Friday 13th April 2018
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Welcome to FTN. New posters are welcome to join the conversation. You can follow us on Twitter @FlythenestHaven You are responsible for the content you post. This is a public forum. Treat it as if you are speaking in a crowded room. Site admin and Moderators are volunteers who will respond as quickly as they are able to when made aware of any complaints. Please do not post copyrighted material without the original authors permission.
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Friday 13th April 2018
I'm sure there was a thread here!
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Not a great night for the Tories in the by-elections!
@britainelects
Rogate (Chichester) result:
LDEM: 55.8% (+55.8)
CON: 40.1% (-27.3)
LAB: 2.6% (+2.6)
GRN: 1.5% (-18.2)
LibDem GAIN from Con
Middleton Cheney (South Northamptonshire) result:
CON: 42.1% (-21.6)
LDEM: 34.1% (+34.1)
LAB: 19.7% (+19.7)
GRN: 4.1% (+4.1)
Conservative HOLD.
St Olaves (St Edmundsbury) result:
LAB: 58.6% (+27.0)
CON: 24.1% (-6.5)
IND: 12.4% (+12.4)
LDEM: 5.0% (+5.0)
Labour HOLD.
@britainelects
Rogate (Chichester) result:
LDEM: 55.8% (+55.8)
CON: 40.1% (-27.3)
LAB: 2.6% (+2.6)
GRN: 1.5% (-18.2)
LibDem GAIN from Con
Middleton Cheney (South Northamptonshire) result:
CON: 42.1% (-21.6)
LDEM: 34.1% (+34.1)
LAB: 19.7% (+19.7)
GRN: 4.1% (+4.1)
Conservative HOLD.
St Olaves (St Edmundsbury) result:
LAB: 58.6% (+27.0)
CON: 24.1% (-6.5)
IND: 12.4% (+12.4)
LDEM: 5.0% (+5.0)
Labour HOLD.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/25627" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Benefit sanctions inquiry launched
Benefit sanctions inquiry launched
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Isle of Man set to scrap its you're iller than we thought,tough shit assessments.
https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/i ... work-test/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/i ... work-test/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Sorry,should be tough love,of course.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Morning all.
Thread about Enoch...
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That second one about Powell recruiting from the Commonwealth to come and work in the NHS is well-known now but still startling given his later stance.
And Labour don't come out of this well either.
Thread about Enoch...
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That second one about Powell recruiting from the Commonwealth to come and work in the NHS is well-known now but still startling given his later stance.
And Labour don't come out of this well either.
If I'm not here, then I'll be in the library. Or the other library.
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
The Facebook/Cambridge Analytica story trundles on:
https://amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://amp.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
This was nicked and embellished but may be the best joke you'll see today...
Allison
@AllieLia
Follow Follow @AllieLia
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A woman is sitting at her deceased husband’s funeral. A man leans in to her and asks, “Do you mind if I say a word?”.
“No, go right ahead”, the woman replies.
The man stands, clears his throat, says “Plethora”, and sits back down.
“Thanks”, the woman says, “that means a lot”
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Not sure this came as a surprise.
Firms relabelling low-skilled jobs as apprenticeships, says report
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-43739963
Wait - can't be that - Labour's target culture had been swept away right?
Firms relabelling low-skilled jobs as apprenticeships, says report
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-43739963
No, it was all about hitting a 3m target.Fast food giants, coffee shops and retailers are relabelling low-skilled jobs as apprenticeships and gaining subsidies for training, a report says.
The study by centre-right think tank Reform says many firms have rebranded existing roles after being obliged to contribute cash to on-the-job training.
It adds that 40% of government-approved apprenticeship standards do not meet a traditional definition of them.
The government says "quality" is at the heart of its apprenticeship reforms.
Wait - can't be that - Labour's target culture had been swept away right?
If I'm not here, then I'll be in the library. Or the other library.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Just happened to be next to each other on my Twitter feed...
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
I did comment yesterday about Trump's lack of "consistency" on quite a few things. It does make you wonder.....
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Matthew Austin
@Fertweetssake
5h5 hours ago
More
Replying to @AngelaRayner
May's avoiding vote as if MPs vote as their constituents desire, vote will be lost. If they vote with the government, it won't go down well with consituents & local election results, already predicted to be poor, may suffer. Avoiding a vote is least bad of 3 bad options.
