Tuesday 6th October 2020
Posted: Tue 06 Oct, 2020 6:45 am
Morning all.
The two companies want the government to cover the expected 10 percent taxes that would hit UK automotive exports from January 1 if Britain leaves the transition period without an agreement. Nissan warned in June that its factory in Sunderland, which employs 7,000 people, would be “unsustainable” if there was no deal. Neither car company commented on the demand for compensation, which was reported in the Nikkei financial daily. According to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, 80 percent of cars built in the UK are exported, with 55 percent of those going to the EU.
I'm not sure about riots but the government's current strategy does seem to be openly trying to push people's tolerance over the edge. The 10pm curfew is nonsensical.Could The Second Wave Spark Riots? We're Entering Very Dangerous Territory
As mentioned earlier, Boris Johnson will use his speech to the Conservative party conference to promise to power every home in the UK with offshore wind energy within a decade. According to extracts from the speech released in advance, he will also include this line about people who used to be sceptical about wind power in the past.
"I remember how some people used to sneer at wind power, twenty years ago, and say that it wouldn’t pull the skin off a rice pudding. They forgot the history of this country. It was offshore wind that puffed the sails of Drake and Raleigh and Nelson, and propelled this country to commercial greatness."
Although not obvious, this is a self-deprecating joke, and a rare admission from Johnson that he got something wrong. That’s because he was the person who used that jibe about wind power. “Labour put in a load of wind farms that failed to pull the skin off a rice pudding,” he once said, in an interview making the case for shale gas.
But despite being a tacit admission of error, Johnson is still being disingenuous. It wasn’t 20 years ago when he made this comment; it was in 2013.
They've never really got out of 'we must do something, this is something' mode, it often seems.Willow904 wrote:
I'm not sure about riots but the government's current strategy does seem to be openly trying to push people's tolerance over the edge. The 10pm curfew is nonsensical.
The idea that Johnson would actually admit to being wrong is fanciful at best...gilsey wrote:As mentioned earlier, Boris Johnson will use his speech to the Conservative party conference to promise to power every home in the UK with offshore wind energy within a decade. According to extracts from the speech released in advance, he will also include this line about people who used to be sceptical about wind power in the past.
"I remember how some people used to sneer at wind power, twenty years ago, and say that it wouldn’t pull the skin off a rice pudding. They forgot the history of this country. It was offshore wind that puffed the sails of Drake and Raleigh and Nelson, and propelled this country to commercial greatness."
Although not obvious, this is a self-deprecating joke, and a rare admission from Johnson that he got something wrong. That’s because he was the person who used that jibe about wind power. “Labour put in a load of wind farms that failed to pull the skin off a rice pudding,” he once said, in an interview making the case for shale gas.
But despite being a tacit admission of error, Johnson is still being disingenuous. It wasn’t 20 years ago when he made this comment; it was in 2013.
ALASTAIR CAMPBELL
@campbellclaret
These 10 points may or may not be related. 1. @BorisJohnson is lazy and only wanted to BE PM without doing the job. 2. Dominic Cummings desperately wanted to be the PM right hand man. 3. Johnson wanted him too. 4. Cummings would only do on condition he could be Mr Tech 5. Covid - the tech is a big part of the problem. 6. The Tory conference is a tech shit show. 7. Johnson is not very good at his job. 8. Cummings is not very good at the thing he says he is a genius at. 9. Hancock Dido Williamson survive cod > BJDC. 10. The country is a mess 2/2
It was certainly said that many of the far-East companies stayed put and stayed quiet through all of this because they were told early on 'one way or another this won't cost you'. If that's true, it's a very very heavy promise to pay that is about to fall due.gilsey wrote:Didn't Theresa May have a secret meeting with Nissan, widely believed to have been along those lines?
Paying those tariffs won't stop them leaving the UK in the medium term anyway.
Depressingly good chance you are correct.gilsey wrote:I've said this before and I'll almost certainly say it again.
If JC had won he wouldn't still be PM now, if even a quarter as many had died from the virus he'd have resigned or been hounded out of office.
Michelle Obama
@MichelleObama
My heart goes out to everyone touched by this virus, from those at the White House, especially the Secret Service and residence staff whose service ought never be taken for granted, to all those names and stories most of us will unfortunately never know.
It wouldn't be so bad if they didn't now pretend that it never happened.gilsey wrote:Centrists complaining about Johnson on twitter get buried by people reasonably asking that.
eg: Ian Dunt.