|
Post by Westie on Jul 19, 2024 15:07:08 GMT
This slimy gormless fucking twat has some cheek. www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/nigel-farage-leeds-riots-b2582495.htmlIf he’s going to talk about “continents” how about getting back to this continent and doing some fucking work as an MP instead of jetting off to play with the rednecks, spending several days licking Trumps enormous shit-hole super-clean? Boris and Truss are already onto that one Nigel: It’s a gigantic arse, but it doesn’t need all 3 of you! Get back here and do some fucking work for once in your worthless life.
|
|
|
Post by dsjr on Jul 20, 2024 8:16:20 GMT
Shouldn't Farage be in his constituency, learning about and serving his constituents? I suspect he'll be there less than Coffey was here (one day per week isn't it?) as it was a stepping stone to get him to Westminster.
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 20, 2024 11:54:30 GMT
As a Euro MP he had a terrible record of non-attendance. Probably the worst of any Euro MP ever. He’s not used to having to do anything resembling work. He will expect his Secretary to do all his constituency stuff, he will only attend the Commons when he has a point to score and he will spend most of his time trying to get on telly or sidling up to Trump. He’s a classic protest figure who is only used to criticising the work of others. It would never occur to him that he’d actually have to do any work of his own.
On the subject of the Indian Sub-Continent he took a dig at: The Indian and Pakistani communities in Leeds had absolutely nothing to do with the incident. Pick anyone in Leeds: In fact pick anyone on the entire Indian sub-continent and there’s a 99.999999999% chance of that person being a better human being than Farage. He’s an utter cunt of the lowest order and I really hope that karma catches up with him very soon.
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 20, 2024 12:11:32 GMT
Printed in full with my own highlights: www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/11/nigel-farage-will-not-be-allowed-to-repeat-his-eu-parliament-rudeness-as-an-mpThe new MP for Clacton, who is due to be sworn in on Thursday, is not likely to get away with such unparliamentary behaviour in the House of Commons. (Farage was fined for the attack on Van Rompuy in 2010.) But allies and EU officials agree it was that 1 min 24 sec speech in 2010 that propelled him to public attention – and notoriety – all across Europe. “Suddenly the media sat up and took notice,” said Gawain Towler, Reform UK’s head of press, who has been working with Farage for 20 years. “That really put Nigel Farage on the map,” he said, recalling “hundreds of thousands of views” on Greek, Italian and Dutch YouTube. For EU insiders, the insults were not a surprise. “It was the usual stuff,” said Guy Verhofstadt, the veteran Belgian MEP, who is standing down from the European parliament and was in the chamber that day . “His style of debating was always like that,” Verhofstadt said. “What he did was attack everybody that stood for Europe. You could know from the start of the debate what he was going to say.”But it took time for the Ukip MEP to craft his style. Farage was first elected to the European parliament in 1999, benefiting from proportional representation, introduced by Tony Blair for the UK’s European elections that year. He was not yet the boisterous performer he would become, but his message was consistent. In one of his first speeches in 1999, his notes shake slightly in his hand as he urges the government to “leave this club and get into the real trading world”. He and his MEPs were known for stunts: heckling, wearing protest T-shirts and fixing little union flags to their desks in the chamber. But they struggled to get the British media attention they craved. Towler – who along with a later Ukip leader, Paul Nuttall, once dressed up in a chicken suit for a photo opportunity about EU leaders’ alleged cowardice for not holding referendums on a treaty – complained that the British press ignored them.
The arrival of the European parliament’s streaming service in 2008 combined with the rise of social media was a gamechanger. Short, punchy clips of Farage haranguing European politicians went viral on social media, getting far more views than the EU’s official channels at that time. Richard Corbett, a long-serving Labour MEP, recalls initial puzzlement over speeches from Farage and his Ukip team. “ They’d get up and start doing a rant about something that had sometimes nothing to do with what was on the agenda, it was completely out of context … but of course, the reason was that it was geared to making a YouTube clip.”In their occasional meetings on trains or planes, Corbett recalls someone who was “chatty” but “tried to avoid getting caught into discussing facts, figures”. EU civil servants remember a disrespectful attitude: “It was clear that he despised the civil servants, he despised any rule or custom,” said one former civil servant. “ His demeanour was very dismissive, unpleasant.”
