Slimothy

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Slimothy

Slimothy

@slimtimcann

Former this,former that. Blocked by Diane Abbott George Galloway & Iain Dale. Busy Arse kicking Tory sleaze & racism. Family,alcohol, equality , #FBPE .🇪🇺

Katılım Şubat 2018
4.3K Takip Edilen3.3K Takipçiler
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Simon Harris
Simon Harris@SimonHarrisMBD·
Is anyone else getting a bit tired of the UK’s constant cycle of ‘Yay a new PM! You’re shit mate! Resign!’ regardless of the party in power? It’s all a bit silly really.
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Philip Webster
Philip Webster@Pwebstertimes·
Story is simpler than is being made out. McSweeney convinced a dubious PM that Mandelsons political skills ideal for incoming Trump . PM no fan of PM and did not even meet him then. Starmer’s fury over vetting suppression genuine IMO. He would have had the get out he needed
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@timespolitics Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row
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Times Politics
Times Politics@timespolitics·
Keir Starmer is too stubborn to resign, but too weak to govern #Echobox=1776889382" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">thetimes.com/comment/the-ti…
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@GaryGibbonC4 Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row
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Gary Gibbon
Gary Gibbon@GaryGibbonC4·
Questions around Keir Starmer’s future and judgement amid Mandelson row dlvr.it/TS9jgt
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@Peston Used to be a good watch - had its day
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Robert Peston
Robert Peston@Peston·
We’re back tonight, with an exciting new look. The branding is a bit too subtle though
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@PippaCrerar Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row.
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@Jacob_Rees_Mogg @YouTube Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row. They can see the PM isn’t lying—he’s making tough, necessary decisions to sort out 14 years of Tory mess. Governing isn’t a popularity contest, it’s about delivery.
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@itvpeston @NicolaSturgeon Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row. They can see the PM isn’t lying—he’s making tough, necessary decisions to sort out 14 years of Tory mess. Governing isn’t a popularity contest, it’s about delivery.
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Peston
Peston@itvpeston·
“We are way beyond the beginning of the end” Former First Minister of Scotland @NicolaSturgeon says Keir Starmer cannot ‘turn around’ the negative poll ratings and the longer he ‘limps on’ the more terminal damage he will do for the Labour brand #Peston
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@itvpeston @KemiBadenoch Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row. They can see the PM isn’t lying—he’s making tough, necessary decisions to sort out 14 years of Tory mess. Governing isn’t a popularity contest, it’s about delivery.
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Peston
Peston@itvpeston·
“The current Prime Minister we have is not governing” Conservative Party Leader @KemiBadenoch says Keir Starmer needs to go as ‘he can’t manage even a simple appointment process’ #Peston
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John Simpson
John Simpson@JohnSimpsonNews·
A lot of good points here.
Niall Ferguson@nfergus

Let me walk you through the events of the war so far: 1. The United States and Israel tried regime change; it didn’t work. Or rather, they got regime change—Iran became an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps–led military dictatorship. That was not an improvement. 2. The U.S. won an overwhelming military victory with air and naval power and scarcely a boot on the ground. But it destroyed less of Iran’s missile- and drone-launching capabilities than at first appeared. 3. Then there was a hostage crisis. Iran took both the Gulfies and the Strait of Hormuz hostage. The result was a massive economic shock for the world that required a rapid resolution. 4. The choice was between 1) military escalation (boots on the ground or strikes on Iranian infrastructure), and 2) a diplomatic deal. Trump chose 2. 5. In Islamabad, the U.S proposed big economic concessions in return for some kind of change in the status of Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, as well as the reopening of the strait. Contrary to the president’s social media feed, the Iranians did not accept. 6. In any case, the devil of any deal will be in the details, not the Truth headline. (When the small print finally comes out, every former Obama and Biden official will be ready to tell The New York Times that it’s worse than the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.) 7. Meanwhile, the Iranians have survived regime change and discovered that closing the strait is just as powerful a lever in economic warfare as they had always hoped. It’s not, despite the Russian quip, an “economic nuke,” because unlike a nuclear weapon you can use it. 8. Where we go from here is fairly predictable. I would be surprised if Trump now deploys ground forces. There will be more negotiation, so Islamabad, here we come. There may have to be more bombing, if the Iranians dust down the North Vietnamese playbook of stringing the U.S. negotiators along. And the final compromise will take longer to be agreed upon than Mr. Market currently believes. The consensus in prediction markets is this will be over by the end of May, but remember: It took Henry Kissinger more than four months to get the 1973–1974 oil embargo lifted.

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Fintan Hogan
Fintan Hogan@fintan_03·
EXC: Reform are investigating eight candidates over posts presented to the party by @thetimes Prospective councillors called the Nazis “real visionaries”, said migrants breed “like rats” and told rioters to burn down a mosque w/ @conky_k and @MaxKendix thetimes.com/article/3ede00…
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@RhonddaBryant Thats what happens when you defeat nationalism - Unity together
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
Noticed a real shift lately — posts criticising Keir Starmer are increasingly met with people pushing back, often pointing to his decency and professionalism. That kind of defence just wasn’t as visible before. Something in the tone of the debate seems to be changing.
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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@itvpeston @Peston @KemiBadenoch Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row. They can see the PM isn’t lying—he’s making tough, necessary decisions to sort out 14 years of Tory mess. Governing isn’t a popularity contest, it’s about delivery.
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Peston
Peston@itvpeston·
.@Peston: Mark Sedwill says Robbins should get his job back @KemiBadenoch: I think there’s a very strong case for that The Leader of the Opposition suggests the PM should potentially reinstate Olly Robbins as Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office #Peston
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helen macnamara
helen macnamara@helen_macnamara·
Highly unorthodox if true. Especially to keep such explanation private. Presumably there will be a note of the briefing session published given the committee chair’s enthusiasm for minutes.
Nicholas Watt@nicholaswatt

Interesting development which helps explain why @EmilyThornberry challenged Sir Olly Robbins with such certainty over his claim that Lord Mandelson had not failed his security vetting. MPs on the Foreign Affairs Select Committee were given a briefing in person by senior cabinet office officials in Parliament at 6.00pm last night. The MPs were shown the standard vetting assessment form with green, amber and red boxes. They were told that the red box was ticked on the Mandelson form. Robbins said he had not seen that form. But he said he was told that vetting officials at the cabinet office UKSV division were leaning towards saying no. The foreign office vetting official, he said, recommended to him that they could mitigate this. MPs tell me that the briefing led by cabinet office permanent secretary Cat Little and a senior National Security Council official was helpful. But I’ve heard some voice fears that the cabinet office may have been trying to “railroad” the committee.

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Slimothy
Slimothy@slimtimcann·
@MatthewStadlen Most people outside the Westminster bubble or media echo chamber simply aren’t bothered about the Mandelson row. They can see the PM isn’t lying—he’s making tough, necessary decisions to sort out 14 years of Tory mess. Governing isn’t a popularity contest, it’s about delivery.
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Matthew Stadlen
Matthew Stadlen@MatthewStadlen·
Struggling to see how Starmer’s claim today at Prime Minister’s Questions that “no pressure existed whatsoever” in relation to the Mandelson vetting is compatible with Sir Olly Robbins’ evidence to Parliament.
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