Archive for Labour

Now Liebour are stealing my ideas!

Back in October I posted about how I would make people work – basically forcing them to work for the local authority street cleanging, clearing up graffiti, etc. in return for benefits.

Then in May, Chris Grayling, the Shadow Work & Pensions Secretary, proposed a slightly watered-down version of the same policy.

Now the real Work & Pensions Secretary, James Purnell, has nicked my idea which he has declared “revolutionary”!

No James, it’s not revolutionary, it’s just common sense and it wasn’t even your idea in the first place.

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Liebour: A spent force

The pathetic weakness of Liebour has been reconfirmed today with the first day of a two day strike by public sector workers and the Scottish Chancellor’s back-track over the 2p rise in fuel duty.

Council workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland in the Unison and Unite unions went on strike today over a below inflation pay offer resulting in the closure of hundreds of schools and libraries and general disruption to council services.  1,500 employees at the Driving Standards Agency have been on a one day strike today.  2,500 Valuation Office Agency staff are working to rule today and tomorrow, 10,000 Home Office staff will be striking on Friday, 5,500 Land Registry workers will also strike on Friday and Costguard control room staff will be striking on Friday for 2 days.

Meanwhile, whilst the country is falling apart because El Gordo has pissed all out money up the wall for the last decade, Alistair Darling has backed down from the 2p/£ increase in fuel duty that has been planned for some time claiming to be doing it for the good of business and the electorate.  This is bullshit, it’s because he knows that an increase in fuel duty will not only devastate Liebour’s chances in the by-election in Glasgow East (next door to El Gordo) but that it will likely bring about a repeat of the fuel price protests of a few years ago.

This is New Liebour in its death throes.  Enjoy it while it lasts – the general election isn’t that far way.

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Tories take Henley, BNP beat Liebour

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – nobody stands a chance of winning a by-election but the Conswervative at the moment.

John Howell took 56.95% of the vote and ended up with nearly a 10,000 vote majority.

Liebour came fifth and lost his deposit, being beaten by the Illiberal Dumbocrats, the Green Party and the BNP.

UKIP came a disappointing sixth but they won’t be as disappointed as the English Democrats who came 8th behind the Monster Raving Loony Party.  The Miss Great Britain Party, bizarrely, put up two candidates for the same election.  I don’t think they quite get how it works because their combined vote would have put them above the English Democrats in 8th place.

If the last few election results are anything to go by, Liebour are likely to find themselves in third place at the next general election.

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Number 10 promoting Liebour websites again?

I’ve just had an email from the Number 10 propaganda department telling me about all the wonderful things our Prime Minister has been doing.  One of the things in it was a link to an “EU Summit minisite”.

I clicked on the link to see what it was all about and it came up with the address http://eusummit.govblogs.co.uk.  A government blogs website?  Looks interesting.  So what’s at http://www.govblogs.co.uk?  A 123-reg holding page.   123-reg?  Since when has the British government used 123-reg for their websites?  Suspicious (out of character I know), I popped onto a whois website to check it out.  The domain is registered to a Simon Dickson, address unknown because he’s apparently a “non-trading private individual”.  Strange, because this website is being promoted as a government website and it has the headers and footers of the Prime Minister’s website.

So who is Simon Dickson?  I’ve found a reference to a Simon Dickson who happens to be a Liebour Party donor.  Co-incidence?  It’s not as if they haven’t got form for this sort of thing, after all.

Edit:
The surname is “Dickson”, not “Dixon”.

Edit 2:
Simon Dickson says, in the comments, he has no links to Liebour.

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Harman wants companies to discriminate

Straight from the horses mouth, Harriet Harman wants companies to practice discrimination when considering similar applications for jobs:

They might think we don’t want an all male team.

We’ve got a new post coming up, we’ve got equally qualified men and women going for it, we are going to pick the woman because we want to have a more balanced top team.

Under a new law that she wants to bring in, companies will be banned from any form of age discrimination but will be allowed and encouraged to take into account sex and colour when considering two people with similar qualifications for a job to ensure that they have a “balanced” workforce.

Once again, the young white Englishman is going to be discriminated against to meet arbitrary quotas.  Already the police, fire service, local authorities and British government departments run racist recruitment campaigns that ban white English men from applying but now they are going to extend that same racial and sexual discrimination to the private sector.

Is it any wonder so many people are joining the fucking BNP?  It’s the same hand-wrinnging liberals that complain about the BNP that are causing the problem in the first place.

We have got to get rid of this illiberal, racist fucking scum.

