The Brexit Thread

Status
Not open for further replies.
Ask CCHQ :p . I do not support his decision to avoid the BBC and think he should have the guts to be interviewed as I like Andrew Neil is the best UK interviewer by a country mile. But I guess his team have calculated there is a greater downside than upside to the interview.

On another note: The killer polling numbers for Corbyn – the pre election Ipsos-MORI leader ratings

View attachment 753058

The irony is that I think this election would have been Labour's, if not for Corbyn.

Corbyn is so unpopular that its amazing that Labour is getting the votes that it is. I hope he quits after this next election. Go retire old man. Write some Communist literature.
 
The irony is that I think this election would have been Labour's, if not for Corbyn.

Corbyn is so unpopular that its amazing that Labour is getting the votes that it is. I hope he quits after this next election. Go retire old man. Write some Communist literature.

I don't think it is just Corbyn. He's part of the problem but it's clear that from the direction of travel somebody from his faction will replace him. Corbyn and his supporters care far more ideological purity than actually winning elections, the Conservatives on the other hand are far more pragmatic and with the exception of Theresa May, who should have been quickly removed after the 2017 election disaster, are usually quite ruthless in desposing of leaders who can't win. Google Rebecca Long-Daily and Laura Pidcock...those are the two MPs being lined up by Corbyn supporters to take over. Not a single brain cell between them though.
 
In your world is correct a synonym for wrong?

@Spizz do you remember the last conversation with numnuts about the anarchy symbol?

It all kind of goes round in circles with some folks.

88f8a04b615c5281432e31c31f8b8216.jpg
 
Exclusive: The Liberal Democrats’ untrue claims about a “Brexit brain drain” at British universities

The Guardian took up the story. ‘Figures reveal Brexit threat as 11,000 EU academics leave UK’, headlined the New European. The Lib Dems’ national Twitter account – with over 300,000 followers – amplified the coverage, declaring ‘11,000 EU academics have left the UK since 2016, driven out by Johnson’s reckless pursuit of Brexit.’ The Lib Dem press office, frontbenchers like Tom Brake, and even left-wing celebrities like David Schneider shared the news.
All told, a fairly decent hit: data-based research, national press coverage, social media amplification… nothing new.

Except for one inconvenient fact: the story is not true.
My reason for asserting this is founded in an incontrovertible source: the Lib Dems’ own data tables, which they linked to in their press release, and which I’ve posted online here.

Here’s the issue. What are the Lib Dems claiming? “Almost 11,000 EU academics have quit the UK in the three years since the Brexit vote”. What is their proof? “Freedom of Information responses from 81 universities”.

What exactly did those FOI requests ask for? I’ve checked this in the Lib Dem data, and with one of the universities they gathered data from, and it’s simple: how many non-UK EU academics left posts at each university in each of the years 2014/15 to 2018/19, and how many non-UK EU staff did each university employ in each of those years.
Hang on a second.

So these numbers are for people leaving their university jobs. There’s no data at all on where they went when they did so. Indeed, the Lib Dems do not seem to have asked for any destination data. This means these figures do not show how many ‘EU academics have quit the UK’ at all. They show how many EU academics have left jobs at UK universities – including those who, for example, left one UK university job to go to another UK university job.
Let me repeat that. Somebody who resigned a lecturer job at Oxford Brookes University to take up a new lecturer job at Oxford University would be counted by the Lib Dems as having left the country, when in fact they hadn’t even left their city.

The headline figure is a total falsehood, with no foundation in fact or research whatsoever.
 
@Chris_the_Brit

I see your new hero ran away from some protestors again today.

Boris Johnson forced to cancel election speech on police advice as protestors mass

BORIS Johnson has been forced to cancel an election speech in Kent after protestors massed at the event.

BBC's Laura Kuenssberg has said the decision was made by police ahead of the rally in Rochester this afternoon. However, Tory Party officials have said the reason was due to logistics. There were said to be dozens of protestors at the venue.

The protestors were said to be holding signs saying 'Tories out' and 'Austerity killed over 130,000, the blood is on your hands'.

The Prime Minister had been scheduled to address supporters in Rochester this afternoon.

It is not the first time Mr Johnson’s appearances have been disrupted by protests.

Last month he cancelled a visit to a bakery in Wells, Somerset, after a group congregated.

 
@Chris_the_Brit

I see your new hero ran away from some protestors again today.




"On police advice"....

By the way, normal voters would see this as a bunch of feral lefties who have nothing better to do and in response, quietly walk to the voting station on 12 December (in their bow tie, top hat and tweed jacket... :p ) and put a cross next to the Conservative candidate.
 
"On police advice"....

By the way, normal voters would see this as a bunch of feral lefties who have nothing better to do and in response, quietly walk to the voting station on 12 December (in their bow tie, top hat and tweed jacket... ) and put a cross next to the Conservative candidate.
Weird. Very weird.
 
Senior British diplomat in US quits with tirade over Brexit 'half-truths'

A senior British diplomat in the US has quit with a blast at the UK government over Brexit, saying she could no longer "peddle half-truths" on behalf of political leaders she did not "trust."

In a searing resignation letter delivered just over a week before the UK general election, Alexandra Hall Hall, the lead envoy for Brexit in the British Embassy in Washington, said that she had become increasingly dismayed by the demands placed on the British civil service to deliver messages on Brexit which were not "fully honest."

The reluctance of Britain's leaders to play straight with the public on Brexit, Hall Hall said, had undermined the credibility of UK diplomats abroad. Her position had become "unbearable personally" and "untenable professionally," she wrote in the letter, which has been obtained by CNN.

 
Boris Johnson Is Heading for a Majority, Labour and Tory Officials Say

That looks likely to result in a Tory majority of between 20 and 35 seats in the House of Commons, officials from both parties said. All Conservative candidates have pledged to vote for Johnson’s Brexit deal, meaning even a small majority would in theory ensure the U.K. completes its divorce from the European Union by the Jan. 31 deadline.

Biggest Tory majority since 1987. I will take that. Funny how if I stayed in this thread, I'd think he had little support.:unsure:

Another big thing the Tories will be able to do is reform the constituency boundaries and reduce number of MPs from 650 to 600. This will be very good for future elections.

So much cool stuff besides Brexit that needs to be done!
 

If Mark had an inkling of curiosity and intellectual honesty he might have looked up what else was happening and included it. It's not just the LibDems saying it.

A recent analysis suggests EU academics at prestigious British universities are leaving their posts in droves amidst Brexit uncertainty, with chemistry departments being hit the hardest.

According to the Russell Group, there was an 11 percent rise in EU academics who left their posts in the year after the Brexit vote. A total of 4,280 European staff quit their academic posts at leading research-intensive Russell Group universities in 2016/2017, compared to 3,865 in 2015/2016.

But universities are already feeling the potential effects of no-deal. Survey results indicated ... almost 60% have lost existing or potential staff members to overseas institutions.

Previous analysis by the Royal Society has shown that the UK’s share of total EU research funding has already fallen from 15.8 per cent (€1.49bn) in 2015 to 11.3 per cent (€1.06bn) in 2018

Early figures from the Russell Group universities reveal a 9% fall in non-British EU students starting postgraduate research courses in 2017-18, compared with last year
 
I think some people are related to goldfish ;)
And you guys failed to read even the wiki page about you own anarchy symbol. So you are just useing it because you think it's "cool" without understanding the context.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X