Westminster Politics

I wouldn't worry too much about it. The govt has no power now, I suspect none of their bills or anything will get through parliament, the Tories will deliberately vote down anything as they don't have confidence in him or his govt.

So we are left with an ineffective government at a time when the country is facing its worst economic and energy crisis', war waging in Europe, and massive Brexit fallouts needing navigated. And that's not mentioning the climate crisis and calls for independence in several corners of the Union.

This country is going to shite.
 
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:lol: fecking dead ringer
 
So we are left with an ineffective government at a time when the country is facing its worst economic and energy crisis', war waging in Europe, and massive Brexit fallouts needing navigated. And that's not mentioning the climate crisis and calls for independence in several corners of the Union.

This country is going to shite.
...... going ?
 
So we are left with an ineffective government at a time when the country is facing its worst economic and energy crisis', war waging in Europe, and massive Brexit fallouts needing navigated. And that's not mentioning the climate crisis and calls for independence in several corners of the Union.

This country is going to shite.

It's been an ineffective govt since they came to power in truth.

Nothing about their governance has helped this country, or its citizens. In fact, the less power they have the better chance of the UK recovering.
 
This is better than the last days of Ole's reign.
 
It's been an ineffective govt since they came to power in truth.

Nothing about their governance has helped this country, or its citizens. In fact, the less power they have the better chance of the UK recovering.

That's not altogether true.

Motions such as the furlough scheme - which was a well formed policy given how quickly it had to be rolled out - during Covid has shown this government could act at pace when needed, and the UK actually has some pretty forward thinking climate policies - although these have been cast into doubt with the growing energy crisis/war in Ukraine, but this isn't entirely their fault.

What is more worrying, and it's something Justine Greening rightly commented on earlier, is that you now have key ministries with no MPs sitting in. The top-down command completely falls a part, and even non-major but still important policies and and programmes can't pass through. Civil servants must be looking on in utter bemusement at what this all potentially means for the projects they've been working on.