#Syria
@Fertweetssake
5h5 hours ago
More
Replying to @AngelaRayner
May's avoiding vote as if MPs vote as their constituents desire, vote will be lost. If they vote with the government, it won't go down well with consituents & local election results, already predicted to be poor, may suffer. Avoiding a vote is least bad of 3 bad options.
#Syria
One world, like it or not - John Martyn
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Well, this is excellent news.
The people I know were very much against what he was trying to do to the OU.UCU
Verified account
@ucu
36m36 minutes ago
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BREAKING NEWS: The vice-chancellor of @Openuniversity Peter Horrocks has resigned.
If I'm not here, then I'll be in the library. Or the other library.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Also on HE news, the result of the UCU ballot is due this afternoon to decide whether industrial action will resume, meaning strikes next week in some universities.RogerOThornhill wrote:Well, this is excellent news.
The people I know were very much against what he was trying to do to the OU.UCU
Verified account
@ucu
36m36 minutes ago
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BREAKING NEWS: The vice-chancellor of @Openuniversity Peter Horrocks has resigned.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
I think dodging a vote in the Commons will also be highly unpopular.gilsey wrote:Matthew Austin
@Fertweetssake
5h5 hours ago
More
Replying to @AngelaRayner
May's avoiding vote as if MPs vote as their constituents desire, vote will be lost. If they vote with the government, it won't go down well with consituents & local election results, already predicted to be poor, may suffer. Avoiding a vote is least bad of 3 bad options.
#Syria
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Or a clean sweep for the Tories....
http://www.killamarsh-pc.gov.uk/news/20 ... ion-result" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.killamarsh-pc.gov.uk/news/20 ... ion-result" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Last edited by HindleA on Fri 13 Apr, 2018 1:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Even at Guido's place the majority of comments on the "Diane Abbott Car-crash" thread are against the gesture bombing which is being slowly gestated ...
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
All assuming, of course, that Donald Trump actually takes some kind of action.
Which can't be relied upon.
And even if he does take some action, it is by no means certain it would be any more extensive than his previous response to use of chemical weapons and thus May's support without a vote may not be such a risk.
The Russians and Russian point of view are getting a lot of airtime today. Why is that?
Which can't be relied upon.
And even if he does take some action, it is by no means certain it would be any more extensive than his previous response to use of chemical weapons and thus May's support without a vote may not be such a risk.
The Russians and Russian point of view are getting a lot of airtime today. Why is that?
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Town/parish council level, doesn't countHindleA wrote:Or a clean sweep for the Tories....
http://www.killamarsh-pc.gov.uk/news/20 ... ion-result" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Not exactly what you would call a watertight case, but in the absence of any other plausible explanation, I still feel it's more than enough circumstantial evidence to enact the Magnitsky amendment asap
https://www.buzzfeed.com/amphtml/emilya ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://www.buzzfeed.com/amphtml/emilya ... ssion=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Britain Has Set Out Its Most Detailed Explanation Yet For Why It Believes Russia Is Responsible For The Salisbury Poisoning
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Garvan Walshe
@garvanwalshe
20m20 minutes ago
More
2. The trap is the anti-immigrant ratchet. Immigration is not a problem in the UK, only its perception is, and it’s a perception not related to reality.
Garvan Walshe
@garvanwalshe
20m20 minutes ago
More
2. The trap is the anti-immigrant ratchet. Immigration is not a problem in the UK, only its perception is, and it’s a perception not related to reality.
One world, like it or not - John Martyn
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
I wish governmental leadership would act in the best interests of country and peoplegilsey wrote:Matthew Austin
@Fertweetssake
5h5 hours ago
More
Replying to @AngelaRayner
May's avoiding vote as if MPs vote as their constituents desire, vote will be lost. If they vote with the government, it won't go down well with consituents & local election results, already predicted to be poor, may suffer. Avoiding a vote is least bad of 3 bad options.
#Syria
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Exactlygilsey wrote:
Garvan Walshe
@garvanwalshe
20m20 minutes ago
More
2. The trap is the anti-immigrant ratchet. Immigration is not a problem in the UK, only its perception is, and it’s a perception not related to reality.
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Watch out for official data coming out today, everyoneWillow904 wrote:All assuming, of course, that Donald Trump actually takes some kind of action.
Which can't be relied upon.
And even if he does take some action, it is by no means certain it would be any more extensive than his previous response to use of chemical weapons and thus May's support without a vote may not be such a risk.
The Russians and Russian point of view are getting a lot of airtime today. Why is that?
