September 23, 2015 at 11:11 pm
Anyone a supporter here. I can’t say I was impressed by their leaders speech(sorry I have forgotten his name already). All I remember was he was so poor he lived up north in a lake and worked 26 hours a day in a gasworks.
By: hampden98 - 24th September 2015 at 13:49
…and all they could afford to drink was a cup of tea…..a cup of cold tea…..without milk…..or sugar…..or tea! 😉
“In a cracked cup and all.”
By: charliehunt - 24th September 2015 at 12:18
:dev2:
By: John Green - 24th September 2015 at 11:31
Yes but, only after sufficient torture.
By: charliehunt - 24th September 2015 at 10:34
It’s good to know that having pilloried the Lords as being undemocratic they are going to utilise that lack of democracy with their bizarrely large number of peers (pay-offs by Cameron to Clegg, I suppose) to vote against Government bills. I see extended use of the guillotine on the horizon!!
By: Meddle - 24th September 2015 at 10:14
I heard Nick Clegg on the radio a few days back claiming that the Lib Dems could have a new lease of life as a centre-right party after Labour’s swing to the left. What a strange world we live in.
By: hampden98 - 24th September 2015 at 07:53
Anyone a supporter here. I can’t say I was impressed by their leaders speech(sorry I have forgotten his name already). All I remember was he was so poor he lived up north in a lake and worked 26 hours a day in a gasworks.
“luxury!” (sorry, had to do it).
By: hampden98 - 24th September 2015 at 07:52
Was.
Lib Dems = history.
By: charliehunt - 24th September 2015 at 06:57
Who…..??
By: Bruce - 24th September 2015 at 06:25
Increasingly an irrelevance. Can’t see anything changing very much.
By: Creaking Door - 24th September 2015 at 01:17
…and all they could afford to drink was a cup of tea…..a cup of cold tea…..without milk…..or sugar…..or tea! 😉
Why do politicians seem to delight in ‘bragging’ about how poor their family was when they were growing- up? What is the merit in it? Yes, granted, he (Tim Farron) can rightly say that he got where he is today without any of the benefits or privileges of coming from a wealthy family but is that such an achievement these days? Is it reverse snobbery: you can vote for me because I’m not one of those posh b’stards you hate so much? Or is it just the numbers game; most of the electorate probably think they’re struggling themselves so they’ll be more likely to vote for somebody who they feel will understand that struggle?