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Liebour asks members to bail them out

Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear.  Even LiebourHome is indulging in a spot of schadenfreude at the expense of their party.

Apparently, El Gordo has invited members to underwrite Liebour’s debts after getting confirmation that he and the other 32 members of the National Executive Council are liable for Liebour’s debts, including the £12m that needs paying this year.

I’m not laughing.  Honest.

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Oh, the irony

I wrote to my MP, David Wright (aka Red Dave), about the increasing cost of living which is almost entirely down to his government’s climate change scam.  I sent a free of charge, environmentally friendly email to him and he replied, extolling the virtues of “green” Liebour and telling me about how we all have to do our bit to protect the environment.  But he didn’t reply by email – no, he typed up a reply, printed it on two pieces of dead tree (not even double sided printing), put it inside another piece of dead tree and posted it from London to my house.  His constituency office is 3 or 4 miles up the road from where I live.

Here is the email I sent to him originally:

Dear David,

I see the price of petrol and diesel has gone up yet again.  The price of diesel is going up every other day at the moment.

It’s getting close to the point where I can’t afford to drive any more which is unfortunate.  Because I have problems with my knees I can’t walk everywhere.  I can get to work on the bus but it’ll cost me £3.20 return from [where I live] to the Town Centre daily.  That’s a journey of about 3 miles.  From the Town Centre I then have the option of catching another bus for around the same amount that will eventually get me to St Georges from where I can walk to work or walking to [a different office] and catching a minibus that my employer provides.

I’d need to do some sums to figure out whether the bus is cheaper than the car but one thing is for sure – my journey to work will increase from five minutes to around an hour and a half.  That means three hours a day less with my family and when I work a late shift every other week that means not seeing my 3 year old as she would be in bed by the time I got home from work.

Then there’s the problem of me being on 24 hour call-out.  Every other week I am on call 24 hours a day but buses don’t run 24 hours a day.  I’d have to give that up and lose about £5,000 a year in salary.

And, of course, there is the knock-on effect of high fuel prices that affects everyone, driver or not – increased cost of food and other goods.  My wife tells me that some items of shopping are increasing on a weekly basis.  This is due to both the increasing cost of transport and the food shortages caused by farmers turning fields over to biofuels in the name of the global warming scam that you and your colleagues are propagating.

When will this stop David?  When will you and your government do something to help out those of us who don’t have a £61,000 MP’s salary to cushion the blow?  When will your government realise that what the economy needs – and what we all need – is for the tax on fuel to be decreased, not increased?  It’s all well and good your prime minister (salary £187,000) telling us that he won’t drop tax on fuel so we can afford to live because we need secure and cheap oil supplies for the future but that’s not happening (largely thanks to your government’s foreign policy, but that’s another matter).  We aren’t going to get cheap and secure oil supplies other than those that are present in the North Sea, control of which your government is passing over to the EU.  A tax cut is the only way fuel prices will be decreased.

So what do you suggest I do David?  The way things are going, very soon I won’t be able to afford to work.  What are you doing to bring down the cost of fuel, the cost of food and the general cost of living?  What are you going to do to make sure that people like me can afford to travel to work and buy food for our families?

Stuart Parr

He eventually replied, basically avoiding answering any of my questions, with the following piece of newspeak:

Dear Stuart

Thank you for your e-mail of the 22 May relating to fuel costs and the general living expenditure of families.

I was somewhat puzzled by your reference to the “global warming scam” that I am supposedly propagating.  I have read literature claiming that global warming is not taking place and I do not find it convincing.  Tackling climate change is the most serious and pressing global environmental challenge the world faces. 

The Stern report showed that failing to reduce carbon emissions leads to dangerous climate change risking our future economic prosperity.  Unless we tackle it, we will face higher food costs, more floods, humanitarian crises and climate refugees.

Efforts are needed to cut emissions across the economy including transport where cars, vans and lorries alone account for nearly a quarter of the UK’s CO2 emissions.  Cars provide huge benefits to people and businesses through greater mobility and freedom.  We need to retain these benefits, while cutting the CO2 emissions, which means encouraging more fuel-efficient cars.

Over the last decade the government has introduced a range of measures to encourage cleaner cars.  This has contributed to the proportion of least polluting cars on our roads rising by more than a third, while that of the most polluting cars has fallen by a quarter since 2001. 

I am very conscious of how current high nominal petrol prices are affecting people.  That is why we postponed this April’s fuel duty increase to help people and this policy will be kept under review.  High fuel costs are the result of international oil prices increasing to record highs.  Fuel duty by contrast is down in real terms since 1999.  The government is working to encourage oil producing states to lift production.

