And Casdon šš».
Good to see so many considered posts here. No time for popcorn, far too serious
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How long can Starmer survive? Getting popcorn ready šæšæ
(584 Posts)It seems not very long at all! What an absolute mess he has got himself into with this Mandelson business on top of all his U turns.
He now has to release everything he knows about Mandelson and Epstein. Kemi Badendoch absolutely roasted him yesterday and his Ministers could not look at him. As usual he looked like a rabbit caught in the headlights.
On top of all this, Angela Rayner (who still has not sorted out her tax āmistakeā) is waiting in the wings. š± She is loving all this and ready to stab him in the back and I bet he regrets supporting her and saying how wonderful she is when she was in trouble.
I think there is something in what you say DaisyAnneReturns. Whether we like the methodology or not, the issues are being discussed in the public arena in the UK, which is healthy.
Iam64
DaisyAnnReturns - interesting post
Thank you 
I think the risk of lowering your standards to such a level where they are indistinguishable from those you are complaining about is not a rrisk worth taking.
What gain has the labour government achieved from this 'brave' risk taking.
I'm afraid I find Starmer's apology to Epstein's victims lacking in sincerity, desperate and embarrassing.
'Ignorance of the law is not a defence' and ignorance in this case is no defence either.
I donāt quite understand what our intelligence services were doing. I would have thought that part of their remit was to ensure and monitor the risk attached to members working for the government, MPS etc.
If that is the case they have failed spectacularly.
In fact Netflix did a better job, years ago in their Epstein documentary.
Whitewavemark2
I donāt quite understand what our intelligence services were doing. I would have thought that part of their remit was to ensure and monitor the risk attached to members working for the government, MPS etc.
If that is the case they have failed spectacularly.
Very good point.
henetha
It doesn't do the country any good to keep changing prime ministers. Keir Starmer should stay. He's far from perfect but at least does seem to be an ethical man.
Who on earth would replace him anyway, and how would they do any better?
What does ethical even mean?
It doesnt even mean noral, does it.
fwiw, I dont agree with any of your points in this post.
DaisyAnneReturns
Could this parliamentary drama actually be a good thing?
At first glance, the current dispute in Parliament over Peter Mandelsonās appointment looks like yet another messy political scandal. But there is a credible argument that what weāre seeing may actually be a sign of the system working as it should.
Start with the context. At the time of Mandelsonās appointment, the UK faced a serious external risk: the return of Donald Trump and the prospect of renewed tariffs that could have cost British jobs. In that environment, appointing someone with deep experience, strong US connections, and an ability to deal with Trump personally was not obviously reckless. Mandelsonās reputation as a āTrump whispererā was arguably the point of the appointment.
None of this required anyone to be naĆÆve about Mandelson himself. His past was well known. He had been sacked twice before, had long carried a reputation for being overly close to powerful figures, and his association with Jeffrey Epstein, while not then alleged to be illegal, was already regarded by many as unwise and troubling. He was, in other words, a calculated risk. But politics often involves choosing between imperfect options, and no actual damage occurred as a result of his brief tenure as Ambassador.
When further information emerged from the Epstein files and public concern intensified, Labour acted. Mandelson was dismissed. That matters. It demonstrates that the appointment was not treated as untouchable or above scrutiny.
What followed is arguably even more important. The Conservatives have demanded access to the full set of files to reassure themselves - and the public - that the original decision was made for the right reasons. That demand is, in principle, fair. The Government, for its part, has not objected to scrutiny, subject only to national security constraints. Where the dispute arose was over how that scrutiny should occur, with the Government proposing an amendment to the Humble Address rather than granting unrestricted access.
Crucially, the Government was not automatically backed by its own side. This is not a Parliament of ānodding dogs.ā With a large majority, it is often government backbenchersānot the oppositionāwho end up moderating executive power. That appears to be happening here.
Seen this way, the episode looks less like institutional failure and more like institutional resilience. A risky appointment was made for defensible reasons, reversed when circumstances changed, and is now being examined through parliamentary mechanisms that include internal dissent as well as opposition pressure.
It may be uncomfortable and noisy, but that is what accountability often looks like in practice.
Well quite. The press love a good scandal and would never take such a balanced view but go into full Rottweiler mode, spattering blame and stirring up controversy.
He is so palpably not up to the job that his poll ratings are rock bottom
At this stage in a parliament this is simply par for the course. Every PM goes through this. It relates to the politically naive who expect perfection and instant results. This is the basic flaw in our democracy.
fancythat
Whitewavemark2
I donāt quite understand what our intelligence services were doing. I would have thought that part of their remit was to ensure and monitor the risk attached to members working for the government, MPS etc.
If that is the case they have failed spectacularly.Very good point.
I agree, thatās really important. A system which allows any party to vet its own MPs, let alone ministers, is seriously flawed. Surely one good thing that could come out of this debacle is a much better vetting system and enhanced intelligence gathering. There are so many loopholes itās like a colander.
Casdon
I think itās prudent to stand back for a couple of weeks, because I think thereās a lot more to come on this scandal Doodledog, not just Mandelson. Every day there are additional ārevelationsā. I think Starmer will go, but I think a considered process once the fallout over Epstein is better understood would be the best outcome we can hope for at this moment.
