Yesterday was the culimination of a busy time, it went well.
Created with flickr slideshow.
Yesterday was the culimination of a busy time, it went well.
May doesn’t need to go to the palace to stay in office. …
Supply & Confidence with the DUP. This isn’t funny. First it’s Brexit, then it’s the Human Rights Act and now the DUP are in No. 10. Do the Tories care about the Good Friday agreement? …
What a day … what a night. …
While reading the news and campaigning I have come across three sites which might interest if not the not so sure, then those for whom first past the post doesn’t work so well.
A day out in Brentford and Isleworth campaigning for a Labour Victory; this is the second most marginal Labour seat in London. Fab company, the team came from all over London.
I met my first voter who loved Corbyn but was abstaining because he couldn’t stand the local Labour candidate’s anti-brexit position.
A comrade came across someone who claimed to be a life long Labour voter who was leaving us because we plan to repeal the Tories inheritance tax give-aways. They have set the start point to £850,000 up from £325,000. This makes a difference in London and plays to my argument that tax bills deter not only those that will pay them, but those that hope to do so too. We tried the triple lock and dementia tax, maybe should have tried the abolition of tuition fees. (I wonder if this is the sort of stuff that the Tories are putting out through their Facebook advertising campaign, now if there was only a crowd sourced rapid rebuttal site that I could post this to.) …
There was a terrorist attack in London last night. Thoughts with the injured and the victim’s families. However,
I also remember the victims of terrorism across the world, including those in Kabul who suffered a bomb attack too. …
I can’t believe that a refusal to countenance a nuclear first strike is seen as a sign of weakness. I have written several times over the last two years about the dangerous imbalance in the Tory defence strategies. Weak conventional arms means that nuclear annihilation is more likely not less. A military that can only throw nuclear bricks will have to do so. The ballistic missile fleet is a deterrent not an asset. It’s use would mean it’s failed.
One thing I had not considered though is whether the submarines can stay hidden for their 20 year expected life time. This article in Open Democracy quotes the Tory Chair of the Commons Defence select committee who questions whether the current submarines’ technology will be able to keep up with the growing surveillance technology. They supplement this by citing numerous ex-Defence Secretary’s opposition and add in Colin Powell for good measure. …
I was out in Hampshire earlier today and travelled through Farnborough Station, not known as a hot bed of socialism. One stalwart comrade was handing out leaflets calling for a Labour vote on the back of the renationalisation promise. Last time I saw Labour leafleting places like this was 1997. Is something happening? …