Starmer
Re: Starmer
Starmer owns a field.
For keeping donkeys.
Land used for keeping donkeys would typically be grade 4 - poor quality. Or even the lowest grade, 5, very poor quality. But Starmer bought it because it was next to his parent's house and they could look at the donkeys out the window. Judging by an aerial view, it might be grade 3a or 3b.
This means a valuation range of £5,000 per acre to £10,000 per acre. Starmer owns 7 acres. I'd guess it's worth about £50,000.
The Daily Mail valued it at £10,000,000.
If you're going to lie, lie big.
For keeping donkeys.
Land used for keeping donkeys would typically be grade 4 - poor quality. Or even the lowest grade, 5, very poor quality. But Starmer bought it because it was next to his parent's house and they could look at the donkeys out the window. Judging by an aerial view, it might be grade 3a or 3b.
This means a valuation range of £5,000 per acre to £10,000 per acre. Starmer owns 7 acres. I'd guess it's worth about £50,000.
The Daily Mail valued it at £10,000,000.
If you're going to lie, lie big.
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Re: Starmer
Interesting comment on recent PMQs:
https://mobile.twitter.com/thhamilton/s ... 7825211392
Basically, look beyond the theatrics - Starmer is forcing the government's hand on policy changes.
https://mobile.twitter.com/thhamilton/s ... 7825211392
Basically, look beyond the theatrics - Starmer is forcing the government's hand on policy changes.
Re: Starmer
Yup, and if the government actually delivers, well, we're in a better place than we'd be otherwise.AMS wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 6:46 pmInteresting comment on recent PMQs:
https://mobile.twitter.com/thhamilton/s ... 7825211392
Basically, look beyond the theatrics - Starmer is forcing the government's hand on policy changes.
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation
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Re: Starmer
Starmer's made it very clear he wants the government to succeed in tackling coronavirus, and was determined to use the scrutiny and challenge of opposition to aid them in doing so.
Re: Starmer
Exactly, which makes Johnson's bluster so bad. And Johnson had had the opportunity to play the statesman.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 9:07 pmStarmer's made it very clear he wants the government to succeed in tackling coronavirus, and was determined to use the scrutiny and challenge of opposition to aid them in doing so.
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation
Re: Starmer
Harsh but trueHarry Yorke
@HarryYorke1
· 19h
Having spoken to a few Labour contacts today, clear Sir Keir Starmer's strategy on Cummings is to keep quiet and let Conservative MPs do all the talking.
Told that when asked who was doing the broadcast round for the party this morning, one official replied: "Michael Gove".
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation
Re: Starmer
I thought this was an elegantly worded statement too. The line saying Johnson "should have drawn a line under" this was directly aimed at the government line that we "need to move on" from the story.
Keir Starmer wrote:Boris Johnson should have drawn a line under the Dominic Cummings saga but was too weak to act.
The public have sacrificed so much for the health of our nation - which he's now undermined.
And sent a message that there's one rule for them and another for the British people.
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Re: Starmer
'Interesting' response to the defunding the police question on GMB...
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Re: Starmer
And looks like they have backfired a bit...
https://m.huffingtonpost.co.uk/amp/entr ... ssion=true
(Or oh no it wasn't that, it was a problem anyway?)
https://m.huffingtonpost.co.uk/amp/entr ... ssion=true
(Or oh no it wasn't that, it was a problem anyway?)
To defy the laws of tradition is a crusade only of the brave.
Re: Starmer
“Defund the police” is a f.cking terrible slogan. There’s no easy way to say you agree with the goals without sounding like you want to abolish the police.
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Re: Starmer
He could have started by saying that he recognizes there are problems with the police and criminal justice system,
that these are (perhaps) actually linked with underfunding of services generally, and talked about the unimplemented recommendations in the review carried out by his now shadow justice secretary in 2017 and which his shadow justice secretary has been repeatedly raising in the commons. Or he could at least not have talked about how many people he has had locked up given the racial disparities in the prison population.
ETA sorry, brought to court, not got in prison.
that these are (perhaps) actually linked with underfunding of services generally, and talked about the unimplemented recommendations in the review carried out by his now shadow justice secretary in 2017 and which his shadow justice secretary has been repeatedly raising in the commons. Or he could at least not have talked about how many people he has had locked up given the racial disparities in the prison population.