I agree - in fact I said as much upthread
. All I am saying now is that hoping for someone to take over who has no involvement with any of this is pointless. Whatever is going on has been going on for a long time, and involves too many people. Anyone with the experience and ability to lead the country will have at least some 'involvement', if 'involvement' now means knowledge of someone else being involved.
None of us here knows what actually happened. Yes, we know that there were trafficked women and girls (and possibly men and boys too), and that there were 'parties'. We also know that Epstein gave large sums of money to influential people. But more than that is still unknown.
Morally bankrupt. Politicians, the Royals. People freezing and hungry. Racism on the rise.
I don't see how any of this can be deemed a cause for popcorn.
MayBee70
Primrose53
Puts Boris Johnsonās birthday cake incident well in the shade though! Just remembering the pages and pages of comments about that on here and we all know how that ended.
Birthday cake? What about him illegally trying to prorogue parliament? Being photographed hung over returning from a party with Lebedev ( who then got a knighthood). Please donāt try to make people think that partygate was his only transgression. And there are also links with Bannon and Epstein regarding Brexit ( that is mentioned in the files).
Why defend Starmer. He's lied throughout his premiership, been humiliated on the world stage, and always puts foreign interests before our own.
Boris has gone, if there is proof of wrong doing, that warrants investigation, then I'm sure it will be.
What Starmer has done was to put in place a known, to him, "friend" of Epstein, a man who should never have been even considered the post, knowing his past corruption.
Luckygirl3
*He is so palpably not up to the job that his poll ratings are rock bottom*
At this stage in a parliament this is simply par for the course. Every PM goes through this. It relates to the politically naive who expect perfection and instant results. This is the basic flaw in our democracy.
I've never known a PM polling so low. He'll never get back up either. The most disliked PM ever.
But, why on earth even consider a man with Mandelson's history and reputation in the first place.
a photograph of PM in his underpants talking to a woman , yes, no he is in a same sex marriage, solved - there was possibly boys involved, sorted,
The most disliked PM ever. - I don't think so!!!
Well despite all the baying and popping of champagne corks, we are still waiting to know what Starmer actually knew about Mandelson's relationship with Epstein opposed to what people "think" he knew. I'm prepared to wait.
Freya5
Luckygirl3
He is so palpably not up to the job that his poll ratings are rock bottom
At this stage in a parliament this is simply par for the course. Every PM goes through this. It relates to the politically naive who expect perfection and instant results. This is the basic flaw in our democracy.I've never known a PM polling so low. He'll never get back up either. The most disliked PM ever.
Who would you recommend for the job please?
Political Theatre? Yes.
Much needed catharsis which may purge some of the strong emotions and genuine anger on display in the House yesterday.
"PMQs is designed to generate clips, not sober judgment." No it was not, but that is the way Starmer uses it, having reduced the amount of time available and usually answering in curt monosyllables
Kemi Badenoch eviscerated him yesterday, then Angela Rayner stabbed him in the back. Lack of loyalty again. Her premier ship would be an even greater disaster than Starmer's.
According to the DT he has no political antennae, is a human rights barrister following a process-driven path, and motivated by calculation and devoid of principle.
His mea culpa speech today actually expressed his sorrow 'for those in power who have failed you'. Was it intentional that he gave his speech next to a plaque proclaiming Pride in Place?
Starmer's behaviour over Mandelson is exactly the stuff of soap operas; not a Greek tragedy but rather two distinctly seedy men living a life removed from reality.
Reading through this thread has been quite depressing. What are these money and power grabbing, duplicitous, dishonourable men doing to our country - to our world.
TerriBull
I honestly thought his performance would be better, adults in the room and all that
crapmisplaced projection of faith in how they were going to perform. He doesn't seem to be able to read the room, which I find extraordinary. Right from the start with Lord Ali and the freebie spectacles and suits. Surely someone of his gravitas could see that would put him in a compromising position quite apart from the optics of how all that highly questionable benevolence would and was perceived by a strapped cash electorate.
I know Mandelson had some grandfather or other who was a prominent member in the Labour party of yesteryear, but I could never get my head round why he didn't just go off and join the Tories and have done with it. His whole raison d'etre gives off the air of following the money at any cost not to mention the social millieu he appears to immerse himself with. Often knocking around with his mate 10 jobs Osborne who doesn't even have an indoor lav it would seem, forcing poor old Mandleson to piss up against the outside wall of Osborne's Notting Hill home, or maybe that was just his way of telling him he didn't like the guacamolemore commonly known as mushy peasserved up at supper. Both photographed schmoozing on a yacht with oligarchs. Really there were no surprises as to his nefarious associations with Epstein. Of course Starmer knew about it, much of it was in the public domain anyway.
The implosion has been quite spectacular, the umpteen U turns, the lack of any business acumen from a completely incompetent Chancellor who seems hell bent on crippling businesses and increasing unemployment. The minister appointed with something to do with housing who ejected her tenants so she could get more money, the MP who has a multitude of uninhabitable filthy flat he lets out, quite contrary as to a basic level that would be acceptable apropos of their tenants' rights bill, Angela Rayner and her bad advice regarding what she should have paid in stamp duty. Bridget Phillipson's shilly shallying around fully adopting the court ruling around Women Only Spaces even though the interminable message from Starmer is "we must obey the letter of the law" Oh yes Grooming Gangs Enquiry kicked into the long grassjust wondering if I've forgotten anything!
Yep right up there with the Boris' shit show who'd have thought!
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just wondering if I've forgotten anything!