Not on hypothetical trade deals with other countries, but on strong Trading Arrangements with the eu. What weve seen today from labour is, i think, their seventh brexit plan. Its yet another nonsensical Jeremy Corbyn plan. It all seems to come down to the Customs Union. Labour suggests it wants us in. But it wont say so quite that clearly. Well ask them to spell it out. And could labours Fortress Wales turn blue . I dont mind the. Whats her name, theresa may, dont mind her. So she could get your vote . Yeah, she could do this time. Ive always voted labour but. Jeremy corbyn . Oh, i dont like him, dont like him, no. Also tonight, is ivanka trump the most powerful woman here . We ask the vanity fair correspondent who has followed her career. Absolutely, from my reporting, people who are close to donald trump say theres only one person in the white house who is not expendable and its ivanka trump. Is south africas governing party on the brink of ousting its president . Happy birthday, dea
The Labour leader s discussions with the Taoiseach centred on the Northern Ireland Protocol, the Ukraine war and the strengthening of British-Irish relations.
President Donald Trump was right about many things. New revelations about how Covid19 escaped suggest he was right about that too. The Slog investigates.
Shortly before a Presidential press conference on April 23rd 2020, Donald Trump came across the manufacturer of a chlorine dioxide formulation for medical use. The President listened to the bloke’s claims and test results. At the Presser, Trump said he was impressed with the use of small-dose water soluble CLO2 in attacking the virus Covid19.
Two hundred megatons of excrement were poured by the media all over the POTUS hairstyle.
Forbes ran a piece claiming bleach (chlorine dioxide) was a false cure for COVID-19. Every news agency around the world took the same stance.
Social and economic changes have pushed people into ‘reluctant individualism’
Illustration Dom McKenzie Illustration: Dom McKenzie/The Observer
Illustration Dom McKenzie Illustration: Dom McKenzie/The Observer
Sun 28 Feb 2021 04.00 EST
Last modified on Sun 28 Feb 2021 06.48 EST
First, the good news. Britons see inequality as a major problem and divide broadly along traditional political lines in their attitudes towards it. Then, the bad news. Britons are also inclined to see inequalities as driven by individual behaviour as much as by social policy or structural factors.
So suggests Unequal Britain, a new study of public attitudes to inequalities published last week by the Policy Institute at King’s College, London. It’s a fascinating deep dive into perceptions both of the problems and the solutions.
A FURIOUS BBC row erupted on the Today programme as host Justin Webb accused Labour of siding with the EU in the negotiations, claiming the party wanted the UK bound to EU rules .