Zoe Farrow

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Zoe Farrow

Zoe Farrow

@zozofarrow

No DMs please

Katılım Eylül 2018
2.6K Takip Edilen2.7K Takipçiler
Zoe Farrow retweetledi
Ted Smith 🇪🇺
Ted Smith 🇪🇺@TedUrchin·
I’m not a betting man, but if I was, I’d say Makerfield will vote Reform. I think the mayoralty of Manchester will go to Reform too. Secretly, I almost hope they do. Despite the hype, Burnham is NOT some superman sent to save @UKLabour, far from it. This is going to go horribly wrong, and all because a few spineless wankers couldn’t hold the party line and panicked. I fucking despair. #StandWithStarmer #BackOffBurnham
Andy Burnham@AndyBurnhamGM

I can confirm that I will be requesting the permission of the NEC to stand in the Makerfield by-election. I grew up in this area and have lived here for 25 years. I care deeply about it and its people. I know they have been let down by national politics. Ten years ago, I decided to leave Westminster. Why? Because, after 16 years, I came to the conclusion that our national political system does not work for areas like ours. I learnt this fighting its failure to invest in the Wigan borough, for justice for the Hillsborough families and against its treatment of Greater Manchester during the pandemic. Over the last decade, I have been challenging this failure from the outside and building a new and better way of doing politics. We have built Greater Manchester into the fastest-growing city-region in the UK and put buses back under public control, introducing a £2 fare cap to help people with cost-of-living pressures. However, there is only so much that can be done from Greater Manchester. Much bigger change is needed at a national level if everyday life is to be made more affordable again. This is why I now seek people’s support to return to Parliament: to bring the change we have brought to Greater Manchester to the whole of the UK and make politics work properly for people. Millions are struggling and they need the Labour Government to succeed. It has already made changes to make life better for them in its first two years. After this week, we owe it to people to come back together as a Labour movement, giving the Prime Minister and the Government the space and stability they need as the by-election takes place. I want to recognise the difficult decision taken by Josh Simons and the sacrifice he and his family are making. I have worked closely with him as Mayor on issues like flooding and illegal waste dumping and have seen first-hand how effective he has been. He has put the communities of Makerfield first, made a real difference for them and should take great pride in that. Finally, I truly do not take a single vote for granted and will work hard to regain the trust of people in the Makerfield constituency, many of whom have long supported our party but lost faith in recent times. We will change Labour for the better and make it a party you can believe in again. ENDS

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Farrukh
Farrukh@implausibleblog·
Left: Michael Gove, "Britain is governable. It's just been badly governed" Right: Michael Gove so utterly sozzled in parliament he can't even stand
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Sarah
Sarah@kokeshimum·
Can anyone explain what the plan is for when Burnham loses? Asking for the entire fucking country who is absolutely sick to the back teeth of this bullshit.
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Sarah Gibbons 
Sarah Gibbons @SarahG20123·
@AndyBurnhamGM @justinmadders What if you lose and Labour lose the Manchester mayoralty? If you wanted to be an MP why did you stop being an MP. Maybe if you’d done the hard years in opposition, you’d be better placed to be PM.
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Brendan May
Brendan May@bmay·
Bringing Andy Burnham back from Manchester will be like when Eastenders brought back Dirty Den - initially the media went mad and the ratings went up - but the return of the character never quite lived up to the hype and excitement so they soon killed him off.
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Sara Connick
Sara Connick@SaraWaterer·
Times reader poll today… Starmer leading by a long shot. I wonder if The Times will be sharing this online?
Sara Connick tweet media
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Matthew Stadlen
Matthew Stadlen@MatthewStadlen·
Are we seriously now going to have weeks or months of uncertainty while Andy Burnham tries to win a by-election before we even get to a Labour leadership contest? There's a country to run. Madness.
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Fraser Nelson
Fraser Nelson@FraserNelson·
“Will work hard to regain the trust of people in the Makerfield constituency” What about the trust of the people of Manchester, who he promised to serve a third term as mayor? They now get a £4m by-election? All this smacks of voters used to serve politicians, not vice-versa.
Andy Burnham@AndyBurnhamGM

