Friday 26 July 2019

Making Britain great again


Boris now has the cabinet he wants. I had to laugh when he kicked out Jeremy Hunt. From slagging Boris off for several weeks he turned around completely and said how much he was looking forward to working with him.

Nobody believes he will persuade the E.U. to begin negotiating all over again by October, so the next step is to dissolve Parliament and spark off a general election. Corbyn could get into Number 10 yet. Whatever happens, we are all going to be in a far worse place than we ever dreamt we would be, in a matter of weeks.

Trump is really looking forward to shafting us when we are on our knees and desperate. Do you know, he actually suggested that Nigel Farage would make a great replacement for the last British diplomat in Washington?

As I sit here with the window open I realise that this Friday something is different. It is very quiet out there.

It seems that the young climate-change protesters do not have rallies outside the Guildhall during the school holidays.

6 comments:

  1. Johnson has spending plans that were profligate when Corbyn advocated similar.

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    Replies
    1. They are not plans. They are false promises to lure the simple-minded electorate. Unfortunately, 52% of the English electorate are simple-minded.

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  2. It makes me sad that Corbyn does not seem to be on top of the threat that Johnson poses. INcidentally I am glad people have largely stopped calling him Boris now he is PM. He will be seen differently, I suspect.

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    1. Corbyn isn't even on top of his own party. Don't worry. The name 'Boris' will soon become a term of abuse, applied to anything inherently unpleasant.

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  3. Hopefully, that creep Farage won't getting a posting here.

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    Replies
    1. He will, no doubt, become an advisor to the Conservatives after they completely fall apart, like Peter Mandelson was to 'New Labour' after they fell apart.

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