🚨 EMMANUEL LONGELO SCORES HIS SECOND ON THE COUNTER-ATTACK! MOTHERWELL REGAINS THE LEAD AS RANGERS CONCEDE WHILE SEARCHING FOR A WINNER.
RANGERS 2 - 3 MOTHERWELL
https://t.co/vHzCZsOOrw
BREAKING : Italian 🇮🇹 Georgia Meloni becomes the first PM in the world to belt Trump for his remarks on Pope 🔥
🇺🇸 Trump –– "The Pope is weak against crime and he is not doing his job well. He is terrible for foreign policy"
🇮🇹 Meloni –– 🔥 "Trump's words toward the Holy Father are unacceptable. The Pope is the head of the Catholic Church and it is right and normal for him to call for peace and to condemn every form of war"
Trump expected support at Strait of Hormuz from Meloni but she's exposing his hypocrisy instead 🤣
There's a camera awe over the park to confirm your offsise you have a camera on the goaline to confirm it crossed the line but mysteriously you dont have a camera at 2 nil down to tell ye the baw went out for a bye kick 🤔
The former RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch warned people about #KeirStarmer before the election. Most of the media laughed it off. Many in Labour dismissed him. But he understood exactly what Starmer represented.
Lynch said Starmer’s Labour was managerial, not political. A party run by lawyers, advisors, and communications professionals rather than people rooted in labour history, trade unions, industry, or working-class communities. A party that believed in management, not representation. Stability, not change. Administration, not politics.
He warned that if Starmer won, Labour would not govern as a movement, but as a management team.
If anything, Lynch understated it.
What we have seen is not a political Prime Minister but an administrative one. Government by briefing note, by focus group, by legal framing rather than political vision. A Labour Party reshaped from a political movement into something closer to a corporate structure with MPs.
Under Starmer, Labour has been changed more fundamentally than even under Blair. Blair at least had a political project. Starmer’s project has been control. Centralise the party. Remove internal opposition. Sideline unions. Purge members. Control candidate selection. Control messaging. Control policy.
The result is a Labour Party that is now barely recognisable as a working-class party, and barely recognisable even as a democratic political party. It behaves more like an administrative arm of the state than a movement representing the people.
Alongside this has come something else that should worry anyone who cares about civil liberties. Expanding surveillance powers. Restrictions on protest. Speech laws framed as safety. Increasing police powers. More powers for the state, fewer rights for the citizen. All passed in the language of responsibility and stability.
This is managerial politics. Not leadership, not representation, not democracy in the traditional labour movement sense. Management of the population. Management of expectations. Management of decline.
Mick Lynch saw a managerial Labour Party coming.
What he didn’t see was a Labour Party rebuilt as a machine: centrally controlled, staffed with loyalists, a government with authoritarian instincts and no roots in the labour movement at all, parachuting in MPs with little to no experience outside political offices, hand-picked acolytes from outfits like Labour Together, selected not for independence or service to their communities, but for loyalty to the leadership. MPs whose first duty is not to their constituents, not to their country, but to the party machine and the people who control it.
Labour didn’t win power for the people. Starmer won power for the global oligarchy and that little club he's been a member of since 2019...
@PaulKnaggs , Labour Heartlands