ETA sorry, brought to court, not got in prison.
To defy the laws of tradition is a crusade only of the brave.
Re: Starmer
Exactly, that’s a nuanced reply not an easy one to get across in a headline. Any positive response he makes to “defund the police” will be absolutely leapt on by the right wing press.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 7:59 amHe could have started by saying that he recognizes there are problems with the police and criminal justice system,
that these are (perhaps) actually linked with underfunding of services generally, and talked about the unimplemented recommendations in the review carried out by his now shadow justice secretary in 2017 and which his shadow justice secretary has been repeatedly raising in the commons. Or he could at least not have talked about how many people he has had locked up given the racial disparities in the prison population.
ETA sorry, brought to court, not got in prison.
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Re: Starmer
This isn't two weeks before a general election, he has time to build a case. His comments have put off other people who I would imagine don't read the right wing press. The right wing press have four years of finding things to leap on him about, it is going to happen regardless.Grumble wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 8:25 amExactly, that’s a nuanced reply not an easy one to get across in a headline. Any positive response he makes to “defund the police” will be absolutely leapt on by the right wing press.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 7:59 amHe could have started by saying that he recognizes there are problems with the police and criminal justice system,
that these are (perhaps) actually linked with underfunding of services generally, and talked about the unimplemented recommendations in the review carried out by his now shadow justice secretary in 2017 and which his shadow justice secretary has been repeatedly raising in the commons. Or he could at least not have talked about how many people he has had locked up given the racial disparities in the prison population.
ETA sorry, brought to court, not got in prison.
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Re: Starmer
I disagree there. Party leaders can be defined early on and can find it very difficult to change initial perceptions.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 8:29 amThis isn't two weeks before a general election, he has time to build a case. His comments have put off other people who I would imagine don't read the right wing press. The right wing press have four years of finding things to leap on him about, it is going to happen regardless.
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Re: Starmer
If a journalist asks you a question you don't have to actually answer it. He could have chosen a few connected points: stretched services across the board, racial disparities in the criminal justice system including the police that need reform (and which have worsened up to the tories), failure of the Tories to implement the recommendations in the Lammy review. None of those need be presented in a way that remotely suggest the police should be defunded.Woodchopper wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:04 amI disagree there. Party leaders can be defined early on and can find it very difficult to change initial perceptions.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 8:29 amThis isn't two weeks before a general election, he has time to build a case. His comments have put off other people who I would imagine don't read the right wing press. The right wing press have four years of finding things to leap on him about, it is going to happen regardless.
He's a barrister, his job is literally to present complex information succinctly in the face of hostile questioning. Assuming he did jury trials, that would involve persuading members of the public. He was the human rights advisor to the Policing Board in Northern Ireland, so I assume he has plenty of experience to draw on there as well even without referring directly to it in interviews.
It's a shame that the concern remains more about automatically trying to figure out how to keep the right wing press happy, rather than figuring out how to communicate a message that doesn't alienate an entire demographic.
Anyway here are a few recent headlines from the Sun:
TAKE YOUR TIME Axed Rebecca Long Bailey FINALLY deletes tweet to ‘anti-semitic’ article which got her sacked by Keir Starmer
LABOUR AT WAR Rebecca Long-Bailey says Sir Keir Starmer caused ‘avoidable mess’ by firing her over anti-Semitic conspiracy theory
CORBYN FURY Corbyn leads calls for Rebecca Long-Bailey to be reinstated as Labour civil war threatens to erupt
'SEXIST' LABOUR Sir Keir Starmer has taken over a Labour Party which ‘silences’ women, Lisa Nandy warned
KEIR SCHTUMMER Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer slammed for long silence on the re-opening of schools
DAN WOOTTON It’s rich for Labour to accuse the Tories of a culture war after they’ve belittled BAME women
HARD JUSTICE Sir Keir Starmer and the Jimmy Savile scandal – what was Labour leader’s involvement as head of Public Prosecutions?