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
A clean sweep for ToriesHindleA wrote:Or a clean sweep for the Tories....
http://www.killamarsh-pc.gov.uk/news/20 ... ion-result" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
A clean sweep of Tories
just musing...
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Good-afternoon, everyone
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Also, if there's no vote, and it all goes tits up, Theresa May and the Government will be the can-carriers.AnatolyKasparov wrote:I think dodging a vote in the Commons will also be highly unpopular.gilsey wrote:Matthew Austin
@Fertweetssake
5h5 hours ago
More
Replying to @AngelaRayner
May's avoiding vote as if MPs vote as their constituents desire, vote will be lost. If they vote with the government, it won't go down well with consituents & local election results, already predicted to be poor, may suffer. Avoiding a vote is least bad of 3 bad options.
#Syria
Edited to remove unnecessary words.
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/216539" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
/2018/apr/13/commonwealth-citizens-harassment-british-immigration-policy
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ion-policy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
/2018/apr/13/commonwealth-citizens-harassment-british-immigration-policy
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ion-policy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Oh - just seen this!
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ria-debateTory backbenchers fear the minority government could be at risk if May acts without MPs’ support and things go wrong. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA
Theresa May is under increasing pressure from her own backbenchers to cancel Monday’s business in parliament to make time for a full-scale debate and vote on intervention in Syria.
“The government owes it to parliament to come and explain,” said Bob Seely, the Isle of Wight Conservative MP who says he is sceptical about intervention. “Articulating their case in a chamber full of critical voices is good for the government. If it can’t, then maybe it shouldn’t be doing it.”
Tory backbenchers fear that if May approves a military strike without parliamentary support and it goes wrong, perhaps through civilian casualties or the loss of a British plane, she could jeopardise her minority government.
Syria mediators take centre stage as moment for rapid strike passes
Read more
Dominic Grieve, the former attorney general, said on Friday: “If it all goes terribly wrong then the government will be in difficulties. It will then have chucked at it that it hasn’t consulted parliament.(Guardian)
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Very good article by Gary Younge.frog222 wrote:https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/216539
/2018/apr/13/commonwealth-citizens-harassment-british-immigration-policy
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ion-policy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
It's the first I've seen on this topic that has cast this squarely against the backdrop of UKIP topping the EU elections in 2014 and the subsequent push to Brexit. The Tory party bowing to minority pressure from the right, trying to prove their Ukippy credentials to stem the flow of votes. I don't think anyone doubts those credentials now.
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Tory backbenchers seem to have a bit of a soft spot for Assad. Interesting that neither Cameron or May can get a majority to back bombing him, as opposed to Hussein, Gaddafi and Isis.PorFavor wrote:Oh - just seen this!
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ria-debateTory backbenchers fear the minority government could be at risk if May acts without MPs’ support and things go wrong. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA
Theresa May is under increasing pressure from her own backbenchers to cancel Monday’s business in parliament to make time for a full-scale debate and vote on intervention in Syria.
“The government owes it to parliament to come and explain,” said Bob Seely, the Isle of Wight Conservative MP who says he is sceptical about intervention. “Articulating their case in a chamber full of critical voices is good for the government. If it can’t, then maybe it shouldn’t be doing it.”
Tory backbenchers fear that if May approves a military strike without parliamentary support and it goes wrong, perhaps through civilian casualties or the loss of a British plane, she could jeopardise her minority government.
Syria mediators take centre stage as moment for rapid strike passes
Read more
Dominic Grieve, the former attorney general, said on Friday: “If it all goes terribly wrong then the government will be in difficulties. It will then have chucked at it that it hasn’t consulted parliament.(Guardian)
"Fall seven times, get up eight" - Japanese proverb
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Willow904 wrote:Tory backbenchers seem to have a bit of a soft spot for Assad. Interesting that neither Cameron or May can get a majority to back bombing him, as opposed to Hussein, Gaddafi and Isis.PorFavor wrote:Oh - just seen this!
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ria-debateTory backbenchers fear the minority government could be at risk if May acts without MPs’ support and things go wrong. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA
Theresa May is under increasing pressure from her own backbenchers to cancel Monday’s business in parliament to make time for a full-scale debate and vote on intervention in Syria.
“The government owes it to parliament to come and explain,” said Bob Seely, the Isle of Wight Conservative MP who says he is sceptical about intervention. “Articulating their case in a chamber full of critical voices is good for the government. If it can’t, then maybe it shouldn’t be doing it.”
