Can a man who lays his wreath upside down be considered suitable for high office?
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Can a man who lays his wreath upside down be considered suitable for high office?
Can a man who lays his wreath upside down be considered suitable for high office?
The Brexit Party has announced that it will not stand candidates in the 317 seats won by the Conservatives at the 2017 general election.
Brexit Party won't stand in Tory seats - Farage
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Meanwhile, the Lib Dums have all but lost the chance of any leave voters by going against public opinion and scrapping Brexit their main policy.
You couldn't make it up.
So you are saying that - according to Corbyn - the money for public spending will come from closing tax avoidance loopholes and clamping down on tax evasion?
No I'm not - because he hasn't said that.
According to Labour's manifesto, public spending will be funded by taxing the top 5% of earners.
While I don't have any idealistic objection to state ownership of some industry sectors, I can't help thinking that anyone outside the political ideologues who think this is a good idea have forgotten quite how bad the state-owned BT actually were at delivering anything approaching reasonable levels of service at a reasonable price.This move will raise an estimated £20bn, which will be used to buy back British Telecom from the public and provide free Fibre broadband to every household in the UK by 2030.
No it won't and they haven't said that it will.
We already know that Labour plans to increase tax for higher earners.
And regardless of funds raised from taxation, we also know that they are committed to large-scale public borrowing to help pay for their plans. And so are the Conservatives.
We've done this.
No idea - I am merely repeating what the Labour chap said on Radio 4's 6 O'clock News last evening.
Their workforce were very happy though. Well paid, early retirement, job for life and plenty of opportunity for skiving.While I don't have any idealistic objection to state ownership of some industry sectors, I can't help thinking that anyone outside the political ideologues who think this is a good idea have forgotten quite how bad the state-owned BT actually were at delivering anything approaching reasonable levels of service at a reasonable price.
You may (reasonably) have the view that BT are pretty sh*t today, but by God, their performance is an exemplar of customer-focused delivery by comparison to what it used to be
While I don't have any idealistic objection to state ownership of some industry sectors, I can't help thinking that anyone outside the political ideologues who think this is a good idea have forgotten quite how bad the state-owned BT actually were at delivering anything approaching reasonable levels of service at a reasonable price.
You may (reasonably) have the view that BT are pretty sh*t today, but by God, their performance is an exemplar of customer-focused delivery by comparison to what it used to be
Do you remember those strange little red and white striped tents they used to erect as soon as they arrived at any roadside infrastructure? Second job on the agenda was to set the stove up and have a brewTheir workforce were very happy though. Well paid, early retirement, job for life and plenty of opportunity for skiving.
Oh, I've suffered business relationships with BT in the recent past and - as I mentioned in my post above - they really are sh*t. It's hard to believe how much worse they used to be though.Try a business account with them. Woeful. Only their technical staff have any competence. The building housing the billing department would be as well burned down.
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