Geri

15.8K posts

Geri

Geri

@GeriEllenMay

You normally have to be bashed about a bit by life to see the point of daffodils, sunsets and uneventful nice days. Alain de Botton

เข้าร่วม Ocak 2023
432 กำลังติดตาม634 ผู้ติดตาม
Geri รีทวีตแล้ว
Shirley bottomley
Shirley bottomley@bottomley50·
Why is Farage allowed to not turn up,do what ever he wants,he isn't working as an MP so why is he being paid.I know I keep saying this but where are the People who are suppose to stop this kind of thing.Why is there no consequences for him?
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Clare Hepworth OBE
Clare Hepworth OBE@Hepworthclare·
This ⬇️
Nikki@gllnkk

@Hepworthclare @lindathomas_uk @Keir_Starmer @AndyBurnhamGM The messages & speeches from world leaders & E5 partners repeatedly highlighted the same themes: integrity, trust, partnership & reliability. That level of international credibility matters in diplomacy, especially on Ukraine & European security. Burnham can’t replicate that.

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Geri@GeriEllenMay·
@NewheathBooks @timchap I voted Labour because of Keir Starmer and the manifesto. I saw manifesto pledges being enacted, many other policies that helped the UK and greatly enhanced status on the world stage. I consider that effective, regardless of which faction of the Labour Party achieved it.
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Tim Chapman 💙
Tim Chapman 💙@timchap·
When the history of this period is written up, people will forever ask how a Manchester Mayor in a matter of weeks became PM of the UK with no leadership contest and no clear policy platform. Ejecting in the process a sitting PM with a massive majority! A spectacular coup.
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Geri@GeriEllenMay·
@SteveSmith98 @AlistairCarns @Conservatives He was a Con before. I’m guessing he saw which side was winning and thought Labour were the best chance of fulfilling his ambition. Shame his ability doesn’t match his arrogance and his integrity is yet to be found.
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Steve Smith
Steve Smith@SteveSmith98·
Is it just me wondering why @AlistairCarns isn't in the @Conservatives?
Al Carns@AlistairCarns

THE FIVE TESTS For weeks I've argued that this party, and this country, needs a proper debate about where we go next. Not a reshuffle. Not a few degrees of course correction. The big, difficult, honest choices we've spent thirty years avoiding. A few people have asked me what that debate should actually be about. Fair enough. I spent 24 years in the Marines and two in government, and I resigned because I couldn't win the argument I believed in from the inside. So let me make it here, plainly. This isn't a manifesto, but a set of five tests. Anyone asking to lead our country should be able to look down this list and say yes to all five. 1️⃣ ⁠The Frontline Test Do we give the people on the frontline the kit they need to do the job, and stand by them when the job is done? I joined the Marines at 18. I've buried friends. So I do take this one personally. I sat in government and watched us write a defence plan for a world that no longer exists, discussed in rooms I was kept out of. A 100k drone is now sinking warships that cost a billion. That is the reality of the wars being fought right now. Passing this means 3% of GDP as the floor, not the ceiling. Buying for the next war, not the last. And fixing the Legacy Act so blokes in their seventies aren't back in the dock for what they were cleared of decades ago. 2️⃣ The Next-Generation Test Are we handing the next generation a better deal than the one we inherited, or a worse one? I'm a lad from a tough part of Aberdeen. My mum raised five of us through some bleak years. The only reason I got out was because I was given an opportunity. That cannot be said for young people today. Nearly a million young people, around one in eight, are now outside work, education or training. That isn't their failure. It's ours. Fixing this means a NEETs and youth unemployment target with a date, the youth guarantee delivered not just announced. Restoring the link between work and a decent life for the under 30s, on housing, wages and opportunity. Skills and apprenticeship numbers that beat the last government, not just match it. Talent is everywhere in this country. Opportunity isn't. Fix that and you fix half of everything else... 3️⃣ ⁠The Trillion-Pound Test Is the plan to add a trillion pounds to what Britain earns, or to manage the decline more politely? Here's the lesson I learned from Ukraine and in government, and it never changes. We invent things. Other countries build them. Other countries decide. We're brilliant at the first mile and absent for the next ninety nine. So set a target and be judged on it. A trillion pounds added to our GDP within a decade. Yes, it's ambitious. We should be ambitious! Getting there means backing the high tech inventors just as much as the high street traders. Your local coffee shop shouldn't be paying more tax per cappuccino than Starbucks does. So why on earth do they? It means an industrial strategy worth the name. Things to make and things to sell, in Barrow, in Derby, in every region. Our industrial base is national security, so we should fund it like it. And it means building the chips and the compute here, not inventing the breakthrough and watching someone else scale it. Data is the new gunpowder. 4️⃣ The 10% Test Can we make the country work 10% better, instead of only ever asking for 10% more? I saw this from the inside. We patch the symptom this year, but the bill grows next year, and we end up paying for failure at the most expensive end of every system. A 10% improvement in outcomes across a handful of our biggest problems, ill health, reoffending, wasted potential, would free up somewhere between £40 and £60 billion a year. We're already paying those costs. We just pay them too late, when they're at their worst. Passing this means investing early instead of paying far more later, and having the honesty to admit that not every pound we spend today delivers an immediate return. 5️⃣ ⁠The Lights-On Test Does our energy policy keep the lights on, the bills down and factories open, or do we keep chasing a target and hope the rest sorts itself out? For years we've treated net zero as the only goal, and everything else, your bill, our industry, whether the grid even stays up, as a problem for later. That’s the wrong way around. Make energy security the goal. Power that people, businesses, and industry can afford, and a grid that stays on when someone tries to switch it off. Do that and net zero follows. Chase the target on its own, and you end up with neither. Passing this means a serious baseload, nuclear and the North Sea, built in time to matter. Strong countries have cheap, secure energy. Weak countries don't. None of this is complicated. It's the oldest deal there is. You serve the country, the country stands by you. In uniform, in a hospital, in a classroom, on a building site. Right now that deal is broken, and everyone keeping our country going can feel it. That broken deal is the real reason for the frustration out there. It's why trust has drained out of politics. And it's why our party that won a landslide is, halfway through the term, already arguing about who leads it. But changing the person at the top fixes nothing if we don't fix the deal underneath. Swap one leader for another and leave the deal broken, and we'll be right back here in eighteen months, asking the same question all over again. So I'm not interested in who gets what job. I'm interested in whether we've got the courage to pass these tests. We've been promised a debate. This is my opening offer to it. And if that debate ever becomes a contest, it should be fought on this ground, not on personalities. I know where I stand.