Tory backbenchers fear that if May approves a military strike without parliamentary support and it goes wrong, perhaps through civilian casualties or the loss of a British plane, she could jeopardise her minority government.
Syria mediators take centre stage as moment for rapid strike passes
Read more
Dominic Grieve, the former attorney general, said on Friday: “If it all goes terribly wrong then the government will be in difficulties. It will then have chucked at it that it hasn’t consulted parliament.(Guardian)
Mrs Assad (and her connections)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asma_al-Assad
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Willow904 wrote:Tory backbenchers seem to have a bit of a soft spot for Assad. Interesting that neither Cameron or May can get a majority to back bombing him, as opposed to Hussein, Gaddafi and Isis.PorFavor wrote:Oh - just seen this!
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ria-debateTory backbenchers fear the minority government could be at risk if May acts without MPs’ support and things go wrong. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA
Theresa May is under increasing pressure from her own backbenchers to cancel Monday’s business in parliament to make time for a full-scale debate and vote on intervention in Syria.
“The government owes it to parliament to come and explain,” said Bob Seely, the Isle of Wight Conservative MP who says he is sceptical about intervention. “Articulating their case in a chamber full of critical voices is good for the government. If it can’t, then maybe it shouldn’t be doing it.”
Tory backbenchers fear that if May approves a military strike without parliamentary support and it goes wrong, perhaps through civilian casualties or the loss of a British plane, she could jeopardise her minority government.
Syria mediators take centre stage as moment for rapid strike passes
Read more
Dominic Grieve, the former attorney general, said on Friday: “If it all goes terribly wrong then the government will be in difficulties. It will then have chucked at it that it hasn’t consulted parliament.(Guardian)
Mrs Assad (and her connections)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asma_al-Assad
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Willow904 wrote:Tory backbenchers seem to have a bit of a soft spot for Assad. Interesting that neither Cameron or May can get a majority to back bombing him, as opposed to Hussein, Gaddafi and Isis.PorFavor wrote:Oh - just seen this!
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... ria-debateTory backbenchers fear the minority government could be at risk if May acts without MPs’ support and things go wrong. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA
Theresa May is under increasing pressure from her own backbenchers to cancel Monday’s business in parliament to make time for a full-scale debate and vote on intervention in Syria.
“The government owes it to parliament to come and explain,” said Bob Seely, the Isle of Wight Conservative MP who says he is sceptical about intervention. “Articulating their case in a chamber full of critical voices is good for the government. If it can’t, then maybe it shouldn’t be doing it.”
Tory backbenchers fear that if May approves a military strike without parliamentary support and it goes wrong, perhaps through civilian casualties or the loss of a British plane, she could jeopardise her minority government.
Syria mediators take centre stage as moment for rapid strike passes
Read more
Dominic Grieve, the former attorney general, said on Friday: “If it all goes terribly wrong then the government will be in difficulties. It will then have chucked at it that it hasn’t consulted parliament.(Guardian)
Mrs Assad (and her connections)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asma_al-Assad
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
What's the collective term for Squirrels?
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
I think it's a PorFavor of squirrels.PorFavor wrote:What's the collective term for Squirrels?
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... -gettlesonVote Leave broke spending limits 'on industrial scale', says ex-employee
Mark Gettleson is third whistleblower to come forward to make claim over EU referendum spending
(Guardian)
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Following on from earlier, following a ballot of all members UCU have called off the strike at Universities.
Students will need to be up and at their lectures next Monday
Students will need to be up and at their lectures next Monday
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
The information in your posts above is important enough to justify its being posted three times.PorFavor wrote:What's the collective term for Squirrels?
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
This bloke doesn't like Trump. Understatement.
" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office. – Aesop
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
No doubt Nigel Farage is (genuinely) proud of himself.Woman told to speak English in London tube attack
Police search for two women after racially motivated assault on Spanish-speaking passenger
(Guardian)
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/201 ... in-england
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Three local council byelections yesterday:
South Northamptonshire DC - Tory hold, though the LibDems ran them fairly close in their first outing here in modern times. This two member ward split 1Ind/1C in 2003 before electing the same combination unopposed in 2007 before the Tories took the Independent seat in 2011, again without any actual contest. This at least changed in 2015 when the Tory slate saw off a sole Indy by about 60-40, compared to which they dropped by nearly 20 points this time. LibDems not that far behind as already said, followed by Labour who had some success here into the 1990s but now had to be content with almost exactly 20% in their first appearance here since 2003. Greens last with a relatively modest 20%.