The best way to ensure long term price stability is to have economy wide stability.  I believe that is what Labour has delivered.  The government responded to calls to alleviate the problems caused by the abolition of the 10p tax rate.  If people want a reduction in tax on fuel then they have to decide whether to further increase public debt or reduce public expenditure.

The medium to long term solution is to promote alternative fuel cars, subsidise public transport and move our wider economy away from oil and gas based energy consumption through more renewables and nuclear power.

Yours sincerely

David Wright

So much bullshit, so little time and energy to fisk him.  I did manage to summon the motivation to type out a reponse (which I sent by environmentally friendly, free email):

Dear David,

Thank you for your letter.  The irony of you replying to my environmentally-friendly, almost zero-carbon email by typing a reply, printing it on a piece of dead tree and then posting it to me 3 or 4 miles down the road hasn’t been lost.  Still, it gave me a laugh.

I wonder if you could let me know what evidence you’ve seen that convinces you that climate change is caused by human activity.  Whenever I look for the kind of incontrovertible evidence that would , if I were an MP, convince me to destroy the global economy and condemn the bulk of my constituents (mainly the section of society that voted for me) to poverty, I keep finding things like:

The lead author of the IPPC report on climate change telling the worlds media that the Wilkins Ice Shelf in the Antarctic is “hanging on by a thread” when it actually collapsed 10 years ago.  I can’t trust the findings of a report whose lead author is a proven liar and propagandist.

German scientists have confirmed that there will be global cooling again this year and for the next decade.  They claim that the increase in temperature predicted in the IPPC report will happen after the decade of cooling.

31,000 scientists (including 9,000 PhD’s) have so far signed the Oregon Petition and 500 climatologists, scientists and engineers have signed the Manhattan Declaration, all criticising the IPPC report on climate change, Al Gore’s film “An Inconvenient Truth” and the actions of world governments in the name of climate change.  Only 2,500 scientists endorsed the IPPC report on climate change, 400 of which say their names were added without their knowledge or consent and one scientist had to threaten legal action to have his name removed after leaving the project because it was unscientific and politically motivated.

The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology says that the floods last year had nothing to do with climate change but the Environment Agency (which is, of course, part of the British government department, DEFRA) said, in response to their report, that although they couldn’t attribute the floods to climate change, we can expect more floods because of climate change.  Such blatant propaganda does nothing for the global warming lobby.

The peak in Atlantic sea temperatures during the second world war that have formed an integral part of the model that the propagandists have used for their predictions have recently been confirmed as incorrect data.  The temperature didn’t actually increase, it was just measured differently by the Americans during the war and normal temperatures were recorded after the war when the British took back over measuring the temperature.  The propgandists haven’t changed their model to take this into account, they’ve just put their fingers in their ears and shouted “la la la la la”.

I remember being told that we were heading for a new ice age when I was younger but the same data that convinced scientists then that we were heading for global cooling then now convinces scientists that we’re heading for global warming.  They were just as convinced on global cooling and they were wrong.

The permafrost in Greenland and the Arctic ice caps haven’t shrunk to the extent that they did during the Medieval Warm Period (natural climate change) or 2,000 years ago when the Vikings settled there.  The Vikings grew grapes for wine production in Greenland and Newfoundland in what is now permafrost and surface ice.

Al Gore’s film, An Inconvenient Truth, was judged to be propaganda by a High Court judge who ruled that it could only be shown in schools if the teacher explained that the film was not objective and was full of inaccuracies.  Most of the inaccuracies were exposed by British government scientists.

Perhaps you’ve got some different evidence that we mere mortals don’t have access to?  If you do, could you please let me have a copy?

If I could just address one more point you make – increasing oil production.  This is a nonsense because the UK is almost entirely self-sufficient in oil requirements.  It is only about 2 and a half years ago that oil use in the UK exceeded our own oil production.  Increasing the amount of oil produced in the Middle East will have little impact on the price of fuel because most of the oil we consume comes from the North Sea and off the coast of East Anglia.  The only reason why our own oil is so expensive is because of the obscene rate of duty that your prime minister has imposed on it.  A country that is almost self-sufficient in oil shouldn’t be paying the same amount for petrol and diesel as a country that doesn’t produce any oil of its own.  A reduction of tax on fuel would provide a massive boost to the economy and may even head off the recession that your government is engineering putting more money back into the economy.  But, of course, citizens having their own money and not relying on state handouts isn’t the socialist way, is it?

