Showing posts with label Tories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tories. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

TOON TUESDAY #69

We'll begin where we left off last week, with President Trump's efforts to bring about peace in the Ukraine.  Flags, taxes and migrant hotels all featured strongly last week and The Telegraph's Matt made a welcome return.  Look out for not one, but two Fawlty Towers references...

Peter Brookes for The Times
Jimbob on X
Ben Garrison on X
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Steve Bright for The Sun
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Dave Brown for The Independent
Morten Morland for The Times
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Peter Brookes for The Times
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Josh on X
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph

Monday, 7 July 2025

MEME MONDAY #42

Last week we featured the fall out from Glasto, the fruit and nut party, the accelerating Channel invasion, tears from Reeves and Starmer's first anniversary in office...

Mon 30 Jun - 19 shares on the Facebook backup page
Tue 1 Jul - 90 shares on the main Facebook page
Wed 2 Jul - 209 shares
Thur 3 Jul - 723 shares
Thur 3 Jul - 95 shares
Thur 3 Jul - 6 shares.  This one really upset a few of
our regular lefty trolls, which makes us very happy.
Plus, the more they comment, the more money we
make from engagement revenue!
Fri 4 Jul - 308 shares
Sat 5 Jul - 93 shares
Sat 5 Jul - 46 shares
Sun 6 Jul - 136 shares.  For those asking, Blair's favourability after one
year was +44, while only Gordon Brown fairs worse than Starmer with
a whopping -44.
Sun 6 Jul - 18 shares
Sun 6 Jul - 114 shares

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Wednesday, 21 May 2025

TORIES FOURTH IN NEW POLL


The latest YouGov poll suggests Keir Starmer's tough talk on migration has had little effect on his party's popularity, quite the opposite in fact.  Labour have actually dropped a percentage point, while Reform UK have gained one.  The most significant aspect of the poll is the fact that the Tories have slumped into fourth place behind the Lib Dems, garnering their lowest ever vote share in the history of the polling organisation.

The poll was carried out between the 18th and 19th of May.  Here are the changes (in brackets) against the previous YouGov poll, carried out between 11th and 12th of May.

Reform UK = 29% (+1)
Labour = 22% (-1)
Lib Dem = 17% (+1)
Conservative = 16% (-2)
Green = 10% (+1)
SNP = 2% (-1)
Plaid = 1% (n/c)
Others = 2% (-1)

Kemi Badenoch's faltering leadership is probably on borrowed time, with her defeated leadership opponent Robert Jenrick currently engaged in an aggressive social media campaign to portray himself as a hard right alternative to both Badenoch and Nigel Farage.  The problem with Jenrick is that he is no more detached from the Tory party's disastrous last term than Badenoch, and his attempt to paint himself as a real conservative now is too little, too late.

Another catastrophic performance in next May's elections could prompt a leadership challenge, but all this will achieve is to merely rearrange the deckchairs on a sinking Tory Titantic.

Tuesday, 6 May 2025

TOON TUESDAY #55

Reform's stunning election victories were very much the order of the day for British cartoonists in recent days.  Success for Farage's party was largely expected, particularly at the expense of the Conservatives, as half of these toons pre-date the election results...

Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Dave Brown for The Independent
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Andy Bunday on Instagram
Morten Morland for The Sunday Times
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Graeme Bandeira for The Nothern Agenda
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Andy Bunday on Instagram
Peter Brookes for The Times
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph

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Monday, 7 April 2025

ISRAEL BARS LABOUR PAIR

Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang

Two Labour MPs have been denied entry to Israel and detained by authorities on arrival.  Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang were accused of entering the country to 'spread hate speech against Israel', according to the Israeli immigration authority.  They were detained alongside two aides who were travelling with them.

Neither MP is a member of the Socialist Campaign Group of rabid pro-Palestinian leftists, so the Israeli decision appears to be a little presumptuous at best.  While it is true that both Mohamed and Yang have been publicly critical of Israel over the Gaza conflict, is the state of Israel now so fragile and proactively oppressive as to publicly declare that this supposed 'hate speech' is a threat to its being?

