he's gonna drain all the fun

as a (not so) trendy leftie, i'm a lot less worried about the general affairs of the country than i was 96 hours ago
he's gonna drain all the fun
same lot that voted for Brexit hoping for less immigration and 'sovereign little' GB .jimibt wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 2:55 pmhe (rishi) must have loved and loathed in equal measure the outcome of his *defeat* by the party faithful (old white men) ushering in the truss-i-nator. experiment over; let's see what unfolds now. just a shame that potentially no more daily faux pas' to cringe over!!greenmark wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 2:49 pmI disagree. I expect Rishi and Hunt (I assume Hunt will stay) to go for cuts and no tax cuts until we emerge from this mire.decomez6 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 2:33 pm
Rishi is Kier's key to No.10 downing street.
for the current tory party to succeed , they will have to adopt labour policies . in essence the only way is labour or economic oblivion .
Rishi worked with kier to lock down the country , give out some handouts inform of farlough
and now he is inhereting a mini chaos caused by a tory oriented mini budget .
so expect more taxation for the rich , higher co-operation tax (windfall tax ) , Euro friendly policies with london as the focal point of growth .. all Labour !
In short , The conservative party is preparing a soft landing into the opposition lead by a Rishi's care taker government .
Labour would continue to spend.
Which of those strategies is correct we'll never know. Only one can be tested at any point.
For sure Rishi has a flipping monumental task. Post-covid, Ukraine, Make brexit work, levelling up, eye-watering public deficit and a political party tearing itself apart. But he does at least have the option of buggering off to California if it all goes base over apex.
Who is suggesting a vote of no confidence?Archery1969 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 5:08 pmBefore people get excited:
“Losing a vote of no confidence would not necessarily trigger a general election: the Government would be expected to resign but given the Tory majority in the Commons the party would have the right to try to form a new administration. Also, there is no mechanism in place to force the government to resign, they could just hold on until January 2025”
It's not a vote of no confidence but a "motion" of no confidence in the government. I'm not entirely sure what would happen if the motion won, other than it being a statement.Archery1969 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 5:08 pmBefore people get excited:
“Losing a vote of no confidence would not necessarily trigger a general election: the Government would be expected to resign but given the Tory majority in the Commons the party would have the right to try to form a new administration. Also, there is no mechanism in place to force the government to resign, they could just hold on until January 2025”
A vote, I believe, is part of the Tory party constitution for Tory MPs to vote on and subject to their own rules.Archery1969 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 6:03 pmWhat the hell is the difference between a vote and motion of no confidence ?