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BelindaSales.
BelindaSales.@sales_belinda·
He was buying soft power for the UK, strengthening our relationship with allies, building a basis for future cooperation and trade. He got us trade deals and plenty of goodwill and made us stand proudly on the international stage. #Starmer
Bolton Wanderer@wanderer_bolton

@sales_belinda Yep strutted about on the world stage buying friends. Meanwhile back at home ...

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is everyone still shouting ✨🌙
Quick sense check: past/present Labour who have voted for Burnham before - are you comfortable with his current approach or becoming PM, or has it irked you? No judgement either way, just genuinely curious..
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Geri@GeriEllenMay·
@cymbal_martin Apparently Burnham doesn’t want to travel internationally. He’s worried he’d attract a tag like “Never Here Keir” that might hurt his image and electability! I’m only surprised he had the courage to get from Manchester to London although two narcissists together would be fun!
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Martin Cymbal💚
Martin Cymbal💚@cymbal_martin·
Trump is a corrupt, narcissistic, self serving, lying, crook. Lacking any sort of class. Far as much of the US is concerned, he must be an absolute disgrace. Sadly, however, for the IK and the rest of the world, he is still the President of the United States. We are stuck with that. Overall, I think #Starmer handled him reasonably well but going forwards, I'd be happy to see more Carney and less Keir from @AndyBurnhamGM
The News Agents@TheNewsAgents

"Starmer did his best to hug Trump close, and that worked for quite a long time... "But if Burnham holds his nerve, that's a much more powerful signal." Will Andy Burnham 'suck up' to Trump if he becomes PM – or would he be wise to keep his distance? thenewsagents.co.uk/article/why-an…

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Geri รีทวีตแล้ว
𝓒𝓱𝓪𝓻𝓵𝓸𝓽𝓽𝓮
It’s wild to me that democracy has fallen so low, that a mayor can just scheme with others to oust the PM. Can you imagine the uproar if Sadiq Khan did that! Andy doesn’t have to do anything to earn the position of PM, he just assigns himself the role. It’s quite unbelievable.
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Sheron Wilkie
Sheron Wilkie@SheronWilkie·
@GordonFielden He also doesn’t want to travel internationally. The PM of the UK who’s job it is to not just represent UK , but advocate for and shape foreign policy for the benefit of the UK electorate. Labour have made a monumental mistake .
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Geri@GeriEllenMay·
@DPJHodges Don’t you dare presume to speak for me. Your bosses, Musk and almost certainly Putin wanted him out and have persuaded some of the public that they feel the same. Some of us, however, possess critical thinking skills and recognise when our democracy is being subverted
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(((Dan Hodges)))
(((Dan Hodges)))@DPJHodges·
No. The public did not.
megan kenyon@meganekenyon

Excl: Did the public actually want Starmer to stay on and fight? Analysis shared with @NewStatesman by Stack Data Strategy suggests that Starmer's decision to quit on Monday had the lowest support of any recent mid-term prime ministerial resignation (Johnson, May, Truss etc). Even fewer Labour voters supported it - 47 per cent of them wanted Starmer to stay on and fight a leadership election. Read more below:

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Shirley Salisbury
Shirley Salisbury@OscarGreta1846·
I cannot get my head around how it is democratic that Burnham will just walk in and become PM. Just why? Wtf is happening to our politics? It is exhausting and a bloody farce.
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𝓒𝓱𝓪𝓻𝓵𝓸𝓽𝓽𝓮
@BHSnapper Many of us in the GE voted for Labour because of Keir Starmer. We voted him in for a full term. It just isn’t acceptable that mid term, they team up on him so he has no choice but to go. Many of us voters feel short changed & I don’t think Andy has good experience for this role.
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ABerry 🇬🇧🌹
ABerry 🇬🇧🌹@LabourBerry·
Don't know what happened but my account was suspended just leading up to Keir Starmer resigning. Now it's just been unsuspended
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