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Politika u UK


BraveMargot

  

99 members have voted

  1. 1. da sam podanik krune, glasao bih za:

    • jednookog skotskog idiota (broon)
      17
    • aristokratskog humanoida (cameron)
      17
    • dosadnog liberala (clegg)
      34
    • patriotski blok (ukip ili bnp)
      31

This poll is closed to new votes


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Posted

Dobar je Gardijan. Strong case za Kuperovu: zena je.

 

 

 

Yvette Cooper is more steadfast, consistently challenging George Osborne on economic terrain. She refuses to concede the nonsense that Labour overspending caused the crash. She would disconcert a prime minister whose clumsy and occasionally patronising tone towards women has proved a vulnerability. And, of course, after a century of male Labour leaders, a female leader would be a plus in itself, all the more so when Tom Watson is a front-runner to be deputy. Ms Cooper’s down-to-earth feminism defines her politics – she knows that those hardest hit by austerity are women – so her victory would be more than symbolic.
Posted

Dobar je Gardijan. Strong case za Kuperovu: zena je.

 

promena urednistva. otisao rusbridger, dosla gospoja viner, koleginica feministkinja. mozda ima nesto u tome... tek je stigla, kolektiv se uhodava, valja joj se dopasti. 

Posted

To!

Ultimativni napad posle koga nema odbrane.

 

Teška artiljerija. Znači da bi stvarno mogao da pobedi.

Posted

Svi bazeni su truba, ali kad ti bukiji daju prednost, onda znaš koliko je sati.

 

Ko je stavio 10 funti na Corbyna u početku, taj će uzeti hiljadarku. Ko stavi istu sumu sada, dobice 15 u vrh glave.

Posted
Jeremy Corbyn could undermine Northern Ireland peace process if he becomes Labour leader, rival claims

 

 

Liz Kendall says things remain “fragile” in country as criticism of hard-Left front-runner continues to build

 

 

The Northern Ireland peace process will be threatened if Jeremy Corbyn becomes leader, one of his rivals has said.

 

Liz Kendall warned that things remain “fragile” in the country and said the party must elect someone who understands the “difficult issues” that still exist.

 

Mr Corbyn caused outrage in the weeks after the Brighton bombing in 1984 by inviting Mr Adams and other members of Sinn Fein to the Commons. He also observed a minute’s silence in 1987 for eight IRA members killed by the SAS in an ambush. Last month he was pictured in Parliament with Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness, the Sinn Fein leaders.

 

Speaking to the Birmingham Mail, Ms Kendall warned that a perception that Mr Corbyn was sympathetic to the IRA would make it harder to maintain peace in Northern Ireland.

 

“There are still huge issues and concerns, and we always need to have a leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister who are absolutely even handed in the way that they deal with the situation, who people feel they can trust,” she said.

“And I know there are many people who have concerns about where Jeremy Corbyn has stood in the past on that.

“And things remain fragile. Difficult issues come up all the time.

“I want to make sure we have a Labour leader who is trusted in this process, and understands the difficult issues that remain.”

 

It comes after an interview with BBC Radio Ulster in which Mr Corbyn was repeatedly challenged to condemn the IRA's actions.

 

Mr Corbyn responded: "I condemn all bombing, it is not a good idea, it is terrible what happened."

 

Asked again if he condemned the IRA, Mr Corbyn responded: "Look I condemn what was done by the British Army as well as the other sides as well. What happened in Derry in 1972 [bloody Sunday] was pretty devastating as well."

 

Asked a final time if he condemns the IRA, Mr Corbyn replied "I feel we will have to take this up later you know" before his phone cut out because of a bad signal.

Posted

Jos sam da objave da jede malu decu za dorucak...

Posted

Jbt, šta je sledeće, opsovao je psa kad se ovaj israo ispred njega?

Posted

Ovo je stvarno napad na svim frontovima, bez presedana.

Posted

Ali je problem sto su dosta  glupi i nekredibilni.

Kuperova je pokusala da napadne Korbina tamo gde je najtanji  - stampanje love, no u direktnom duelu bi onda morala da objasnjava zasto je stampanje love ok da ide kroz banke a ne kroz drzavu, a to bas i nije vote winner.

Posted (edited)

Ali je problem sto su dosta  glupi i nekredibilni.

Kuperova je pokusala da napadne Korbina tamo gde je najtanji  - stampanje love, no u direktnom duelu bi onda morala da objasnjava zasto je stampanje love ok da ide kroz banke a ne kroz drzavu, a to bas i nije vote winner.

 

niti ona to ume da objasni na glasačima razumljivom jeziku

Edited by MancMellow
Posted

blerov panicni poziv da se ne glasa za korbina, dobija nove verzije medju glasacima.  ^_^

 

CMXOkBGWgAA6j77.jpg

Posted

kakvi jadnici i govnarčići. Korbinu želim puno sreće.

Posted

Lord Mandelson's failed 'mass resignation' bid to attempt to stop Jeremy Corbyn winning Labour leadership

 

It also emerged that Liz Kendall urged Yvette Cooper to stand down because Andy Burnham is the only candidate who can win - but Miss Cooper refused.

