7.2 million people in this country are food insecure, but one bad thing befalls investment bankers and landlords and it’s all we hear about for weeks, because guess which segment of society journalists are sourced from.
7.2 million people in this country are food insecure, but one bad thing befalls investment bankers and landlords and it’s all we hear about for weeks, because guess which segment of society journalists are sourced from.
“Dumb moves” seems to be he theme of Microsoft lately.
Because enacting policies that you know will increase the number of trans kids committing suicide is a policy of killing trans kids.
They look so cute and conniving, I’d let them crash the plane.
Picking Badenoch is such an own goal, left leaning and moderate people don’t like her because of the far-right culture war rhetoric and she’s very unpopular with the Reform voters she’s suppose to win back.
I think they are harming their argument by calling it “austerity” when the Budget is pumping money into hospitals and schools, starting to reverse the harm done by austerity.
I think reducing austerity to just underinvestment is letting Labour off too lightly. They promised no return to austerity and one of the key tenets of austerity was attacks on benefits recipients, especially disability benefits, and they haven’t reversed any of the planned Tory cuts to disability benefits. But don’t get me wrong, I’m glad for the increased investment in public services, god knows they need it.
Signed,
Jeremy Corbyn MP, independent
Carla Denyer MP, Green Party Co-Leader
Adrian Ramsay MP, Green Party Co-Leader
Sian Berry MP, Green Party Leanne Wood, former leader of Plaid Cymru
Liz Saville Roberts MP, Plaid Cymru
Ben Lake MP, Plaid Cymru
Llinos Medi MP, Plaid Cymru
Ann Davies MP, Plaid Cymru
Zack Polanski, Green Party Deputy Leader and London Assembly Member
Leanne Mohamad, Independent candidate for Ilford North
Jamie Driscoll, Leader of Majority and Independent former North of Tyne Mayor
Andrew Feinstein, former ANC MP and independent candidate for Holborn & St Pancras
Beth Winter, former Labour MP for Cynon Valley
Cllr Hilary Schan, Chair of We Deserve Better and independent councillor, Worthing Borough Council
Anthony Slaughter, Wales Green Party Leader
Zoë Garbett, Green London Assembly Member and councillor, Hackney Council
Caroline Russell, Green London Assembly Member and councillor, Islington Council
Cllr Amna Abdullatif, independent, Manchester City Council
Cllr Carl Walker, independent, Worthing Borough Council
Cllr Suleman Khonat, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Salim Sidat MBE, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Mustafa Desai, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Muntazir Patel, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Salma Patel, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Sajid Ali, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Terry Mahmood, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Imran Ahmed, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Rana Gulistan, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Mohamed Kapadia, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Iqbal Masters, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Waqar Hussain, independent, Blackburn Council
Cllr Ammar Anwar, independent, Kirklees Council
Cllr Tanisha Bramwell, independent, Kirklees Council
Cllr Imran S Safdar, independent, Kirklees Council
Cllr Emma Dent Coad, independent, Kensington and Chelsea Council
Cllr Yvonne Tennant, independent, Pendle Borough Council
Cllr Chris Davies, Green Party, South Tyneside Council
Cllr Holly Wadell, independent, Northumberland County Council
Cllr Benali Hamdache, Green Party, Islington Council
Cllr Jonathan Elmer, Green Party, Durham County Council.
Cllr Margaret Howard, independent, Worthing Borough Council
Cllr Claire Hunt, Green Party, Worthing Borough Council
Cllr Ian Davey, Green Party, Worthing Borough Council
Cllr Penny Wrout, independent, Hackney Council
Cllr Claudia Turbet-Delof, independent, Hackney Council
Cllr Fliss Premru, independent, Hackney Council
Cllr Alexi Dimond, Green Party, Sheffield Council
Cllr Nick Hartley, Green Party, Newcastle City Council
Cllr Mary Murphy, independent, Northumberland County Council
Cllr Ray Sutton, independent, North West Leicestershire Council
Cllr Sophia Naqvi, independent, Newham Council
Cllr Mehmood Mirza, independent, Newham Council
Cllr Zubair Gulamussen, independent, Newham Council
Cllr Nathanial Higgins, Green Party, Newham Council
Cllr Russell Whiting, independent, Gedling Borough Council
Cllr Dr Hosnieh Djafari-Marbini, independent, Oxford Council
Cllr Scott Ainslie, Green Party, Lambeth Council
Cllr Sean Halsall, independent, Sefton Council
Cllr Asima Shaikh, independent, Islington Council
Cllr Ilkay Cindi-Oner, independent, Islington Council
Cllr Phil Graham, independent, Islington Council
Cllr Matt Nathan, independent, Islington Council
Cllr Ani Stafford-Townsend, Green Party, Bristol City Council
Cllr Ria Patel, Green Party, Croydon Council
Cllr Khaled Musharraf, Green Party, Newcastle City Council
Cllr James Crawford, Green Party, Bristol City Council
Cllr Liam Davis, Green Party, Hackney Council
Cllr Kerry Picket, Green Party, Brighton & Hove City Council
Cllr Ernestas Jegorovas- Armstrong, Green Party, Islington Council
Cllr Alastair Binnie-Lubbock, Green Party, Hackney Council
Cllr Ben Foley, Green Party, Bedford Borough Council
Cllr Habib Rahman, independent, Newcastle City Council
Cllr Alan Gibbons, independent, Liverpool City Council
Cllr Sam Gorst, independent, Liverpool City Council
Cllr Lucy Williams, independent, Liverpool City Council
Cllr Karen Davis, independent, Norwich City Council
Cllr Cate Oliver, independent, Norwich City Council
Cllr Pete Kennedy, Green Party, Stroud District Council
Cllr Paul Barnett, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr Andy Batsford, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr John Cannan, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr Nigel Sinden, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr Mike Turner, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr Simon Willis, independent, Hastings Borough Council
Cllr Hau-Yu Tam, independent, Lewisham Council
Cllr Chloë Goldsmith, Green Party, Brighton & Hove City Council
Cllr Raphael Hill, Green Party, Brighton & Hove City Council
Cllr Lotte Collett, independent, Haringey Council
Cllr Jane McCoid, independent, Gateshead Council
This is actually an abridged version of the full statement, which they haven’t released a text version of anywhere because apparently uploading jpegs of text to Twitter is how we do politics now.
