For most of us we have to pay to be in a care home in old age yet in the house of lords care home they get paid so a bit unfair.Just a thought: how much would we save if we abolished the House of Lords?
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For most of us we have to pay to be in a care home in old age yet in the house of lords care home they get paid so a bit unfair.Just a thought: how much would we save if we abolished the House of Lords?
I imagine what would replace it - and it would need a second chamber - would be as expensive if not more so - and would be much less effective. The HoL has saved us from some very poorly thought out legislation over the years. Be careful what you wish for here.Just a thought: how much would we save if we abolished the House of Lords? They don't do much, do they?
About £100m not a lot in the overall context of the costs of government across the UKJust a thought: how much would we save if we abolished the House of Lords?
Probably a LOT more than you realise. They act as a safety net to prevent poor legislation.They don't do much, do they?
How about an elected house rather than some reward for favours.some sort of second house remains a good idea.
5 minutes later you'd be moaning that they were just as bad as the HoC.How about an elected house rather than some reward for favours.
Answer; they don't seem to have one. https://www.theguardian.com/artandd.../labour-manifesto-housebuilding-plans-commentGood account of the housing crisis. What is the Labour position on this, if they have one? https://www.theguardian.com/society...strous-tory-policy-blew-up-the-housing-market
I would also suggest that labours immigration policy caused as much havoc with the housing market as did the Tories!!Good account of the housing crisis. What is the Labour position on this, if they have one? https://www.theguardian.com/society...strous-tory-policy-blew-up-the-housing-market
We do need an upper house though. In my view, we need a house of council representatives. One councillor elected from each council, across party lines, onboarding the loss of an internal vote that results in the council for the benefit of representation in the upper house, encouraging cross-party working and new groupings, such as geographical. This would bind central government to local, and would encourage less centralised top down governance and add much needed devolution. It would also avoid addition of yet another layer of elections with poor turnout (which is what GB's plan will do), and would instead further sponsor and add value to an existing one, improving turnout, and improving the quality of councillors in local governance. This would also produce the right sort of numbers required for the upper house. The only difficulty is working our how to incorporate existing areas of devolution. I would get our parliaments moved to further North in England, so as to be more central UK, and form parliaments that are circular to seek to avoid the adversarial us and them approach embedded in our current system.Just a thought: how much would we save if we abolished the House of Lords? They don't do much, do they?
Put yourself in there shoes, they will be unemployed soon so thought a bit of corruption might help pay the bills.Not one but four (and now there's talk of more) people close to sunak placed bets on a July election.
I think it's absolutely correct (based on available evidence) to level that claim of Boris Johnson. Otherwise it's a strong statement to make for any public figure (without sufficient evidence). What makes you feel that Starmer in particular is dishonest?Starmer is fundamentally dishonest and untrustworthy
The basis for selection for a second house should be fundamentally different to the House of Commons - no point in two look alike legislative chambers.How about an elected house rather than some reward for favours.
"not ideal" somewhat of an understatement there. It should be absolutely banned.Rewards for favours is not an ideal way to select members and should be improved.
Its not a strong statement beyond the facts. He lied to achieve power, securing a mandate on an entirely false prospectus, and did so putting his signature (in case there might be any doubt about his commitment) to all of the pledges he made to achieve power. It has been suggested that these had to be changed because of Truss, but these changes were underway before the disaster of Truss occurred. Before that, he lied about Brexit, and his public commitment to accept the vote of the referendum, but then created the main source of internal friction in the Corbyn led party bringing forward an obscure position that nobody could get behind in 2017 or 2019. He said Corbyn was a brilliant leader, and defended the manifesto in the elections, and continued to do so beyond when trying become leader, saying it was Labour's foundational document. He started off supporting environmental protests; now he is in hard opposed. He supported schemes exploring the decriminalisation of cannabis; now he is hardline anti. He made firm commitments to Martin Forde in dealing with the hierarchy of racism that have been dropped, and indeed the culture allowed to clearly persist. Then there is his flip-flopping in position on gender identity. He is not a man I would remotely want as a model for my kids, and while more vaguely more sheepish when doing it, is not in a categorical difference to Boris Johnson. The public can see this, which goes along way to explain what will be unprecedented negative leader's ratings of a party about to form the government.I think it's absolutely correct (based on available evidence) to level that claim of Boris Johnson. Otherwise it's a strong statement to make for any public figure (without sufficient evidence). What makes you feel that Starmer in particular is dishonest?
Some good and perfectly fair points there.Its not a strong statement beyond the facts. He lied to achieve power, securing a mandate on an entirely false prospectus, and did so putting his signature (in case there might be any doubt about his commitment) to all of the pledges he made to achieve power. It has been suggested that these had to be changed because of Truss, but these changes were underway before the disaster of Truss occurred. Before that, he lied about Brexit, and his public commitment to accept the vote of the referendum, but then created the main source of internal friction in the Corbyn led party bringing forward an obscure position that nobody could get behind in 2017 or 2019. He said Corbyn was a brilliant leader, and defended the manifesto in the elections, and continued to do so beyond when trying become leader, saying it was Labour's foundational document. He started off supporting environmental protests; now he is in hard opposed. He supported schemes exploring the decriminalisation of cannabis; now he is hardline anti. He made firm commitments to Martin Forde in dealing with the hierarchy of racism that have been dropped, and indeed the culture allowed to clearly persist. Then there is his flip-flopping in position on gender identity. He is not a man I would remotely want as a model for my kids, and while more vaguely more sheepish when doing it, is not in a categorical difference to Boris Johnson. The public can see this, which goes along way to explain what will be unprecedented negative leader's ratings of a party about to form the government.
I think you illustrate well how inured we become to shifts in dishonesty over time. Having followed this from e.g. the Peter Oborne books on Blair, and the significant shift in "Spin" then, Starmer really is an order of magnitude or categorical degree worse than Blair was himself, who stood at the outset on an honest prospectus. Its hilariously hypocritical (sardonic) when Starmer criticises the honesty of Sunak, as happened last week, when he doesn't have a leg to stand on. Meanwhile, it empowers straight talkers like Farage, who are not trapped by the contorted positions of trying to work out what to say without being self-contradictory or to disappoint some polity or other. The same considerations, and the risk of exposure, are also what is allowing us to see what the new emperor is wearing.Some good and perfectly fair points there.
I would suspect that Starmer's flip flopping is more about the needs of a politician (who may have a chance of being voted into power) having to temper/modify their message to try to not repel voters. I don't like it at all, but I wouldn't put it in the same scale as Johnson's complete disassociation from the truth.
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