Westminster Politics


"New policing powers will ensure hardworking everyday people will no longer be collateral damage to disruptive protests."

Meanwhile, hardworking everyday people will continue to be collateral damage to disruptive Tory policies and a shite standard of living.
 
 
Is that real or a meme? That single journey will have cost the same as the annual policing budget for a sleepy rural hamlet.
It was a one off due to there being potential sit down protests during the journey. Feels relevant considering today's farcical announcement.
 
Striking is unlawful? Are they going to throw nurses in jail? Or... ooh, scary.... Fire them? And replace them with the huge influxes (sarcasm) of nurses from abroad? :rolleyes:
No, but they would close down the unions that enabled the "unlawful" strike, so the nurses would never have a United choice again.

Tory 101.
 
That would be highly counterproductive.
Like the recent anti protest laws?

Or the recent inclusion of "slow walking" as an illegal form of protest?

It would be counter productive for the masses but the Tories would love it. It could rejuvenate their right wing voters and finally break the unions which is what they have wanted since Thatcher. In short, they just don't care and are desperate enough to do it.
 
:lol: :lol: :lol: So cringe



Wow. How inspiring is he. Makes me so proud that we have such a statesman for our Tory leadership team.
We should be pledging our ellgaince to Rushi Sunak instead of Kind Charlie.
3 cheers for Rushi...... complete silence.
 
Not a word about this?

"UK households missing out on £19bn a year in unclaimed welfare benefits
Complexity of system and perception of government handouts as ‘shameful’ stopping people from accessing much-needed support
"
https://www.theguardian.com/society...-on-19bn-a-year-in-unclaimed-welfare-benefits

So forget about fraud then? The article you posted highlights an important point. But it's illogical to me how that means fraud should be somehow brushed under the carpet.
 


This is going to be huge when it comes out.


I live in the area and Simon Clarke is my MP. Got blocked on Twitter when I started asking about all of this.

Note how not one of the Tory replies makes any suggestion that the claims are false.
 
I live in the area and Simon Clarke is my MP. Got blocked on Twitter when I started asking about all of this.

Note how not one of the Tory replies makes any suggestion that the claims are false.
Is this where redcar steel works and stuff used to be? Tata steel I think used to run it?

The north east and the redcar/Middlesbrough area is one of the poorest in the UK too. My in laws are from there.

That's an advert from Sunak gov right there. Robbing from the poor and giving to the rich.

I think this will gain traction when more evidence comes out.
 
Is this where redcar steel works and stuff used to be? Tata steel I think used to run it?

The north east and the redcar/Middlesbrough area is one of the poorest in the UK too. My in laws are from there.

That's an advert from Sunak gov right there. Robbing from the poor and giving to the rich.

I think this will gain traction when more evidence comes out.

It is indeed that area. Deregulate to make it easier to get approval for the Freeport, pump tons of public money in to getting the area worked, prepped and ready for it, then sell of to buddies and donors at a fraction of its value.

But look! Over there! There’s a coronation to celebrate!!! GOD SAVE THE KING!!!
 
So forget about fraud then? The article you posted highlights an important point. But it's illogical to me how that means fraud should be somehow brushed under the carpet.
It's illogical to me how the government are happy to highlight and invest in marketing videos about fraud, which is a tiny proportion of total benefit outlay. Yet, as shown in this article, the real problem is that the benefit system is designed to be near impossible to navigate and comes with a stigma, which means people who are eligible are not claiming £19bn while living in poverty. This problem is driven by the UK government and media trying to deflect and blame benefit fraud for the state / our tax being wasted, when in reality it is not a significant value.

But by the tone of your posts it seems you buy in to the government line?
 
It's illogical to me how the government are happy to highlight and invest in marketing videos about fraud, which is a tiny proportion of total benefit outlay. Yet, as shown in this article, the real problem is that the benefit system is designed to be near impossible to navigate and comes with a stigma, which means people who are eligible are not claiming £19bn while living in poverty. This problem is driven by the UK government and media trying to deflect and blame benefit fraud for the state / our tax being wasted, when in reality it is not a significant value.

But by the tone of your posts it seems you buy in to the government line?

I don’t buy into anything, I’m just pointing out in isolation benefit fraud is a problem. Unclaimed benefits is also a problem.
 
I don’t buy into anything, I’m just pointing out in isolation benefit fraud is a problem. Unclaimed benefits is also a problem.

Countless things are problems in isolation. Common sense says you need to prioritise those problems and aim to fix the biggest ones first. Benefit fraud is way down that list.

Unless you don't want certain things fixing and need a scapegoat to distract attention away from them.