interimspace

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interimspace

@interimspace

He who cannot draw on 3,000 years is living from hand to mouth / Goethe ※ intellectually promiscuous & not party faithful ※ A wet Duck never flies By Night ⇜⫷⫸⇝

Se unió Haziran 2013
285 Siguiendo1.3K Seguidores
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interimspace
interimspace@interimspace·
To deserve tolerance, begin by not being fanatics (Voltaire)
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Steven Barrett
Steven Barrett@SBarrettBar·
I don't understand how we are supposed to function like this The Prime Minister constantly lies Wes Streeting lies. Steve Reed lies. This is not a functioning Government.
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Toby Young
Toby Young@toadmeister·
New evidence from Antarctica ice cores showing no link between CO2 and temperature over the last three million years has stumped Net Zero activists, says Chris Morrison. dailysceptic.org/2026/03/25/sho…
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Preston Byrne
Preston Byrne@prestonjbyrne·
I think when we publish our full Model Bill you'll have an opportunity to answer that question for yourself. What part of this do you disagree with? x.com/ArnoldLabour/s…
Preston Byrne tweet media
Arnold Smith@ArnoldLabour

@prestonjbyrne MAGA Americans seem to have no understanding of free speech in the UK. It's pretty offensive. You think Brits are so dumb they need to be told by Americans whether they have freespeech or not?

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Simon Danczuk
Simon Danczuk@SimonDanczuk·
Anyone reading the transcript will conclude McSweeney deliberately obfuscated, lied about location, avoided mentioning Downing Street, and failed to say there was sensitive information on the phone. The British public are being had by Starmer and Labour. thesun.co.uk/news/38627793/…
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(((Dan Hodges)))
(((Dan Hodges)))@DPJHodges·
This latest stonewalling from No.10 goes to the heart of the problem. There are zero operational or security implications to simply answering with a "Yes" or "No" the question "Did the Government security team contact the Met". But they still refuse to be open and transparent.
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Talk
Talk@TalkTV·
🚨"This is looking horribly like a cover-up. I would say an obstruction of justice or perverting the course of justice." Morgan McSweeney did not tell the Met Police who he was or where he worked when he called 999 after his phone was stolen. @JuliaHB1
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Chris Rose
Chris Rose@ArchRose90·
In 2021, the same Speaker did tell Boris Johnson twice during #PMQs, to answer questions. So he can do something about it.
Chris Rose@ArchRose90

After #PMQs Tory MP Sir Edward Leigh MP raised a Point of Order on Keir Starmer dodging EVERY question EVERY week. The Speaker says that he cannot do anything about it. It has become utterly points to watch. I don’t blame the Reform MPs for walking out. It’s so pointless now.

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GB News
GB News@GBNEWS·
'Nigel Farage has texted me, he says "PMQs is a waste of space".' GB News Political Editor @ChristopherHope, shares his analysis of PMQs. Reform UK stormed out after Sir Keir Starmer failed to answer Nigel Farage's question on illegal migration.
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William Clouston SDP
William Clouston SDP@WilliamClouston·
All the establishment parties deliberately throttled home oil and gas production and put their faith in expensive unreliable intermittent renewables. The energy crisis is theirs…
BBC Politics@BBCPolitics

Will the PM approve licences for Rosebank and Jackdaw oil and gas fields in North Sea? Kemi Badenoch asks Keir Starmer says “oil and gas is coming out of the North Sea 24/7”, the only way to take control of energy prices is through “renewables” #PMQs bbc.in/47UF06x