If you could also let me know what you intend to do to bring down fuel costs, increase global fuel production to combat the loss of crops to biofuel production and bring down food costs, I would be most grateful because right now your government’s policies are compounding (or causing) the situation, not making it better.

Stuart

David Wright is a party man through and through.  What does he care if half of his constituents are struggling to pay their bills?  At £61k, his salary is about four times the average wage of his constituents and we pay his travel expenses.

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Try not to laugh …

Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. If No Mandate Brown wasn’t such a fucking contemptible shit I’d feel sorry for him.

kissmaggie1.pngA year ago he thought he was going to take over the reins from Traitor Bliar, see out the last couple of years until the next election and then either lead a Lib-Lab coalition if they could scrape together enough support between them or, most likely, retire with his Prime Minister’s pension and wait for his peerage (which had best be the pretendy peerage for a pretendy Prime Minister).

Instead he finds himself performing roughly the equivalent role of the captain on the Titanic, rearranging the cabinet as HMS Liebour slowly slips under the water, its twisted bulk fatally gashed by the iceberg of insolvency.

Not only is Liebour £27m in debt, not only does it have £13m of debts due this year, not only does it have to repay £7.45m of debt this month, not only has its membership dropped by 50% since 1997, not only is Liebour getting less in donations than the Lib Dumbs but … the GMB union is cutting the number of Liebour MPs it sponsors from 108 to about 36. This quote from Paul Kenny, the GMB’s General Secretary, is brilliant:

The government is very keen on testing for everybody, performance-related pay, and we’ve applied in the GMB over the last 12 months exactly the same principle.

We’ve examined the records of MPs both at local level and national level and many are doing a fantastic job, but there are a number who seem at times to be embarrassed by their relationship with the union.

We don’t want to embarrass them by giving them union money.

Fantastic. Several unions are also planning to hold a vote at their AGM on disaffiliating from Liebour.

Oh how laughed …

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Liebour MEP hypocrisy

Last week the Liebour MP and Speaker of the House, Michael Martin, suggested that MPs should be given a £23k annual grant towards second home expenses so they don’t suffer the embarassment of the taxpayer finding out what they’ve spent our taxes on.

Today, a Liebour MEP said that MEPs should publish a full breakdown of their expenses after the leader of the Conswervative MEPs, who was given special responsibility for making sure their expenses were whiter than white, admitted accidently authorising about three quarters of a million pounds worth of “expenses” paid to a family-owned company with its head office in his house.  This is, of course, ever so slightly against the rules even in an organisation as institutionally corrupt and bereft of any form of morality as the EU.

But how hypocritical can Liebour be?  They believe in transparency when a Conswervative MEP (Giles Chichester) owns up to defrauding the taxpayer but when their own MPs are caught with their snouts in the trough they want to change the rules to make it easier for them to get their hands on – and hide – dubious expenses paid by the taxpayer.  I mean, why should the taxpayer be paying Gordon Brown’s Sky TV subscription when we’re already paying him a salary of £187k?  Why should we be paying tens of thousands of pounds for a mock Tudor fronting for their taxpayer-funded second home?

The answer is that we shouldn’t and whenever taxpayers money is spent, every last penny should be accounted for and available for public scrutiny.  I agree with Richard Corbett MEP on this but I would politely remind him that the biggest bunch of crooks in Westminster are Liebour MPs and people in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

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The dead tree press catches up … eventually

Via Guido, the Guardian has noticed that Liebour has £13m of loans due this year despite being on the verge of bankruptcy.

They must be congratulated on their investigative journalism skills – after all, it only took them a week and a half to think of looking at the Electoral Commission website to see how much debt Liebour have got due for repayment this year.  It was the first thing I did after laughing at their misfortune.

Oh well, they caught up eventually.

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Tamsin “Toff” Dunwoody defends election campaign

Tamsin Dunwoody, the granddaughter of Baroness Norah Phillips and daughter of Doctor John Dunwoody, has defended her election campaign which is based almost entirely on telling the people of Crewe & Nantwich that they should vote for her because the Conswervative candidate is a rich and successful lawyer.
She said:

I don’t have a £53m pound fortune supporting me. I don’t have a £1.5m mansion. I am just a single, unemployed mother of five fighting hard for a job.

Fighting for a job you see, not for a chance to perform a public a service but for a job that pays £61k.

