Dave Morrell

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Dave Morrell

Dave Morrell

@MorrellDave

Family and Sport is everything

Bristol, England Katılım Mayıs 2012
280 Takip Edilen925 Takipçiler
Dave Morrell retweetledi
BBC 5 Live Sport
BBC 5 Live Sport@5liveSport·
Maro Itoje disagrees with Sir Jim Ratcliffe's "terminology" but gives the Manchester United owner credit for apologising since. 🎧 Hear more from Itoje on the latest Rugby Union Weekly podcast. #BBCSport #RugbyUnionWeekly
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Coleman Had A Dream Podcast
Coleman Had A Dream Podcast@Colemans_Dream·
Very disappointed in the Newport result and performance. Massive result in the context of the season. And not in a good way.
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Rob Wilson
Rob Wilson@burto69·
@MorrellDave @UKLabour I agree 💯 with democracy and he was elected to carry out the mandate the people voted for, and whether I agree with him or not is irrelevant. What I have got an issue with is cancelling elections and doing away with trial by jury, and IMO this is a path to autocracy if unchecked
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Rob Wilson
Rob Wilson@burto69·
We are in dangerous times. Trial by jury stopped, elections delayed, we are on the path to a @UKLabour autocracy.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677

There's a line in a democracy that, once crossed, changes everything: when elections cease to be an obligation and become a variable. That line has now been crossed in Britain, and it's the state's own elections watchdog saying so. The Electoral Commission has been explicit: Labour's justification for delaying local elections is not legitimate. Not unwise. Not clumsy. Illegitimate. Extending mandates damages public confidence, undermines local legitimacy, and creates a clear conflict of interest by letting councils decide how long they can avoid voters. In any functioning democracy, that would end the matter. Here, the government presses on regardless. That's the scandal. This is no longer a party political dispute or a row between Reform and Labour. The referee has intervened and said the game is being rigged, and the players have decided to ignore the whistle. When a government continues with election delays after being told by the independent authority charged with protecting electoral integrity that its reasoning does not hold, the issue stops being reform and becomes power protecting itself. The language Labour uses is revealing. Elections are framed as an inconvenience. Voters are framed as an administrative burden. Democracy is reduced to a cost-saving exercise, something to be postponed if the spreadsheets look untidy or the reorganisation plans are mid-flow. Ministers speak of "capacity constraints" as if the right to vote is a luxury item that must wait until the filing cabinets are rearranged. In a democracy, administration exists to serve elections. Elections do not exist to suit administration. The conflict of interest identified by the Electoral Commission should alarm anyone who still believes in democratic norms. Councils are being asked whether they would like to delay the moment they must answer to voters. That's not consultation. It's self-dealing. No serious system allows those in power to decide how long they may remain there without consent. Yet this is now presented as a "locally led approach," as though outsourcing democratic suspension makes it virtuous. Worse still is the uncertainty. Candidates have been selected. Campaigns have begun. Money has been spent. And with months to go before polling day, the government is still dangling the possibility of cancellation. The watchdog describes this uncertainty as unprecedented. That word matters. Democracies rely on predictability. Once elections become provisional, subject to last-minute ministerial approval, the entire process is degraded. When challenged, ministers retreat into condescension. Chris Bryant waves away concerns as conspiracy and insists that "ordinary people" would think elections are "a bit daft." This is a familiar trick: speak for the public while denying them a voice. Redefine democratic rights as common-sense nuisances that sensible adults should stop fussing over. It's the rhetoric of managed democracy, where participation is tolerated only when it produces the correct outcome. None of this is happening in isolation. Mayoral elections have already been postponed. Now council elections are being pushed back again. The pattern is clear. When the polls turn hostile, the timetable moves. When voters become unpredictable, the vote is delayed. Governments confident in their mandate do not need to buy time. They face the electorate and take their chances. Labour is not doing that because it knows what the numbers say. The danger is not just that millions of people may be denied a vote next year. It's the precedent now being set. Once a government learns it can delay elections after the watchdog objects, after campaigns have begun and candidates are in place, the principle is broken. Elections become conditional. Democracy becomes something you are granted when those in power feel safe enough to allow it. "Chris Bryant waves away concerns as conspiracy and insists that "ordinary people" would think elections are "a bit daft.""

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Dave Morrell
Dave Morrell@MorrellDave·
@burto69 @UKLabour I agree I don’t particularly like it either it’s just not autocratic. There’s no conspiracy at play it’s our democratic system playing out.
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Rob Wilson
Rob Wilson@burto69·
@MorrellDave @UKLabour 😂 My original post was that @UKLabour are cancelling democratic elections and doing away with trial by jury, which is something that I’m not comfortable with, and is a dangerous path to start down. I’d feel the same whoever the political party was in government.
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Dave Morrell
Dave Morrell@MorrellDave·
@burto69 @UKLabour The Labour Party is able to do what they like as a result of our Democratic system I.e First Past The Post. Just because you don’t like the result doesn’t mean you can cry foul.
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Dave Morrell
Dave Morrell@MorrellDave·
@burto69 @UKLabour Nazi Germany became a sort of Dictatorship (a form of Autocracy) under Hitler after he passed the Fuhrenprinzip law. I don’t think you can suggest Starmer is a Dictator. He’s actually the opposite he changes direction all the time depending on who he listens to
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Allison Pearson
Allison Pearson@AllisonPearson·
If you earn over £50,270 a year you will now pay 40% tax even if things are tight for your two-child family and the cost of living is horrendous. If you have six children, Labour will now give you £14,000 extra. What was that about Fairness? #Budget
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Dave Morrell
Dave Morrell@MorrellDave·
Been a while!!
Dave Morrell tweet media
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Dave Morrell
Dave Morrell@MorrellDave·
So very proud of everything you’ve achieved and the manner in which you’ve conducted yourself in the good and difficult times. Thanks for the amazing experiences you have given me from your debut against Wycombe to the World Cup and League Title ❤️❤️
Joe Morrell@JoeJMorrell

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