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Iain Duncan Smith MP Chingford & Woodford Green
This week I have asked a number of times about proscribing the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Today I asked the Prime Minister directly, and still, no real answer. Instead, @Keir_Starmer says the UK’s proscription powers “are not designed for a state organisation.” That sounds less like a reason and more like an excuse for inaction. The IRGC spreads terror, threatens British citizens, targets Iranian dissidents, and fuels antisemitism and extremism, including here in the UK. Other countries have acted. The United States, Canada, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia have all designated the IRGC as a terrorist organisation. So why won’t this government? Labour should stop hiding behind process, proscribe the IRGC, and protect our citizens, particularly the UK’s Jewish community, who face rising intimidation and hate.
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Times Radio
Times Radio@TimesRadio·
“He’s blown it.” @HugoRifkind says the prime minister can’t keep passing the blame to Ed Miliband on energy, as it makes him look “powerless.” @StewartWood | @PatrickkMaguire
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Zia Yusuf
Zia Yusuf@ZiaYusufUK·
🚨 This is a dark day for Britain. Reform receives a large, perfectly lawful donation from a British Citizen, and Labour responds by rushing through a new law to prohibit him from making such a donation again. Rycroft even refers to British citizens as “malign actors” in his report. This is how fast the machinery of government moves when it wants to protect itself. When it comes to securing our borders? Nothing can be done for years at all apparently. This Starmer regime is authoritarian. Cancelling elections, choking off legal funding for its main rival, surveilling speech. Make no mistake, if Reform do not win the next general election, this country is toast.
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The Free Speech Union
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion·
The moment you finally realise you’re leading the most authoritarian government in our country’s history: 1️⃣ Introducing an official definition of “anti-Muslim hostility” that silences legitimate criticism of religion — 18 years after Parliament abolished such laws. 2️⃣ Removing the right of most defendants to have a jury trial, in the biggest assault on English liberty in over 800 years. 3️⃣ Requiring pub landlords to monitor customers’ private conversations to protect staff from remarks, comments, or jokes they may find “offensive”. 4️⃣ Clamping down on lawful social media posts, arresting an Irish comedian for gender-critical tweets and even threatening to ban access to X in the UK. It’s not a great look, is it, Prime Minister…
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Kemi Badenoch
Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenoch·
TFW Ed Miliband is running the government.
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Sarah Pochin MP
Sarah Pochin MP@SarahForRuncorn·
Yet another disgraceful performance from the Prime Minister today at PMQs. Why won’t you answer the question, @Keir_Starmer?
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Nadhim Zahawi
Nadhim Zahawi@nadhimzahawi·
If the PM knew about this, and Morgan must have had to tell him. Then he must resign. This is a massive national security breach. 👇🏽
Steven Swinford@Steven_Swinford