Stephen Ladyman, who has been running the disastrous campaign for Liebour said:

Maybe it’s a little crude but it’s trying to get across a legitimate political message that the Conservative candidate hasn’t done anything in the area. He’s a rich man and he won’t understand the problems that people face day-to-day.

Of course, he’d know what problems people face day-to-day on his salary of almost £139k. Just like the previous MP, Tamsin Dunwoody’s mother, knew all about the problems people face day-to-day. She had to struggle on a meagre £61k a year salary – slightly higher than the £26k national average which most of her constituents could only dream of.

So basically, if you’re writing off the other parties, what you’re looking at is a choice between a rich lawyer who doesn’t need the money and who presumably wants the job for what it is – a public service – and an unemployed single mum who wants the job for the salary having been unemployed since losing her seat in the Welsh Assembly to a Tory and who’s so posh she’s got her own entry in Burkes Peerage.

What is it they say about people in glass houses? Who’s the real toff? The rich lawyer or the granddaughter of Baroness Phillips with her own entry in Burkes Peerage?

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It’s not looking good for Gordo

Following yesterday’s revelation in the press that Liebour is on the brink of bankruptcy, I did some digging of my own.

According to the list of loans at the Electoral Commission’s website, Liebour has almost £13m of loans due for repayment this year.

It also transpires that in quarter 4 of last year, even the Illiberal Dumbocrats took more in donations than Liebour did.  The Conswervatives, meanwhile, took around four times as much in donations than Liebour.

I’m currently waiting on someone from the Elecoral Commission to tell me what happens when the party in government is declared insolvent …

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Liebour Party Bankrupt

The Liebour Party is on the verge of bankruptcy and needs an extra £4m funding before auditors will sign off its accounts as a going concern.

In 1997 Liebour had 400,000 paying members, today they have less than 200,000. In the last quarter of 2007 they had £2.86m in funding from members, in the first quarter of 2008 they had £581,000. They are struggling to pay staff wages and are only able to pay the bills because the unions have increased their donations from £1.6m in the last quarter of 2007 to £4.5m in the first quarter of 2008.

Liebour is now £21m in debt.

I don’t think there is a precedent for what would happen if the party in power went into administration but I’m looking forward to finding out!

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Lying Hypocrites

Guido has a copy of a Liebour election leaflet for the Crewe & Nantwich by-election.

Mrs Sane and I occasionally spend a weekend at a nice hotel just outside Nantwich and there are a lot of nice big houses round there.  Of course there are some scutty houses as well but just because someone lives in a nice big house doesn’t mean they care any less about the people who don’t live in nice big houses.  In fact, they’re more likely to want to bring the quality of the surrounding area up because it’ll make their nice big house more valuable.  Does anyone have a picture of the recently deceased MP for Crewe & Nantwich, Gwyneth Dunwoody’s house?  The wife of a doctor and daughter of a peer is unlikely to have lived in a two-up, two-down in a council estate.

Crewe & Nantwich has had a Liebour MP for a long time so where is the regeneration money from the Liebour government?  Tory councillors can only try and spend what the Liebour government gives them.

Soft on crime and yobbish behaviour?  Isn’t that a pretty fair description of the Liebour government’s approach for the last 10 years?  Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime Traitor said – what a joke.  When judges can’t lock people up because the prisons are full and serial offending teenage louts have to be given a slapped wrist and maybe a tag if they’re particularly naughty, is it any wonder that gangs of marauding yobs are roaming the streets?

Nobody should have to carry an ID card.  Liebour has given away control of our borders and allowed virtually limitless numbers of immigrants to enter the country to the extent that they don’t even know how many people are in the country.  At the same time they’ve set about abolishing civil liberties and curtailing our historic, constitutional and fundamental rights to combat the threat posed by the people they’re letting into the country.

Cutting funding to schools?  Teachers spend more time filling out paperwork and manipulating statistics to try and meet arbitrary targets than ever.  Schools in England receive far less funding than schools in Scotland and Wales – something that is worth reminding the people of Crewe & Nantwich of.  Audlem is in Crewe & Nantwich and they certainly know about the differences in funding over the border.

Liebour are nothing but a bunch of lying hypocrites.  If the people of Crewe & Nantwich vote Liebour this month they deserve everything they get.  In fact, if they vote Liebour I’ll start a petition to get the whole of Crewe & Nantwich transferred to Wales!

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Number 10 pulls its advert for Liebour

After posting this yesterday I sent a shitty email to the webmaster of the pm.gov.uk website giving them until 10am today to remove the link to the Liebour website or I would complain to the Civil Service Commissioner and contact the press.