“He never did any proper work,” the person added. “He was really just there to disrupt things.”[/font] He had frequent run-ins with officials over expenses – and was docked half his MEP salary in 2018 over allegations of misuse of public funds. And he appointed a woman he met in a Strasbourg bar, long rumoured to be his girlfriend, to a job as a parliamentary researcher
[/font][/font] While the chamber was an important stage, Farage made no impact in the committee rooms, where the legislative work was done. Over a three-year period, he attended only one of 42 meetings of the parliament’s fisheries committee when it was negotiating decisive reforms. In 2014-2016, he took part in four in 10 European parliament votes, the worst voting record of all British MEPs.For the anti-EU party, that was the point. Farage and his MEPs “were voted [in] to fight it, not to take part in it”, Towler said. “And they won. In 2016, they won.” As an MP, Farage will face new demands from his 78,000-strong constituency in Clacton. “ The one thing we know from his time as an MEP is that he likes being in the limelight,” Simon Usherwood, a professor of politics at the Open University, said. “He is not a great paperwork guy.”
Towler, Reform’s spokesperson, said Farage saw his constituency work as “absolutely vital”, as was “ensuring you had a good team of caseworkers who can pick it up and do the job”. Usherwood will also be watching to see whether Farage and the other Reform MPs join House of Commons committees. “He could justify not participating in the life of the European parliament because he rejected its legitimacy and its authority, but clearly he can’t do that with Westminster,” Usherwood said. The jury is out, he added, on whether Farage tries to be “constructive and useful” or uses his seat “as a platform for protest” “I can imagine that [Farage] wants to be seen as being in parliament and speaking from the green benches. It is going to be part of that curation of an aura of respectability, which is presumably the next stage of his plans for getting ahead in the world.”
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 21, 2024 15:50:59 GMT
New BR Railway advert on TV already, Over 50% of the Railway will be back to being Nationalised by mid next year. Yeah View Attachment Starmer has amazed me. Really glad I was wrong about him.
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 22, 2024 7:53:42 GMT
I spent a lot of yesterday afternoon and evening following events in the US. Biden standing down is good news, as I think his age and frailty were a vote loser.
It seems very likely that VP Kamala Harris will get the nomination but I hope she picks a good running mate. Easily the best of the bunch is Pete Buttigieg. He’s a very intelligent and personable guy. If he hadn’t been openly gay, he’d probably have got the nomination for 2020.
The Republican VP, JD Vance is pretty sharp, so it would be great to see someone even sharper on the Democratic side.
|
|
|
Post by dsjr on Jul 22, 2024 8:06:47 GMT
I spent a lot of yesterday afternoon and evening following events in the US. Biden standing down is good news, as I think his age and frailty were a vote loser. It seems very likely that VP Kamala Harris will get the nomination but I hope she picks a good running mate. Easily the best of the bunch is Pete Buttigieg. He’s a very intelligent and personable guy. If he hadn’t been openly gay, he’d probably have got the nomination for 2020. The Republican VP, JD Vance is pretty sharp, so it would be great to see someone even sharper on the Democratic side. I thought she was rather unpopular, but we seem to hear so little about her, I've no idea really. They do need someone to put Trump back on the defensive and to correct his constantly spouteded bent or downright apparent un-truths.
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 22, 2024 8:20:19 GMT
Apparently she’s had a bit of a resurgence this year. VPs are usually saddled with the tasks the President doesn’t want, so I guess her previous slump was related to that. She had a good campaign ad when she was seeking the Presidential nomination last time around. Now Trump is a convicted felon, it should mark a an even bigger contrast. cdn.jwplayer.com/previews/vrZRAevN
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 22, 2024 15:22:28 GMT
I really hope not. They mightn’t have had their own woman leader but fear not: Liz Truss is over there to remind them that they have nothing to fear
|
|
|
Post by dsjr on Jul 22, 2024 21:45:39 GMT
Just heard on t'telly - Trump and Harris are as popular as Meghan Markle at a Royal Christmas party...
|
|
|
Post by dsjr on Jul 23, 2024 11:19:17 GMT
|
|
|
Post by dsjr on Jul 23, 2024 16:35:07 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 23, 2024 17:40:08 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 24, 2024 18:26:47 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Westie on Jul 25, 2024 13:06:33 GMT
|
|