BREAKING Morgan McSweeney did not tell the Metropolitan Police who he was or where he worked when he called 999 after his phone was stolen The Metropolitan Police has released a transcript of the call and said that it was not aware 'of the victims employment or the particular security risks associated with his device or material on it The call took place on 20 October, 2025 at 22.30. McSweeney stated that it was a government phone Here is the verbatim transcript of the call in full: Call handler: Police, what's your emergency? Caller: Oh, hello, someone just robbed my phone. Call handler: Did they actually take it from you just now? Caller: Yeah Call handler: How did they get away? Caller: So he's on a bike. He's come onto the pavement to grab my phone and cycled off on a bike. Call handler: And where did this happen? Caller: It happened in Belgrave Street* in Westminster. *We now know that the incident took place in Belgrave Road, Westminster. The call handler inputs Belgrave Street and it provides a matching road name in Tower Hamlets, which is what is recorded in error. There are further references to locations near to Belgrave Street in Tower Hamlets later in the call, which compounds the issue. Call handler: And whose phone are you using now? Caller: I've got two phones. I'm using my personal one. That was my work one. Call handler: Can I take the phone number for this phone you're calling on? Caller: Yeah, 07XXXXXXXXX. Call handler: Thank you. And you said Belgrave Street, yeah? Caller: Yeah, just kind of going back to the location. Call handler: Don't put yourself at any risk. It's not worth it over a phone. I appreciate it’s frustrating. Call handler: And which way did they go towards, this suspect on a bike? Caller: He went. He travels north. I saw him for a few blocks. Call handler: So where were you when you last saw him? Have you got any idea? Caller: Yeah, so. Call handler: Did you get up to Stepney? Caller: Let me tell you where I got to. I'm just going back to where I can. Caller: So he turned right. Sorry, he turned left. There's a park on top of the road and he turned left there. Call handler: Stepney Green Park, ok. Caller: Yeah. He turned left there. Call handler: Can you remember anything about his appearance? Caller: Yeah, he was young. He was a black guy. He was on a bike. Call handler: About how young? Call handler: Just a guess. Caller: Teens. Late teens. Call handler: Was he skinny, tall, any idea? Caller: Yeah. He was slim. He was about average height. Call handler: Was it an e bike or pedal bike? Caller: Pedal bike. Call handler: Have you got a tracker on the phone at all? Caller: I do. It’s a government phone. Call handler: And it's your work phone. What kind of phone is it? Caller: It’s an iPhone. Call handler: Do you know what model? Caller: I don't. [PAUSE] Call handler: Right, just bear with me a second. Call handler: We would normally deploy to see you but at the moment, we are having extreme demand on police officers. So, I don't know if you would prefer to make your way home and make a crime report over the phone or online tomorrow. I mean, I can complete one with you now. I can pass this down, you can wait, but I honestly do not know how long you'll be waiting, Caller: If I could complete it now that would be good. Call handler: Ok. Call handler: What's your name, please? Caller: My name is XXXXXXXXXX. Call handler: XXXXXXXXXX? (repeats name back) Caller: Yeah. Call handler: And your date of birth, please? Caller: It's XXXXXX Call handler: Is XXXXXXXXX (surname) all one word? Caller: Yeah, (spells surname). Call handler: And what's your home address? Caller: (Provides non-London address) Call handler: So you live in XXXXXX? Caller: Yeah. Call handler: Are you staying anywhere while you're in London? Caller: Yeah. Call handler: Sorry, it just takes a little bit longer to deal with an address outside of the Met. I do apologise. Caller: It’s ok. Call handler: And may I take an email for you please (name)? Caller: Yeah, it's XXXXXXXXXXX@XXXXXXXXXX.com (personal email address) Call handler: You'll get a copy of the preliminary crime report through to that email. Call handler: How would you like to be contacted by an investigating officer? By email or phone? Caller: Phone, please. Or either, I’m not fussed. Call handler: Have you got any finance apps on the phone? Caller: No. Call handler: You'll need to change any passwords for any logins you do have on the phone. Caller: Yeah, okay. Call handler: You're not vulnerable in any way. Are you? Caller: No I’m not. Call handler: Do you believe there was any CCTV near where the incident happened? Caller: Might be. [Inaudible] away from location. Call handler: Don't worry. Don't return. No, I'll just put at the moment unknown. And obviously, if we find out more, we find out more. Call handler: Are you willing to make a statement to support the investigation? Caller: Definitely. Call handler: So what time did he actually snatch the phone? Caller: About two minutes before I rung you and I chased, and then I rang my office to get the phone tracked and then I rang you. Call handler: Okay, cool. It would have been about 25 past that you were robbed. Caller: A little before, about 23 minutes past, I think. Call handler: 23? Little bit before? Okay. [PAUSE] Call handler: Just bear with me, I’m just trying to get this system to accept the address. Sorry about this. I won't keep you much longer. Call handler: If you do get any tracking updates, what you do is you give us call back if the phone is stationary. Caller: Yeah. Call handler: And we can review attending then. We can't guarantee attending a moving phone at all, but if it's been stationary for a few… Call handler: It’s not accepting your address. Caller: I can give you my London address? Call handler: It’s alright. I've nearly got this to work. Caller: Okay Call handler: How long you staying in London? Caller: So I come to London every week. I work in London. Call handler: Oh, I see. Okay, that makes sense. Caller: So I'll be here till Thursday. Call handler: Okay. [PAUSE] Call handler: As I was trying to say, I've got this sorted now, so I'll be texting you a crime reference number in the next few moments. Along with the crime reference number will be a CHS reference number. If you need to give us a call back, you can call back giving that reference number from any device, and then we'll be able to link it straight away to your crime report and review deploying. We will need to know a bit more details about the phone itself, so when you're contacted by the investigating officer, or if you do get tracking details, you can call us back with the IMEI number, and the type of phone that it is that would be super helpful. Caller: All right, thank you. Call handler: All right, I’m just about to text you through the crime reference number now. Caller: Thank you so much. You’ve been really helpful. Call handler: No worries. All right, (name). You take care now, okay? Bye. Caller: Bye bye.

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