Could he ever become a UK Prime Minister having been a great success as the London mayor
Bridge too far perhaps













I agree I take a different view to my chum OBF, because I am not sure a classics degree proves much. If Boris became leader of the Tories they might lurch even further into the hands of the unthinking blinkered right wing factions so vocal in the Tory party.sumdumbloke wrote:What are the great successes of his reign that you all refer to?
As far as I can see he's just a part-time cheerleader (if a Labour mayor kept his day job as Johnson has done whilst trying to be mayor imagine the outcry)
He's a very good PR man. Past that? Remember the bullingdon club photos?
Which would still be significantly better over the brain-dead, economy destroying left wing factions that make up the Labour party.Frank Manning wrote:they might lurch even further into the hands of the unthinking blinkered right wing factions so vocal in the Tory party.

Kendhni wrote:Which would still be significantly better over the brain-dead, economy destroying left wing factions that make up the Labour party.Frank Manning wrote:they might lurch even further into the hands of the unthinking blinkered right wing factions so vocal in the Tory party.


Are you sure it wasn't 38 .. or is it maybe 40 .. or possibly 23?Onelife wrote:Yes Ken, and if the 39 Conservative U-turns are anything to go by it could take a whole lot longer than that?![]()
Regards
Keith

gfwgfw wrote:Bleeding Heck
Invited Boris for a typical rural Darzet wayzgoose and he has excepted for amusing services rendered
How best should I treat my "hero"

Well at least we’re in agreement that there have been lots of government u-turns? As for precisely how many and how much their incompetence has cost the country gawd only knows. What I do know is one of their U-turns cost the tax payer £100 million because of their divering over which fighter jets they should order, add to this the West coast Rail franchise cock up which I believe cost another £50 million then you can soon see there’s room for improvement in their policy making department.Kendhni wrote:Are you sure it wasn't 38 .. or is it maybe 40 .. or possibly 23?Onelife wrote:Yes Ken, and if the 39 Conservative U-turns are anything to go by it could take a whole lot longer than that?![]()
Regards
Keith
Many of the so called u-turns (for any government) is the media creating non-stories to sell their rags to a gullible public. The same happened with Gordon Brown when he, at one point, was referred to as 'corkscrew Brown' because of the number of u-turns he was doing. The bottom line is that many of the u-turns, on any government, relate to nothing more than ideas that have been fielded for discussion, the media has picked them up, knee-jerked out of control, misled the public and then when the government decides it was not a good idea, or could not be funded, or needed more thought or whatever, the media refer to it as a uturn .. but it keeps the public happy and sells the rags.
Also, with a coalition government one would expect more changes in policy ... that is often both an upside and a downside of coalition governments.
Fortunately the coalition government now seems to have got a grasp on the economy and we are seeing confidence and investment returning ... this bodes well for the second half of this decade ... but then again, we have to think about repaying the debt and solving the pensions timebomb that has been shelved ...again!
