Crosswords1 min ago
The Results Are In
32 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by douglas9401. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.naomi24
//You're having another 'whoosh' moment, FatticusInch, old bean. :o)//
The only whoosh sound is Johnson being sent out the back door by his party.
Rather ironic that a week after changing the ministerial code to suit his own ends his party are now amending the rules in order to ensure regicide is a speedier process.
Even the 1922 committee want rid of him post haste.
//You're having another 'whoosh' moment, FatticusInch, old bean. :o)//
The only whoosh sound is Johnson being sent out the back door by his party.
Rather ironic that a week after changing the ministerial code to suit his own ends his party are now amending the rules in order to ensure regicide is a speedier process.
Even the 1922 committee want rid of him post haste.
dannyk13
//Fatti .Waiting for you to admit that you were wrong saying he would lose the v.ote.//
Well Danny boy you’ll be waiting a long time.
If you take a look at my posts I said he’d win the vote, that was obvious, it was always going to be the margin of victory that would be the decider.
Do try and keep up.
Have you started watching the mainstream news yet? If not, senior Tory party figures are saying he’s finished, he’s split and fatally divided the parliamentary party, he’s done.
//Fatti .Waiting for you to admit that you were wrong saying he would lose the v.ote.//
Well Danny boy you’ll be waiting a long time.
If you take a look at my posts I said he’d win the vote, that was obvious, it was always going to be the margin of victory that would be the decider.
Do try and keep up.
Have you started watching the mainstream news yet? If not, senior Tory party figures are saying he’s finished, he’s split and fatally divided the parliamentary party, he’s done.
dannyk13
//Come on Fatti Man up and admit you were wrong with your predictions.//
My prediction is shortly going to come to fruition.
Do you actually follow or have any grasp of politics, the machinations and how it works?
Actually, don’t answer that, it’s clearly obvious.
Leave it to the grown-ups.
//Come on Fatti Man up and admit you were wrong with your predictions.//
My prediction is shortly going to come to fruition.
Do you actually follow or have any grasp of politics, the machinations and how it works?
Actually, don’t answer that, it’s clearly obvious.
Leave it to the grown-ups.
Lol, it’s like a mirror of what Johnson’s cabinet meeting will sound like later this morning on here.
They aren’t listening to the outside world either.
FAO dannyk13,
This will give you an idea of how party politics works.
The former Conservative leader Lord Hague has called on Boris Johnson to quit as PM, saying he has experienced a "greater level of rejection" than any of his predecessors.
Writing in the Times, the peer says that while Johnson survived the vote, "the damage done to his premiership is severe".
"Words have been said that cannot be retracted, reports published that cannot be erased, and votes have been cast that show a greater level of rejection than any Tory leader has ever endured and survived," he writes.
"Deep inside, he should recognise that, and turn his mind to getting out in a way that spares party and country such agonies and uncertainties."
As well as being Conservative leader for four years, Lord Hague is a former foreign secretary and leader of the House of Commons.
He noted he did not face a confidence vote while party leader from 1997 to 2001, saying he "would have regarded my position as completely untenable if more than a third of my MPs had ever voted against me".
"The nature of this particular revolt makes it qualitatively as well as quantitatively devastating," he writes.
They aren’t listening to the outside world either.
FAO dannyk13,
This will give you an idea of how party politics works.
The former Conservative leader Lord Hague has called on Boris Johnson to quit as PM, saying he has experienced a "greater level of rejection" than any of his predecessors.
Writing in the Times, the peer says that while Johnson survived the vote, "the damage done to his premiership is severe".
"Words have been said that cannot be retracted, reports published that cannot be erased, and votes have been cast that show a greater level of rejection than any Tory leader has ever endured and survived," he writes.
"Deep inside, he should recognise that, and turn his mind to getting out in a way that spares party and country such agonies and uncertainties."
As well as being Conservative leader for four years, Lord Hague is a former foreign secretary and leader of the House of Commons.
He noted he did not face a confidence vote while party leader from 1997 to 2001, saying he "would have regarded my position as completely untenable if more than a third of my MPs had ever voted against me".
"The nature of this particular revolt makes it qualitatively as well as quantitatively devastating," he writes.