German side, with Bayer Leverkusen among the possibilities, before a release clause becomes active within a defined timeframe, potentially allowing Liverpool to complete the move at a later date once the relevant legal, regulatory and contractual considerations have been resolved.
For Liverpool, such a structure would provide a clear and legally secure route to secure a player they continue to value highly, while for Eichhorn it would preserve the prospect of one day realising what those close to the situation describe as his dream move to Liverpool Football Club, a club he has admired since childhood. The story is not about rejection, despite what certain mouthpiece reporters have attempted to portray, but about finding the appropriate legal and financial framework to facilitate an outcome that all parties have broadly been working towards from the very beginning.