By continuing to use the site, you agree to our use of cookies and to abide by our Terms and Conditions. We in turn value your personal details in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
...to acknowledge the achievements of Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson.
1. Managing to be the most embarrassing PM the country has ever seen. Yo might not think this is an achievement, but remember that one of his predecessors shagged a dead pig.
[Post edited 19 Jan 2022 9:22]
I'm one of the people who was blamed for getting Paul Cook sacked. PM for the full post.
To give the leader of the Conservative and Unionist Party his due, he has done more for the cause of Scottish independence than any politician in history.
Can we get Pug corrected to Pig please? I'm no fan of the Tory party but shagging a dead lap dog is even more disgusting than even they are capable of.
And its a vision I would like removed from my mind. Pronto.
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
4
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:29 - Jan 19 with 1892 views
5 There's a letter in the Times being shared on Twitter that makes the point that on the day of the 7/7 bombings in London in 2005, Johnson - then editor - didn't want to cancel the Spectator's summer party which was due to be held that night. Sat sulking in his office, the letter writer claims, until someone else decided having a party when so many had died probably wasn't appropriate.
But yeah, our generations' Churchill. A patriot. B**locks
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:27 - Jan 19 by JakeITFC
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:27 - Jan 19 by JakeITFC
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
Brexit. Not me personally, I hasten to add, but people were sick of it and just wanted it done. Boris and co were promising a quick end to it. Thats the only reason for the majority.
Support will collapse next time out, as UKIPs did after the Brexit vote. Maybe not enough to remove the Tories, but certainly a vastly reduced majority, maybe back to a hung parliament.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:29 - Jan 19 by Bobbychase
5 There's a letter in the Times being shared on Twitter that makes the point that on the day of the 7/7 bombings in London in 2005, Johnson - then editor - didn't want to cancel the Spectator's summer party which was due to be held that night. Sat sulking in his office, the letter writer claims, until someone else decided having a party when so many had died probably wasn't appropriate.
But yeah, our generations' Churchill. A patriot. B**locks
Ah. The buzzer has finally gone off in DaveU's basement I see.
We should probably stop bullying him, as it would appear that the chief figurehead for racism, homophobia, open corruption, incompetence and dishonesty that he clearly venerates as some kind of deity will soon be gone.
I'm one of the people who was blamed for getting Paul Cook sacked. PM for the full post.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:27 - Jan 19 by JakeITFC
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
Unfortunately people are idiots. The inappropriateness of Johnson was there for all to see but people chose to ignore it because the people wanted Brexit "done" with the "oven ready" deal, the immigrants cleaned out and the £350m spent per week on the NHS. Sadly the Labour party are as much to blame for promoting someone like Jeremy Corbyn as its leader.
I wonder if Mrs Sunak will like Carries choice in wallpaper when he moves next door?
0
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:54 - Jan 19 with 1755 views
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:52 - Jan 19 by peterleeblue
Unfortunately people are idiots. The inappropriateness of Johnson was there for all to see but people chose to ignore it because the people wanted Brexit "done" with the "oven ready" deal, the immigrants cleaned out and the £350m spent per week on the NHS. Sadly the Labour party are as much to blame for promoting someone like Jeremy Corbyn as its leader.
I wonder if Mrs Sunak will like Carries choice in wallpaper when he moves next door?
I believe that Mrs Sunak is so minted that she could afford to have the whole place redecorated in $ 1000 bills floor to ceiling, and that would just be small change to her...no need to go to "friends" with the begging bowl
[Post edited 19 Jan 2022 10:03]
0
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:00 - Jan 19 with 1715 views
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:27 - Jan 19 by JakeITFC
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
Incredibly it could be this very party that could be the first to install a prime minister of Asian heritage.
0
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:02 - Jan 19 with 1702 views
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:27 - Jan 19 by JakeITFC
His party won a general election with the highest share of the popular vote in a couple of generations, quite impressive (especially as everybody now seemingly takes great glee in him being a known liar, a racist and incompetent).
Not much ownership of that decision from anywhere, is there?
yes by lying and scheming or has your local £350mill hospital been built?
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:24 - Jan 19 by Herbivore
As an aside, this run of PMs has been like going from Keane, to Jewell, then straight to Hurst. Disaster upon disaster.
Nah, Boris is Lambert. Patently unsuited to the job, woefully incompetent, occasionally clever with a soundbite and supported blindly by fools who saw the soundbites but not the years of failure.
Cameron was Hurst - destroyed the country through his arrogance and hubris.
I'm one of the people who was blamed for getting Paul Cook sacked. PM for the full post.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:02 - Jan 19 by Keno
yes by lying and scheming or has your local £350mill hospital been built?
[Post edited 19 Jan 2022 10:02]
And by breaking apart traditional party lines using Brexit (also based on lying and scheming, which is also now coming home to roost).
Funny how it's taken a few parties for people to start to see through him, but there we go. If that's what gets him out and not the awful record in everything else, I'll take that.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:32 - Jan 19 by Cheltenham_Blue
Brexit. Not me personally, I hasten to add, but people were sick of it and just wanted it done. Boris and co were promising a quick end to it. Thats the only reason for the majority.
Support will collapse next time out, as UKIPs did after the Brexit vote. Maybe not enough to remove the Tories, but certainly a vastly reduced majority, maybe back to a hung parliament.
[Post edited 19 Jan 2022 9:35]
I'd argue that Corbyn as the alternative helped him towards that majority given the nations thoughts on him.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 09:42 - Jan 19 by BlueBadger
Ah. The buzzer has finally gone off in DaveU's basement I see.
We should probably stop bullying him, as it would appear that the chief figurehead for racism, homophobia, open corruption, incompetence and dishonesty that he clearly venerates as some kind of deity will soon be gone.
He’s logged off again. I suspect that he’s had to go and change his underpants again and give his Carpel tunnel a rest. He’ll be back soon.
We have no village green, or a shop.
It's very, very quiet.
I can walk to the pub.
1
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:50 - Jan 19 with 1533 views
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:12 - Jan 19 by Swansea_Blue
And by breaking apart traditional party lines using Brexit (also based on lying and scheming, which is also now coming home to roost).
Funny how it's taken a few parties for people to start to see through him, but there we go. If that's what gets him out and not the awful record in everything else, I'll take that.
It would be the politics equivalent being backs-to-the-wall all match and one shanking in off your CB's thigh in the 92nd minute to get the winner.
Not the way you want the result, but you've got three points.
I'm one of the people who was blamed for getting Paul Cook sacked. PM for the full post.
As he's hopefully now on his way out, it's time... on 10:27 - Jan 19 by hype313
I'd argue that Corbyn as the alternative helped him towards that majority given the nations thoughts on him.
The perceptions of Corbyn were/are managed by the media, lied about by his opponents and lapped up by too many of the electorate.
In the same way that perceptions about Boris were/are managed by the media, lied about by his supporters and lapped up by too many of the electorate. We’re now seeing exactly what happens when those pretenses are dropped.
Unfortunately, too many people reinforced those perceptions out of self-interest and, if we’re being honest, through being fairly ignorant.