Israeli authorities added that Internal Minister Moshe Arbel had formally denied entry to the four individuals after they had been detained and questioned.  They also stood accused of entering the country to 'document Israeli security forces'.  Again, this is incredibly defensive.  The MPs were not set to enter the warzone of Gaza, but merely the occupied West Bank.

Mohamed and Yang - both new MPs elected in last year's general election - issued a joint statement on social media (see below).


The Foreign Secretary sprang to the defence of his 'centrist' comrades, describing their detention as 'unacceptable' and 'counterproductive'.


The following day Lammy embroiled himself in a row with Kemi Badenoch after she backed Israel's actions in an interview with Laura Kuenssberg.  The Tory leader said every country had a right to control its own borders and said it was 'shocking we have MPs in Labour who other countries will not allow through'.  A clip of that section of the interview can be found here.

Her unequivocal support for the Israeli authorities drew criticism from Lammy, who described her response as 'disgraceful'.  In order to make clear his disdain, he tagged Badenoch into the same X post and sought to further politicise the matter by referring to Conservative MPs having been barred entry from China.


Badenoch then hit back with her own personal attack, questioning Lammy's ability to be a 'good Foreign Sec'.  She also referred to the recent letter from various Labour MPs calling for a new airport in Kashmir and 'promoting Hamas propaganda in parliament'.  Lammy did not respond further on X.


Badenoch's stance did not even enjoy universal support from her own front bench, with Shadow Treasury Secretary Richard Fuller telling Times Radio he supported the ability of MPs to be 'welcomed into any country'.  He also quite rightly questioned the democratic values of a state that barred foreign MPs from its soil, whether it be China, Israel or any state.

There is also the issue of who paid for this trip?  When it comes to the Westminster gravy train, one suspects that the answer is glaringly obvious - the humble British taxpayer.

What we found quite telling about this whole affair is how it portrays the demographic shift in Britain, rather than events in the West Bank or Gaza.  The two MPs at the centre of this row were both born overseas, while Kemi Badenoch - birth name Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke - was only born in the UK to exploit birthright citizenship, after which her parents took her back to Nigeria.  Lammy, although London born, has duel UK-Guyanese citizenship, while the Beeb's Kuenssberg was also born overseas.

When Mohamed was elected for Sheffield Central last year, she became the first Yemeni Member of Parliament.  Yang is the first Chinese-born MP, after being elected last year for the Berkshire constituency of Earley and Woodley.  Who knew Berkshire was home to so many constituents with a vested interest in Palestine?

The only bona fide Brit named in this article is Fuller, who was born here to British parents and does not share citizenship with a foreign country.  To quote Sir Keir Starmer - Britain is changing.  Sadly, it is changing beyond belief.

Friday, 7 February 2025

LUCY LASHES OUT

Labour's Lucy Powell had a car crash exchange with opposition frontbencher Richard Holden earlier this week.  The pair appeared on the Beeb's Politics Live show where they sparred over Labour's disastrous sellout of the Chagos Islands.  Powell became enraged by what she perceived as Holden talking over her, snapping at him several times as if he were a disobedient child.

Watch below.


Note Powell's assertion that 'it's not a good look' to talk over her, as if there was something misogynistic in it.  Until a time in which Labour declare that women can't have penises, men cannot use the ladies and compete in women's sports - they have abandoned the right to take the high ground on feminist issues!

Saturday, 18 January 2025

KHAN DISMISSES CRIME CONCERNS

The latest edition of London Mayor's Question Time generated a couple of viral clips showing Sadiq Khan in a typically arrogant and evasive light regarding crime in the capital.  First up was Susan Hall - Khan's opponent in last year's mayoral election - and the Tory leader in the London Assembly.  She repeatedly asked Khan to verify how many rape gangs were operating in the city, to which Khan refused to answer by claiming that he didn't understand the question.

This was Hall's second successive attempt to use the question time procedure in order to obtain an answer from Khan, but once again she drew a blank despite repeating the question over and over again.  Khan appeared to be trying to draw Hall into confirming the ethnic or religious identity to the grooming gangs, which of course we all know overwhelmingly share Khan's Pakistani Muslim heritage.  She refused to be drawn into his trap, which of course he would have used as an opportunity to brand her 'racist' - even though such gangs are undeniably a Pakistani Muslim problem.