I can confirm that I will be requesting the permission of the NEC to stand in the Makerfield by-election. I grew up in this area and have lived here for 25 years. I care deeply about it and its people. I know they have been let down by national politics. Ten years ago, I decided to leave Westminster. Why? Because, after 16 years, I came to the conclusion that our national political system does not work for areas like ours. I learnt this fighting its failure to invest in the Wigan borough, for justice for the Hillsborough families and against its treatment of Greater Manchester during the pandemic. Over the last decade, I have been challenging this failure from the outside and building a new and better way of doing politics. We have built Greater Manchester into the fastest-growing city-region in the UK and put buses back under public control, introducing a £2 fare cap to help people with cost-of-living pressures. However, there is only so much that can be done from Greater Manchester. Much bigger change is needed at a national level if everyday life is to be made more affordable again. This is why I now seek people’s support to return to Parliament: to bring the change we have brought to Greater Manchester to the whole of the UK and make politics work properly for people. Millions are struggling and they need the Labour Government to succeed. It has already made changes to make life better for them in its first two years. After this week, we owe it to people to come back together as a Labour movement, giving the Prime Minister and the Government the space and stability they need as the by-election takes place. I want to recognise the difficult decision taken by Josh Simons and the sacrifice he and his family are making. I have worked closely with him as Mayor on issues like flooding and illegal waste dumping and have seen first-hand how effective he has been. He has put the communities of Makerfield first, made a real difference for them and should take great pride in that. Finally, I truly do not take a single vote for granted and will work hard to regain the trust of people in the Makerfield constituency, many of whom have long supported our party but lost faith in recent times. We will change Labour for the better and make it a party you can believe in again. ENDS

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Mary Lefteris 🌹Labour
Mary Lefteris 🌹Labour@MaryLefteris·
@elsieblundell @AndyBurnhamGM He didn’t need to beat Reform because this wasn’t a vacancy. You have all orchestrated this to unseat our decent PM. Shame on you all. If you oust our PM you’ve lost my membership and my vote. These games were previously only played by the Tories, how have you MPs sunk so low?
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Stewart Wood
Stewart Wood@StewartWood·
I'm delighted for Nigel Farage. According to @nberpubs, Brexit gave our country a 6-8% reduction in GDP per capita, a 12-18% reduction in Investment & a 3-4% reduction in productivity. But it gave Nigel Farage a gift of £5millon. So that's alright.
Sam Coates Sky@SamCoatesSky

Nigel Farage tells @MrHarryCole the £5m gift is a "reward" for Brexit Says it's "nothing to do with the Electoral Commission" and "I'm not in the least bit concerned"

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Damian Low
Damian Low@DamianLow3·
The level of personal hostility directed at Keir Starmer over the last week deserves scrutiny in its own right. Not because he should be immune from criticism, but because the tone and intensity of the attacks tell us something unhealthy about the state of democratic politics. 1. Starmer is a conventional political figure. Cautious, legalistic, incremental. He frustrates people precisely because he is managerial rather than messianic. Yet the reaction to him often goes far beyond disagreement, tipping into visceral hatred more commonly reserved for authoritarians or demagogues. 2. Much of this hostility is disconnected from concrete policy. It is not about specific votes, proposals or outcomes, but about projection. A belief that Starmer embodies betrayal, bad faith or hidden malice. That kind of politics runs on suspicion rather than evidence. 3. This matters because democracy depends on the assumption of good faith among opponents. You can think a leader is wrong, timid, or misguided without believing they are fundamentally illegitimate. Once politics becomes moralised to the point of demonisation, compromise is reframed as treachery and pluralism as weakness. 4. The pattern is familiar. In fragmented, polarised systems, anger concentrates not on extremists, whose intentions are clear, but on moderates, who disappoint maximalists on all sides. The centre becomes the lightning rod precisely because it resists totalising narratives. 5. There is also a media and online dynamic at work. Incentives reward outrage, not proportionality. Algorithms favour contempt over analysis. Over time, this creates a political culture in which relentless personal attack feels normal, even virtuous, rather than disgusting. 6. None of this is a defence of Starmer’s decisions, instincts or record. Those should be argued over robustly as you do in a democracy. The problem is the substitution of critique with hostility and the quiet erosion of democratic norms that follows when political opponents are treated as enemies rather than rivals. 7. A democracy cannot function if every election is framed as an existential struggle against internal evil. At some point, the target may change, but the damage to trust, restraint and culture remains.
Damian Low tweet media
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Phil Collins💙
Phil Collins💙@PhilC273·
@AndyBurnhamGM @wesstreeting Hugely disappointing both of you. It's clear you think you matter more than the country. The PM has made mistakes & the pace could be increased but the direction is correct & he does care. You may both find a lot of people would rather stay with Keir
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WH🌹
WH🌹@Wesleyhzn·
@UKLabour please start publishing your membership numbers...lots of people are joining and the word needs to get out there that the country is behind you. Come on...
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Anti gaslighting
Anti gaslighting@LCorbett60·
The support for Keir Starmer the last few days has been brilliant, Wes Streeting has found that out. Labour members want to keep Starmer as PM,any others thinking of challenging him should take heed. #Istandwithstarmer
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