laurentian
Regular
I sit corrected. I misread the way that the article was reported. It was agreed by HMRC that it was a genuine error however based on incorrect advice at the time.
I was wondering if the "advisers" will face any penalty
I sit corrected. I misread the way that the article was reported. It was agreed by HMRC that it was a genuine error however based on incorrect advice at the time.
Ego, people see an opportunity to assume power and think they can do better. The way modern media operates also means outlets have to endlessly create a story which is partly what is happening too.
My understanding is the Streeting is to the right within the party yet a lot of MPs/membership are reported s wanting a return to Labour beliefs and that it's moved too far right. Thus I can't see Streeting as PM bringing peace and facing Rayner of Burnham (apparently more left leaning) he's probably lose.
They've panicked about opinion polls since more or less day 1 instead of getting on and delivering the policies that won them the massive majority in the first place. It's bizarre but I guess is symptomatic of a political party being run by special advisers instead of the Cabinet.
I think people can be slow to change and don't flip support readily. From early days things like Winter Fuel Allowance were making voters question their support and start to change. Since then it's been an ongoing stream of U-turns and mistakes giving people no reason to change back to Labour. Trying to out-Reform Reform took Labour to a stance not very Labour further pushing people away. Recent elections have shows viable alternatives (ie Greens is no longer a "wasted vote").I don't understand Labour's current implosion. They have a massive majority and plenty of time to deliver results. Any new PM will face all the same questions about legitimacy that previous PMs have faced and is likely to do worse overall as a result.
I was wondering if the "advisers" will face any penalty
Wonder if Streeting, Rayner , Miliband etc are each waiting for someone else to put themselves forward first as the "stalking horse".
Its rare that a stalking horse candidate is perceived will in a party, so perhaps no one wants to risk losing votes by being the one to start publicly any challenge
They had a stalking horse. It turned tail and wandered lamely back into the stable though.
Whilst I don't like Starmer, Streeting is beyond terrible. It's Streeting's actions and decisions as a Minister that I base my views on so I consider he'd be massively worse that even Starmer. So when I consider his (potential) candidacy for PM as likely to fail I do wonder if that is more my wishes than real world likelihood.They had a stalking horse. It turned tail and wandered lamely back into the stable though.
Whilst I don't like Starmer, Streeting is beyond terrible. It's Streeting's actions and decisions as a Minister that I base my views on so I consider he'd be massively worse that even Starmer. So when I consider his (potential) candidacy for PM as likely to fail I do wonder if that is more my wishes than real world likelihood.
I suspect his standoff with No 10 hoping Starmer would resign/step down is probably because starmer would probably beat him in an election.