UK Politics Thread (Part 4)

I don’t know much about Bob Vylan, but presumably the label knew a little bit about them, y’know, maybe they had an idea of the two lads and their ideas, considering they released a bunch of their records and they themselves are not particularly shy. Anti-semitism is an everchanging concept.

I support Kneecap, also, but fuck me, they are awful. It’s horrible music.

Like, ahhhh, we smashed a bunch of acid and then we’ll speed down country roads in our Damien Duff shirts. Oirish as fuck, lads? Ever read Yeats on ket, lads?

5 Likes

Incoming flame I’m sure.

Campbell does a decent podcast with Rory Stewart that’s worth a watch / listen from time to time. As a politician I’d rate his ability way above pretty much everything we have at the moment. But before someone jumps down my neck, that doesn’t excuse the antics with Blair.

4 Likes

Fairly dramatic shift in the gilt market today, 0.1% increase in yields just in the afternoon. That now puts tremendous pressure on Labour to show how exactly they will find an additional £5B of revenue, or something else that the Labour caucus is willing to cut.

2 Likes

Absolute mess. While they’re between a rock and a hard place it’s difficult not to think they’ve come at this with very little idea on how to solve it or they’re shit scared of something.

Might have been attributed to last Government, but even so, smacks of incompetence from top to bottom… name and shame is what I say…

Ex-spending watchdog called in to probe £10 million Lords front door ‘scandal’

Story by Nick Lester

A former public spending watchdog has been asked to investigate the installation of a new front door to the House of Lords that cost nearly £10 million and does not work.

The Peers’ Entrance project has been branded “a scandalous waste” of taxpayers’ money and led to calls for those responsible to resign.

The Lord Speaker has now written to independent crossbencher Lord Morse, who led the National Audit Office for a decade, to look into the £9.6 million debacle.

Parliament has previously heard that a security officer had to be permanently stationed at the door to press a button to open it. One peer has calculated this was costing £2,500 per week.

It also emerged that the price tag for the work spiralled by nearly 60% from the original estimate of £6.1 million.

The fiasco has raised questions over lessons to be learned for the long-delayed restoration of the Palace of Westminster, which is forecast to cost billions of pounds.

In his letter to Lord Morse, Lord McFall of Alcluith, who chairs the House of Lords Commission that oversees the running of the site, said: “The commission identified that it was unclear how many issues were due to manufacturing and installation failures and how many were due to issues with the initial identification of requirements and subsequent need for alterations.

“Additional information will be needed to understand the failures, including information on costs – both how the initial project figure of £6.1 million was arrived at and the increase to the current total of £9.6 million, and any unanticipated additional costs such as increased staffing to manage and operate the entrance.

“It will be important to assess the quality of the decision-making in establishing the project and the ways in which the evidence provided for the specifications of the new entrance were tested to ensure they took account of user requirements.”

He added: “The problems that have arisen around delivery of the new entrance pose larger questions about effective programme delivery, including capability within parliamentary departments.”

Speaking at Westminster, senior deputy speaker Lord Gardiner of Kimble, who also sits on the commission, said: “It is unacceptable that the Peers’ Entrance does not operate as it should. The commission has directed urgent work to resolve this.”

He added: “The cost to remedy defects will not be borne by the House and will be met by Parliament’s contractors.”

Tory former minister Lord Robathan said: “I do not hold the Senior Deputy Speaker responsible for this scandal, but it is a scandalous waste of public money.”

Demanding to know who was responsible “by name”, he said: “It is now nearly £10 million for a door that does not work. Somebody accountable should be identified and should perhaps resign for this terrible waste of public money.”

Conservative peer Lord Hayward said: “The Senior Deputy Speaker told us the total cost, but the staff manning that door, calculated on the written answer he provided to me, are costing £2,500 per week. That cost has to be borne by someone.”

Responding, Lord Gardiner said: “On the issue of the number of people involved in the manual use of the door while it is being repaired and made usable, I am assured that they are within the existing complement of members of staff.”

3 Likes

Unfortunately, no one will take the decision that it’s an outmoded victorian building that needs replacing with a modern parliament and turning i into a tourist attraction.

4 Likes

It would still need an operable front door.
I’ll have to visit it when it has a functioning door.

1 Like

How did a door get green lit at £6m and then rise to £9m without anyone questioning it? I’d be mildly surprised at a cost of £60k that rose to £90k. It’s a door.

2 Likes

It speaks to a detachment issue within government. The optics of spending £9m on a fucking door are catastrophic. It really does feed into the idea that they are living on a different planet.

2 Likes

Money in the pockets of friends.
It just isn’t possible to contemplate a door costing 9 million potatoes let alone pounds. I hope the guard and treat it well.

Not excusing it because I think its disgusting but is the building listed? There might be a constraint on what they can put there i.e. only a direct copy of the previous one.

I’m guessing, otherwise I agree with your thoughts.

Even so my brother in-law must be doing something wrong.

8 Likes

Greens should support that.

2 Likes

The BBC loves a cheeky chappie…

2 Likes

Russia and China are the primary players in this

1 Like

Read these earlier… Going to get louder as the visit gets closer

Trump’s upcoming state visit to the UK should be treated not as routine diplomacy, but as a test of who we are prepared to honour. This is not just another leader arriving for a photo op. This is a man who has returned to power through intimidation, conspiracy and the deliberate erosion of democratic checks. His visit should not be welcomed, it should be condemned.

This is a president who handed out pardons to political allies, far-right provocateurs and convicted criminals. He has praised those who stormed the US Capitol. He has criminalised dissent, threatened to defund universities that criticise him, and used the machinery of the state to punish journalists and opponents. Under his watch, institutions once considered sacred to Western democracy have been treated as obstacles to be torn down.

And yet here we are, preparing to host him again, as if none of that matters. As if it is perfectly normal to offer a royal banquet to a leader who undermines elections, incites violence and governs through personal loyalty and fear.

There is nothing normal about this visit. Trump has already imposed new tariffs on British steel and ceramics, despite his performative talk of the “special relationship”. His administration continues to treat allies with suspicion and hostility while embracing authoritarian leaders abroad. And still, our government appears content to give him red carpet treatment, as though his attacks on democracy, international law and even our own economy should be overlooked in favour of tradition and optics.

The danger goes far beyond bad optics. Trump’s visit empowers his political allies here in Britain. Reform UK has borrowed his language, his strategy and his disdain for truth. Nigel Farage has spent years acting as Trump’s mouthpiece in the UK, echoing the same tactics of division and scapegoating. A state visit sends a signal to the British far right: this is what success looks like. Break the rules, attack your enemies, and you too will be rewarded.

This visit is not a diplomatic courtesy. It is a disgrace. It legitimises a style of leadership that should have no place in our public life. It tells the world that you can trample on democratic values and still be embraced by Britain’s institutions. It sends a message to victims of political violence, press intimidation and cultural repression that their suffering can be set aside for the sake of ceremony.

This is not about political differences. It is about whether we draw the line at authoritarianism, or whether we welcome it into Windsor Castle with a bow and a toast.

We should not be honouring Trump. We should be warning others not to follow his path.

4 Likes

Sir Keir, you are one ruthless bar steward.

1 Like

One of them is my local MP (or representative, as I am an overseas voter). I have actually quite warmed to him, but he has constantly criticised the Labour leadership. I think it was only a matter of time.

1 Like

1 Like