They got an extra couple of hours because I was busy but no email was forthcoming so I phoned the Ethics department at the Cabinet Office and had a whinge.  The man at the Cabinet Office (Mr Brown but apparently no relation) clicked the link, read the strap line “Vote Labour on Thursday 1 May” and said “hmmmm”.  Then he asked for a copy of the email which I duly sent this evening asking for an update by noon tomorrow and informing him that I hadn’t contacted the press yet but would do so if it wasn’t sorted soon.

Mr Greer is on the ball and has noticed that the link has now been removed.  I don’t know how many other complaints they’ve had but this certainly looks like a case of blogger power!

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Welcome to Planet Gordo

Charlie Marks, one of the only left wingers in England that doesn’t need their head looking into (surgically), has some background information on Liebour’s new poverty adviser.

Jennifer Moses will be advising Gordon Brown on poverty (combatting it, not causing it – he already knows how to do the latter) as part of his Cabinet of all the Talentless.

Ms Moses is the obvious choice for advising the British government on combatting poverty being a multi-millionaire “non-dom”.  She lives in a huge £10m mansion in London that’s so large she and her multi-millionaire husband find it easier to email each other in the home than get close enough to shout.  Her mansion was paid for with a £10m mortgage from an Isle of Man bank which allows her to be officially classed as a non-domicile, saving her thousands in tax.

This is the most blatantly inappropriate appointment in government I’ve seen since West Midlands Regional Assembly appointed a Birmingham City councillor as its rural affairs advisor.  Good to see Liebour are keeping in touch with their socialist roots.

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Liebour using government websites for self-promotion

Erm, this isn’t what I pay my taxes for …

The excellent PJC Journal has spotted a link on the 10 Downing Street website to the Liebour Party’s website.  Not only that but it’s the local election campaign section of their website.

This is against the Civil Service Code, it is against electoral law and it is a an appalling abuse of taxpayers money and trust.  How dare the Liebour Party use a government website, paid for by the taxpayer, to promote their racist, corrupt, morally corrupt cult.

Edit:
I must have been so consumed with indignation that I didn’t spot PJC’s hat-tip to Shane Greer.

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Sandwell Councillor claims nearly £15k in expenses

Joanne Watson, a Liebour councillor in Sandwell, has attracted the attention of Guido Fawkes after claiming £14,894.20 in expenses for attending 4 meetings.

One commentator suggests that she actually attended 7 meetings which, if true, brings the cost per meeting down from £3,723 to £2,127.74.

Sandwell is, of course, Councillor Bob Piper‘s patch and he’s always having a dig at councillors with their snouts in the trough.  So what does he have to say about it?  In a nutshell … nothing at all, it hasn’t even got a mention.

Come on Bob, show us you’re not just another cog in the Liebour Party propaganda machine and give your colleague the fisking she deserves.

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Wendy Alexander: lying hypocrite

Wendy Alexander has addressed the Scottish Liebour spring gathering and told them that she will lead them to victory in the Scottish Parliament. Yeah, right.

In a characteristic display of utter hypocrisy, she said that she “will lead by exposing the dishonesty of the SNP”. Dishonesty of the SNP? Sorry Wendy Love, just remind me who’s only just been let off with a slapped wrist for breaking electoral law.

Alexander tried desperately to paint Liebour as the party of the people and the SNP as the evil capitalists (even though they’re more left wing than Liebour) but failed miserably because I very much doubt that even the people inside the conference hall believe that Liebour is a credible party any more, let alone the average man (or woman) on the street.

Liebour are a bunch dishonest, corrupt, self-serving, British nationalist crooks. They are unelectable in England and they are hemorrhaging support in their Celtic heartlands. They are, to put it bluntly, a spent force. The only reason they still cling on to power now is because Gordon Brown is too chicken shit to call the election he knows he is going to lose. Badly.

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DUP to support internment?

On the Our Kingdom blog, Tom Griffin opines that the DUP will support Liebour in its attempt to increase the amount of time the British state can detain you without charge from 28 days to 42 days.

This would be a bizarre stance for a Northern Irish party to take, particularly when internment was such an unpopular policy there during the Troubles. Supporting even a watered down version of internment is surely political suicide in Northern Ireland. Unfortunately not in England where too many people are prepared to roll over and play dead but in Northern Ireland it was just about the most effective recruiting tool for the IRA.
Internment, whatever the time limit you put on it, is unconstitutional, illiberal and immoral. Co-incidently, those are the three words I’d use to describe No Mandate Brown’s Prime Ministership.

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