theological wrote: » You have the strange belief that somehow the UK won't be able to negotiate free trade agreements even when much smaller countries have managed to. The idea that countries wouldn't want enhanced access to the UK market (the world's 5th largest) post-Brexit is bizarre. I fully respect your right to disagree with me, and I welcome the opportunity to be challenged but please provide something to back up your arguments.
lawred2 wrote: » Is there no election standards office in the UK?
CelticRambler wrote: » The stark reality is that the NHS is being slowly privatised bit by bit, and the reason the public aren't rising up in fierce indignation is because it is being done sneakily, and (believe it or not) many people in the private sector are making money out of it.
Joe_ Public wrote: » Can only assume theyve crunched the numbers and come up with this as a winning strategy. Or maybe just some mad gamble by their resident "evil genius" Mr Cummings. Frankly i really dont know what their game is.
Rjd2 wrote: » Cummings is not running the campaign, its Isaac Levido who is the prodigy of Lynton Crosby who I think played a role in the 2017 disaster.
Deleted User wrote: » Over the past decade of Tory rule, NHS privatisation has risen from 6% to 7%. During Labour, it rose from 4% to 6%. If the Tory's were interested in en masse privatisation, I think the shift from 6-7% would not be observed. Am I claiming that no privatisation has taken place / will take place - no. But what these statistics demonstrate is that these hyperbolic claims that the NHS is "being slowly privatised" is absurd. At this rate, if the Torys were in charge for the next 80 years, NHS privatisation would rise from 7% to 15% by the year 2100.
gooch2k9 wrote: » I'm starting to think Twitter is more a force for harm than good.
prawnsambo wrote: » Where are you getting your bolded percentages from? Because since 2014/15 the amount of NHS budget going to private healthcare had risen by 14% in 2018. And that doesn't include the almost £14 billion spent separately by the DHSC.
In 2017-18, £8.8bn of the health service budget went to organisations in the independent sector - around 7 per cent of the total budget.
Joe_ Public wrote: » Thanks. "Protege" of lynton crosby would ring seven hells of alarm bells for me. I am forever astonished at how people in politics can do such sh!t jobs for huge salaries and seemingly never be out of work. I see nick timothy regularly spouting garbage in the telegraph these days, another epic failure from 2017.
Rjd2 wrote: » I think Nick Timothy got shortlisted for a safe Tory seat somehow. Yeah the guy who cost May her majority and whose campaign was a laughing stock a mere 2 years later is parachuted into a seat not even he can lose. :P
Deleted User wrote: » "Risen by 14%" refers to costs, not a total percentage of the NHS which is privatised.
prawnsambo wrote: » Actually 7.7% according to this. And from the same document it's almost doubled since 2011/12. So your Labour figures seem to be overstated a tad.
Deleted User wrote: » Well, fine, it depends on which report / date; let's agree a figure of 7-8%. The point I made still stands.
Gintonious wrote: » https://twitter.com/jeremycorbyn/status/1191687795343052802 Will this help Corbyn at all?
Imreoir2 wrote: » The UK has no functional experience of trade negiotations and its team will be amatures during its initial efforts to secure trade deals. The UK will start off at a huge disadvantage as it will be working under the deadline of the end of the transition period once it is out of the EU. This hands sigificant leverage to its rivals in trade talks. More importantly than these two factors is the limited size of the UK market. As has been said countless times, trade is a numbers game. The EU market is huge and it has a lot of heft in trade talks as a result. The UK market is much smaller and it will have less influence in trade talks because of that inescapable fact.
Imreoir2 wrote: » The UK will be able to agree trade deals, but the best they can hope for in most cases is keeping the trade arangements they have now. In many cases the indications are that they will fall short of even standing still. The UK needs to masivly improve its tradeing relationships outside Europe to make up for the damage that leaving the single market and customs union will cause. Far from this, it is likely that the UK is going to expend a lot of effort and resources only to end up with worse overall tradeing arangements outside Europe.
Imreoir2 wrote: » Europe is the UK's most important market and Brexit is going to do significant damage to that tradeing relationship, outside Europe the weakness of the UK's position will likely see its trading relationships disimprove too, with any significant agreements it eventually reaches being one sided against the UK.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Well, fine, it depends on which report / date; let's agree a figure of 7-8%. The point I made still stands.
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » The good news is now the election gives a clear set of choices for the public. Vote tory to get the Boris deal / hard 2020 brexit. Vote non tory to get a code between soft brexit and public change of mind. It makes things simple and clear.
Deleted User wrote: » Mr Nigel Farage is the most significant political figure in modern UK history. Exceptional.
A Dub in Glasgo wrote: » Yet he will not seek election to the UK parliament after his previous 7 attemps all failed
boring accountant wrote: » It's even more impressive that he managed to do all of this without ever winning a seat in the HoC.
An Ciarraioch wrote: » The Telegraph becomes a self-parody:https://twitter.com/BBCHelena/status/1191835817641152515
Deleted User wrote: » I think what Mr Nigel Farage has demonstrated, somewhat uniquely in fact, is that you don't need to be an MP or Prime Minister to recalibrate the political direction of a country. That is exactly what I mean by "exceptional". Even many of his staunchest enemies, such as Kenneth Clarke MP, concede that Mr Nigel Farage has been the most successful politician in the modern era. Even if you hate his guts, you can't ignore that fundamental reality.
VinLieger wrote: » And yet you support brexit which will lead to trade deals with the likes of india and china where massive levels of immigration will be a key part of those countries demands.
Headshot wrote: » Mg this is painful to read with this “Mr Nigel Farage” rubbish If you wanted to be so formal why not “Mr Kenneth Clarke”?
LuckyLloyd wrote: » Boris Johnson "brilliant" Daniel Hannon a man of "great intellect" Nigel Farage "exceptional" "Surrender acts" and rebranding of lies and nonsense as "constructive deception". It's just a flow of gibberish soundbite posting, there is little actual substance and certainly no attempt to argue a point successfully or change minds. Just because it's well written and non abusive doesn't mean it's up to scratch for this thread.