 

 

mandelson-reacts_1626225b.jpg

 

Photo: REUTERS

 

 

ChristopherHope_60_1805027j.jpg

By Christopher Hope, Chief Political Correspondent

10:00PM BST 16 Aug 2015

 

Lord Mandelson tried to persuade the three mainstream Labour leadership candidates to quit en masse to stop leftwinger Jeremy Corbyn and force the party to suspend the election.

 

It also emerged that Liz Kendall urged Yvette Cooper to stand down because Andy Burnham is the only candidate who can win - but Miss Cooper refused.

 

The claims lay bare the desperation by the Labour hierarchy to try to stop Mr Corbyn from succeeding Ed Miliband as leader in less than four weeks time.

 

The news came as:

 

Gordon Brown, the former Labour Prime Minister, effectively begged hundreds of thousands of party members and supporters not to vote for Mr Corbyn when they receive their ballot papers in the next 48 hours;

- it emerged that four unions – including Unite and the RMT train drivers’ union – have donated nearly or lent nearly £100,000 to Mr Corbyn’s so-called “crowd sourced” leadership campaign;

- Mr Burnham prepared to claim in a speech on Monday that he was the "only candidate" in the leadership campaign who can unite Labour and "lay the foundations for a Labour victory in 2020".

 

Lord Mandelson, one of the architects of “new” Labour, privately appealed last week to the Kendall, Cooper and Burnham camps to quit the contest before ballot papers were sent out, according to sources.

 

One said: “Lord Mandelson and other Blairites were saying – this is a disgrace, let’s get this thing pulled. But it was not going to happen.”

 

The peer is understood to have believed that the party might suspend the contest if there was only one candidate, but he had to back down when officials said it would mean Mr Corbyn won.

 

There are also claims - made in a column by the Telegraph's Dan Hodges - that Miss Kendall approached Miss Cooper to ask if she would quit to back Mr Burnham and help him overhaul Mr Corbyn’s lead. Miss Cooper refused.

 

A senior source from Miss Kendall's camp confirmed that its polling data said Mr Burnham was best placed of the three candidates to beat Mr Corbyn.

 

Sources close to Miss Kendall and Miss Cooper dismissed claims that they had discussed quitting. Lord Mandelson did not reply to requests for comment. Labour declined to comment

 

The divisions came as Mr Brown stepped into the leadership campaign with a thinly veiled attack on Mr Corbyn’s ambitions to be leader.

 

In a 50 minute speech at London’s South Bank centre, Mr Brown name checked Labour leaders from Keir Hardie to Michael Foot as he gave warning that the party will be powerless to help the poorest and most vulnerable unless it can win a general election.

 

Acknowledging that the party was “grieving” after its general election defeat, he said: “There is one thing worse than having broken hearts, it is powerlessness.”

 

Labour had to be “electable”, Mr Brown said, adding: “We cannot deliver in Government without power, we can deliver principles only when we have power.”

 

Mr Brown did not refer to any of the four leadership candidates by name during his speech. Afterwards he refused to comment on who he would vote for in the contest when challenged directly by The Daily Telegraph

 

But in an a clear indication he was concerned about a victory for Mr Corbyn, he singled out some of the would-be leader's potential foreign allies who he has in the past expressed sympathy for.

 

He said the rise in popularity of non-establishment politics was a response to the insecurity created by globalisation.

Mr Brown said: “If we are going to solve the problems of both the global economy, global finance, global climate change, if we are going to solve the problems of global inequality and poverty, we will need a level of global co-operation to match our national endeavours that is higher.

 

“And I have to say, if our global alliances are going to be alliances with Hezbollah and Hamas and Hugo Chavez's Venezuela and Vladimir Putin's Russia, there is no chance of building a worldwide alliance that could deal with poverty and inequality and climate change and financial instability.” :D

 

A spokesman for Mr Corbyn’s campaign said: “It is necessary to be credible but credibility cannot mean an orthodoxy of austerity that chokes off recovery - instead we need a Labour Party that stands for growth, investment and innovation across the whole country.”

 

A spokesman for Ed Miliband denied claims that he was set to speak out, saying he had "at the moment no plans to intervene".

 

It also emerged that unions have piled in behind Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership campaign, despite his claims that it relies on small donations.

 

Mr Corbyn’s campaign claims: “We have no big private donors. Jeremy wants Labour to become a democratic social movement again, dedicated to real change. Only Jeremy will deliver that change.”

 

However entries on Mr Corbyn's House of Commons' register of members’ interests, which was updated quietly last week, shows Corbyn’s campaign took in nearly £100,000 between June 23 and July 31 from just four unions.

 

Donors include train drivers’ union RMT and Aslef gave £25,000 and £10,000 respectively while the Transport Salaried Staff Association and Unite gave £6,000 in free office space.

 

Unite also lent the Corbyn campaign £50,000, which has to be repaid on September 12, the day of the result of the leadership election.

Mr Corbyn’s campaign has so far raised £120,000 in small donations and said is now looking to “hit our new bullseye” - £180,000.

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