Chichester DC - LibDems went a bit better in this one, taking a previously safe Tory ward with 55% of the vote. This single member division has had various opponents since being created for the 2003 elections, but until now the common factor has been its unvarying reliability for the Tories (this includes an unopposed return for them in a previous 2010 byelection) but despite not having stood here since 2007 the LibDems stormed home now as the Tories dropped by over 25 points compared with 2015. Labour got less than 3% in this deeply unpromising terrain, but that was still almost twice what the Greens achieved - a massive drop since around 20% and second place three years ago.
St Edmundsbury DC - Labour hold with close to 60 per cent of the poll in a ward which split 1Ind/1Lab last time with the Tories only just behind. In 2003 and 2007 two Labour members had been safely returned here in straight fights with the Tories, but one of their councillors then defected to the Greens and in 2011 split the "left" vote sufficiently to let an Independent in - they duly consolidated their position in the most recent 2015 contest. This time round, though, Tories dropped to less than a quarter of the vote - beaten by well over 2 to 1 - and the sitting Indy failed to add much lustre to their hopeful this time as they finished a poor third. LibDems failed to perform any miracles here in their first showing since the 1990s, last with a pretty modest 5%.
Three contests again next week, which concludes things until the regular elections at the beginning of May.
South Northamptonshire DC - Tory hold, though the LibDems ran them fairly close in their first outing here in modern times. This two member ward split 1Ind/1C in 2003 before electing the same combination unopposed in 2007 before the Tories took the Independent seat in 2011, again without any actual contest. This at least changed in 2015 when the Tory slate saw off a sole Indy by about 60-40, compared to which they dropped by nearly 20 points this time. LibDems not that far behind as already said, followed by Labour who had some success here into the 1990s but now had to be content with almost exactly 20% in their first appearance here since 2003. Greens last with a relatively modest 20%.
Chichester DC - LibDems went a bit better in this one, taking a previously safe Tory ward with 55% of the vote. This single member division has had various opponents since being created for the 2003 elections, but until now the common factor has been its unvarying reliability for the Tories (this includes an unopposed return for them in a previous 2010 byelection) but despite not having stood here since 2007 the LibDems stormed home now as the Tories dropped by over 25 points compared with 2015. Labour got less than 3% in this deeply unpromising terrain, but that was still almost twice what the Greens achieved - a massive drop since around 20% and second place three years ago.
St Edmundsbury DC - Labour hold with close to 60 per cent of the poll in a ward which split 1Ind/1Lab last time with the Tories only just behind. In 2003 and 2007 two Labour members had been safely returned here in straight fights with the Tories, but one of their councillors then defected to the Greens and in 2011 split the "left" vote sufficiently to let an Independent in - they duly consolidated their position in the most recent 2015 contest. This time round, though, Tories dropped to less than a quarter of the vote - beaten by well over 2 to 1 - and the sitting Indy failed to add much lustre to their hopeful this time as they finished a poor third. LibDems failed to perform any miracles here in their first showing since the 1990s, last with a pretty modest 5%.
Three contests again next week, which concludes things until the regular elections at the beginning of May.
"IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS???!!!!111???!!!"
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
@AnatolyKasparov
I was prevented thanking you in the time-honoured fashion by those damn' squirrels.
I was prevented thanking you in the time-honoured fashion by those damn' squirrels.
Last edited by PorFavor on Fri 13 Apr, 2018 9:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Oh. See what I mean? They've really got it in for me.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Haircut.
Even the price increase didn't induce a panic attack,though still some way of double figures,pound wise.
Even the price increase didn't induce a panic attack,though still some way of double figures,pound wise.
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Delayed purchase of weekly bus ticket and walked the few miles.
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- Prime Minister
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Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Ex miner,swears like a trooper.
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- Prime Minister
- Posts: 27400
- Joined: Tue 26 Aug, 2014 12:40 am
- Location: Three quarters way to hell
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
PF likes most things in treble,I am reliably informed.
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- Prime Minister
- Posts: 27400
- Joined: Tue 26 Aug, 2014 12:40 am
- Location: Three quarters way to hell
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... a-landlord" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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- Prime Minister
- Posts: 27400
- Joined: Tue 26 Aug, 2014 12:40 am
- Location: Three quarters way to hell
Re: Friday 13th April 2018
Whilst kicking the sick/disabled in the nethers.
British values
Christian.
British values
Christian.