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David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:19 pm
by Dickie Davies
If Gordon Brown calls the election next week, it is possible that David Cameron could be Prime Minister in early November, with George Osborne his Chancellor.
What do board members think of this prospect?
Re: David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:21 pm
by Sam Slater
No.
People are fed up with Labour, but hate the Tories.
Re: David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:30 pm
by Lizard
Bring it on I say, EVERYBODY bitches about nu-labour, so lets have a change, how could it be worse? if it means getting rid of that un-elected slimeball Brown Gordon, I'd vote for David Ike, no fuck it, Anne Widdecome
[img]
http://www.englandism.com/images/gordon-brown.jpg[/img]
Smug cunt.
Re: David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:43 pm
by andy at handiwork
I feel so strongly about ID cards, the promise from the Tories to drop the bloody proposals could almost get me to .......forget everything I hate about them.
Re: David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:51 pm
by Pervert
Everything the Tolies have been promising is geared, as normal, towards their rich chums. Lord Snooty spent last weekend going on about his party's "compelling policies." Apart from ditching aspects of inheritance tax, I've yet to hear anything concrete.
Cambo is an empty shirt, and elements of his own party hold him in contempt. Don't expect him in Downing Street any time soon.
The only reason for Labour going for an election this early is because someone thinks the economy is going to go tits up soon. So, hopefully, we won't have one until 2009 at the earliest. By then, enough people might trust politicians enough to vote.
Sorry----naive, really.
Re: David Cameron PM in November?
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2007 7:56 pm
by colonel
The key fact here that you haven't mentioned will be this Government's greatest legacy- that whereas under Thatcher you had to suffer or emigrate; now you can just move to Scotland or Wales.
Yes- for day-to- day living, both are and will remain Tory free zones. However much Salmond hates Brown will pale into insignificance if Cameron/Osborne took power. Westminster's powers are limited in Scotland to foreign affairs, defence, social security, the finance to pay for all that, and other areas such as the Crown and styles and titles. Wales has less power- particularly in the areas of justice, police and local government reform. But for health, education, housing, culture, agriculture, fisheries,transport and local government operation, all is devolved to both.