A bit of a mixed bag, but already a fair bit of focus on Labour excluding women and ethnic minorities, and a nod towards failure to prosecute sexual predators, which has popped up here and there in other places as well. Whether that 'story' will last several more years or be revived in time for a GE is another matter I suppose.
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Re: Starmer
Failure to answer a question is typically reported as tacit support for something.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:48 amIf a journalist asks you a question you don't have to actually answer it.Woodchopper wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:04 amI disagree there. Party leaders can be defined early on and can find it very difficult to change initial perceptions.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 8:29 amThis isn't two weeks before a general election, he has time to build a case. His comments have put off other people who I would imagine don't read the right wing press. The right wing press have four years of finding things to leap on him about, it is going to happen regardless.
If truth is many-sided, mendacity is many-tongued
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Re: Starmer
OK: 'no I don't agree, the situation is not directly comparable with the US, but I understand concerns and anger about [the cause of injustices in the UK]'. Or some variation thereof, could be worded differently. Although my replies so far have also referred to arguing that public services in general including the police are underfunded.El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:59 amFailure to answer a question is typically reported as tacit support for something.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:48 amIf a journalist asks you a question you don't have to actually answer it.Woodchopper wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:04 am
I disagree there. Party leaders can be defined early on and can find it very difficult to change initial perceptions.
To defy the laws of tradition is a crusade only of the brave.
Re: Starmer
You could even blame it on the Tories, while your at it.discovolante wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 10:04 amOK: 'no I don't agree, the situation is not directly comparable with the US, but I understand concerns and anger about [the cause of injustices in the UK]'. Or some variation thereof, could be worded differently. Although my replies so far have also referred to arguing that public services in general including the police are underfunded.El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:59 amFailure to answer a question is typically reported as tacit support for something.
Re: Starmer
If Starmer had agreed with defunding the police, you can bet that clip would get dragged up again and again at PMQs, as well as Tory Facebook ads etc, especially every time the Tories were on the ropes on a law and order matter.
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Re: Starmer
If you're responding to the posts in this thread, then I don't think I have said that he should have agreed with defunding the police?
To defy the laws of tradition is a crusade only of the brave.
Re: Starmer
From the interview he is strongly supportive of the police and fundamentally disagrees with the aims of BLM (UK) in this regard. Must admit I’m not familiar with what their aims are around defund the police. I would hope Starmer was familiar before he commented on them.
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Re: Starmer
Their argument is that building more prisons and expanding police powers isn't a solution to social problems, and that the institutional racism of the judicial system is only one kind of injustice that it enforces.Grumble wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2020 4:10 pmFrom the interview he is strongly supportive of the police and fundamentally disagrees with the aims of BLM (UK) in this regard. Must admit I’m not familiar with what their aims are around defund the police. I would hope Starmer was familiar before he commented on them.
Here's a short guardian article - to quote the dénouement:
From https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... ves-matterBetween 1993 and 2016, the prison population in England and Wales almost doubled, and within a year of release, almost half of incarcerated adults are reconvicted. We have the largest prison population in western Europe. Despite reforms, training and inquiries into police racism, black Britons make up 12% of adult prisoners and more than 20% of children in custody – compared to just 3% of the general population. Amnesty has reported that anti-gang policing targets black young people with little or no connection to violent crime. But Black Lives Matter protesters do not demand police defunding because of institutional racism alone: it is a demand that seeks tangible, evidenced and effective improvements in public safety for all, beginning with those who need it most.
From domestic violence services to new social housing and the restoration of the educational maintenance allowance for those in post-16 education, there are innumerable investments that should be made before we continue to throw good money after bad. The best way to tackle racism in our criminal justice system and create safer communities for everyone is through reducing police power and resources, while bolstering the capacity of our health, social and educational systems. Keir Starmer’s approach will only add more harm to our society, rather than resolving it.
The UK argument doesn't even require expensive police retraining, just a diversion of funding from invasive policing and incarceration to social programs. It is quite surprising to see a Labour leader opposed to that, though obviously in Starmer's case he's spent a lot of his career as a prominent figure in the rapidly expanding and increasingly intrusive police system, so perhaps it shouldn't be in his case.
A shame he felt he had to dismiss a lot of sensible people's concerns as 'nonsense', though - seems like he's more interesting in impressing the Mail than his own base of voters.
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