Years of austerity and privatisation have decimated our public services and pushed millions into poverty, disproportionately impacting women, people of colour and disabled people. The collapse of the Tory government was an opportunity for Labour to end the grotesque levels of inequality reached under the Tories. Instead, they have chosen to inflict more hardship on the British public who expected - and deserved - something better.
Labour is raising defence expenditure to 2.5% of GDP while telling us there is no money to lift 250,000 children out of poverty; no money to help pensioners living in poverty stay warm this winter; and no money to maintain the £2 bus cap which punishes the poorest for trying to get to work and go about their lives.
Put simply, this is a lie. There is plenty of money. It’s just in the wrong hands. The richest 1% in the UK hold more wealth than 70 per cent of Britons. By refusing to impose a wealth tax, this Government has chosen to force vulnerable communities to pay the price for years of economic failure, instead of making the richest pay their fair share. Labour’s first budget shows us whose side they’re on.
Making millions of children, working, retired and disabled people poorer damages our entire economy and stretches our public services. An austerity economy is a false economy.
Shifting the fiscal rules to increase investment is welcome but this should have been used to tackle inequality and maximise the creation of good jobs. As we saw in the New Labour years, growth does not necessarily deliver for the majority - reducing poverty and inequality while tackling the climate emergency should have dictated Labour’s policy choices. Instead the Chancellor has wedded us to a failed economic ideology and undermined our ability to fix this country.
We call on the Labour Government to:
We refuse to believe that child poverty, mass hunger and homelessness are inevitable in the sixth largest economy in the world. A progressive movement is growing up and down the country, demanding a real alternative to this race to the bottom between Labour and the Tories which has seen the new government perpetuate decades of austerity and rampant corporate greed.
The Tories’ collapse allowed Labour to come to power with the lowest vote share ever won by any single party majority government. Labour hemorrhaging votes to progressive independents and Greens in their heartlands should be a lesson to this Government: you are wrong to believe that progressive voters have nowhere else to go. Our movement is growing every day - and you ignore the demand for a real alternative at your peril.
largely used when millions of people lost their lives in crises like Rwanda, the Second World War, the Holocaust, and the way that they are used now undermines the seriousness of that term
Nitpick, but Lammy said “the Second Word War and the Holocaust”, the ways they’ve transribed it implies Lammy was saying the Second World War itself was a genocide.
Last summer, he referred to Azerbaijan’s bloody conquest of Nagorno-Karabakh, with the exodus of a terrified Armenian population, as “liberation”.
Excuse me? That’s actually disgraceful.
What, Emacs is a successful init system https://github.com/a-schaefers/systemE
gender? a thing evry one gets ecual aksess to?!‽ i wont fall for this markest proper gander!!!.
inspired Kamala’s dangerously liberal policies
I never knew Trump felt so strongly about VAT on private schools.
So he went with the means to cheat, but didn’t use it? That’s somehow even stranger.
Both the Green Party and the RSPB have voiced concerns about what this will mean for Britain.
Here’s what Green Party MP Ellie Chowns said:
"Starmer’s pledge to investors that he will “cut red tape” is a tired cliché that, in practice, too often means harming environmental standards and workers’ rights. We’ve had fourteen years of successive Conservative governments promising to “cut red tape,” and all we have to show for it is a flatlining economy and falling living standards.
If Starmer is serious about attracting investment to the UK, he will need a bolder approach that delivers on the “change” he promised in his election campaign. He could start by re-evaluating our relationship with our biggest trading partner, the European Union.”
And RSPB chief executive Beccy Speight:
"An unsettling speech from the PM this morning for those who love and value nature. Deregulation done in the wrong way is effectively dropping standards, at a time when the natural world desperately needs better protection. It’s a short-sighted tactic that could have ramifications for us all in years to come, undermining our long term prosperity - better methods, such as nature-friendly planning, would give businesses the certainty they need.
We support growth and we support the badly-needed energy transition, but not at the expense of our precious wildlife and wild places.
His very own secretary of state [Steve Reed] said recently that “nature is dying” – uncontrolled deregulation is tantamount to hammering the final nail into its coffin."
A spokesman for Kemi Badenoch said it would be “wrong to infer any prejudice” from the report and that it was “essential that we are able to talk about these issues without the media deliberately misleading their readers for the sake of easy headlines”.
They’re right, it’d be wrong to infer something so explicit.
That’s because Starmer made getting stuff done in the first hundred days a major part of his campaign.
Tbf, there is like 350 million of you lot, that’s like 75% of the Anglosphere, so it makes sense you’d have the most news.
I love the implication that only Americans speak English.
What do you mean by handwriting features? I’ve played around with Write a bit and it has some cool features (I really like the ability to make a series of stokes a link) but I wouldn’t call them handwriting features.
This is honestly lower than I’d expect.