Ssssssshhhhhh, don't mention Reform.

Reform Councillors have a hissy fit because they don’t get the top jobs in Cornwall council.

And to think people voted for these Muppets :ROFLMAO:

1.15 in and I couldn't watch any more. OMG what a boring man to front a video.
 
As can be clearly seen if you can watch that video for more than a minuit is how important it is for a party leader to make you smile. I don't worry over policies or what they stand for as it doesnt affect anyone in the slightest, so you may as well just vote for someone that you like.
 
So your support is based on personality, no rational argument, no consideration of facts, evidence or data.

You literally are supporting Reform out of blind faith.
No not blind faith as such, I think party leaders should be a personable character or what else are you voting for?
 
As can be clearly seen if you can watch that video for more than a minuit is how important it is for a party leader to make you smile. I don't worry over policies or what they stand for as it doesnt affect anyone in the slightest, so you may as well just vote for someone that you like.
How awfully shallow.
 
No not blind faith as such, I think party leaders should be a personable character or what else are you voting for?
You are judging Reform purely based the personality of Nigel Farage.

That’s literally blind faith
 
You are judging Reform purely based the personality of Nigel Farage.

That’s literally blind faith
Look at it like this, if I vote for farage and he gets in, then I have actually got something I like, can you say that for whoever you vote for?
 
Nigel Farage headed vote leave.

They made a load of promises:
No, they told us of the opportunities. They could 'promise' us nothing as they weren’t in a position to deliver anything. Obviously the conservatives wasted those opportunities which is why I now give my support to Reform. Now get back in your box and stop repeating the same shyte over and over.
 
Look at it like this, if I vote for farage and he gets in, then I have actually got something I like, can you say that for whoever you vote for?
If I want entertainment I can see a comedian.

For a politician I don’t want somebody I like, I want somebody that has policies that are good for this country….or the least worst policies.


Nigel Farage might seem like a jolly nice chap you might see down the pub, but behind the mask he is not a nice person at all.
 
The Reform UK leader laid out a series of economic promises ...designed to take advantage of disquiet among Labour voters at the government’s policies on taxes and benefits. But while Farage promised up to £80bn worth of new spending – including scrapping the two-child benefit cap and increasing winter fuel payments – he did not explain exactly how they could be paid for.

Helen Miller, the deputy director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said: “The risk is that we hear much more about sizeable giveaways on tax and benefits while getting nothing like the same amount of specificity about the big cuts to spending on public services that would be needed for the plan to be implementable.”

One of Farage’s main revenue-raising policies is to scrap the government’s commitment to reaching net zero by 2050, which he said would save £45bn a year, citing calculations by the Institute for Government (IfG). But Jill Rutter, a senior fellow at the IfG, said the Reform leader had used a figure that included both public sector and private sector investment.

Farage himself admitted his sums might not add up, but insisted they gave “an idea of direction, policy, of priorities, of what we think is important, of what we think it is going to cost”.

...he made three main policy announcements: ending the two-child benefit cap, reversing the cuts to winter fuel payments and increasing tax breaks for married couples. He refused, however, to guarantee keeping the pensions triple lock, which ensures the state pension rises by the highest of inflation, earnings growth or 2.5% a year. He also promised more generous tax breaks for married people should he win the next election...
the Guardian

Mot will be along shortly to explain the difference between a promise and an 'opportunity'.
 
Back
Top