Watch the clip below.


Next up was Alex Wilson, Reform UK's sole representative in the London Assembly.  He took Khan to task over knife crime, which he began by reeling off a shocking list of London stabbings that have taken place already in 2025 - including two murders.  Wilson then proposed a 1,000 strong police task force to deal with knife crime, funded by a cutback in the Mayor's inflated staffing budget.

As the lone Reform AM, Mr Wilson called on colleagues from other parties to back his proposal and asked the Mayor would encourage them to do so.  Khan's response was derogatory.  He simply replied: "As a rule of thumb I never encourage anyone to work with Reform".

Khan's arrogance knows no bounds.  Watch the clip below.

Sunday, 3 November 2024

KEMI GOES MLK

Speaking to the Beeb's Laura Kuenssberg on Sunday, the presenter inevitably drew attention to Kemi Badenoch's immutable characteristics of being a black female party leader.  "What do you think of it as a milestone?" asked Kuennsberg.  Badenoch's response was pure Martin Luther King as she said: "I think the best thing will be is where we get to the point when the colour of your skin is no more remarkable than the colour of your eyes or the colour of your hair."

She added how astonished she is that Rachel Reeves goes to such great lengths to remind everyone that she is the first female Chancellor of the Exchequer.  "I think that is a very low glass ceiling within the Labour party... no more significant than what other women in this country have achieved".

Watch the clip below.

Saturday, 2 November 2024

BADENOCH ELECTED TORY LEADER


Kemi Badenoch has been elected Tory leader in the membership ballot.  She defeated Robert Jenrick by a comfortable margin of 12,418 votes.  After the applause and cheering subsided, Badenoch gave her maiden speech as leader and wasted no time in taking a shot at Keir Starmer's party, asking "Isn't it great to have another woman as party leader?"

Not just a woman, a black woman.  Another first for the Tories, and succeeding their first Asian leader no less.  Meanwhile, the so-called 'progressives' over at Labour have still not elected a single female leader, let alone anyone who isn't white.  The left will be bubbling with hate at the sight of Badenoch taking the helm, just as they could not contain their hatred for other non-white Tory females such as Patel and Braverman.

Badenoch continued:  "The task ahead is tough, but simple.  First, hold the Labour government to account and second, prepare for government with a clear plan.  Keir Starmer is discovering all too late the perils of not having a plan".

Starmer has a plan, alright.  To bring this country to its knees.

Will Badenoch provide a valid alternative to his globalist net zero agenda, or can we expect more of the same left-leaning nanny state authoritarianism of Johnson and Sunak?  The latter is more likely, which is probably why the new kids on the block over at Reform won't be losing too much sleep over this appointment.

Sunday, 13 October 2024

SOCIALISM: A SCARY STORY

A video critique of socialism, featuring a well spoken attractive lady, went viral on various social media platforms earlier this year.  The video originated on TikTok and was copied to other platforms with no credit, the only clue to her identity being the name of a now deleted TikTok account - 'Rebecca Paul in Surrey'.  We can now reveal that she is none other than the Conservative MP for Reigate, Rebecca Paul.

The one and a half minute video can be seen below.


The story she tells is nothing new, having first appeared online around 2009 and revisited many times over ever since.  Paul's version is no different, in fact she has read one of the most popular versions word for word, adding only the line at the very end: "And that is socialism my friends, a race to the bottom."

Paul made the video before she was elected as an MP in July, having posted it to TikTok last year.  However, it later mysteriously disappeared from her TikTok account and it is not clear whether she removed it or the communist censors based in China.  Her account has since disappeared altogether, again no clue as to why.

Is it acceptable to criticise socialism in today's left-leaning non-conservative party?

Ms Paul told us in an email: "I made the decision to deactivate my Tiktok account last year for a variety of reasons.  I do have the option to reactivate it in the future if I so wish".

Tory MP Rebecca Paul pictured earlier this year