
Starvecrow
4.4K posts




Reminder: the loss on the oil rights Thatcher sold was around £500bn

🚨 WATCH: Keir Starmer says he will set out his "values and convictions" that drive him as PM on Monday "The hope wasn't there enough in the first two years of this Government. That's why it's important for me now to set out where hope resides"


2/ This is not the end of UK social democracy but it has to build a broader coalition to resist the extremism of the right and the new Islamist sectarianism. Calling them what they are would be a start!


The Conservatives cannot rebuild by chasing the 2019 coalition. That coalition has gone. The question now is simple: who is the party for? If the answer is angry populism, it gets smaller. If the answer is economic competence, serious government and broad centre-right values, there is a route back.


Chair of the @southbankcentre Misan Harriman has some thoughts on the surge of Reform at the elections this week. He compares it to the Holocaust. This is truly DISGUSTING.




The great moving Left show






Dame Sheila Hancock, 93, scared ‘to die while Nigel Farage is Prime Minister’ trib.al/RkoEPv9

FM says he will invite all party leaders except Reform in to St Andrews House for talks about post election priorities. On cost of living, he will deal with supermarket price cap and £2 bis fare in first 100 days. He says UK Govt must engage on the constitution.

I don’t even think it’s being pro unlimited migration that drives much of the real pro migration sentiment in the centre of politics. It’s something closer to “impassioned permissibility” where the only thing they care about is not enforcing rules / hierarchies / categories at an abstract level. Not enforcing a boundary on another is THE highest order value. They don’t actively want bad things to happen, they just don’t want to push back against a liberalisation of a category even more.

P.P.S. While all politicians know this, it afflicts them to different extents. Centre-chasing Labour and the Conservatives have had the hardest balancing act (the median voter wants low immigration *and* cheap labour). Easier for those just seeking to galvanise one of the poles.

I don’t even think it’s being pro unlimited migration that drives much of the real pro migration sentiment in the centre of politics. It’s something closer to “impassioned permissibility” where the only thing they care about is not enforcing rules / hierarchies / categories at an abstract level. Not enforcing a boundary on another is THE highest order value. They don’t actively want bad things to happen, they just don’t want to push back against a liberalisation of a category even more.


Party systems don't die very often and I don't think it's time for obituaries quite yet. Still, when the history of this period is written, the fecklessness of Labour and Tory elites and their bizarre inability to deal with voter preferences around immigration will loom large.

