
......actually never mind the election - we all know what the result is going to be
( , Thu 31 Oct 2019, 22:43, Reply)

I always think of this when people want to let Labour back in, the party that literally left a note saying "there's no money left".
Proof decades later that regardless of party, people vote for who they voted for regardless of how shit they've been before.
The bit at the end is a perfect denouement.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 10:21, Reply)

It’s actually a tradition for outgoing chancellors to leave notes like this for their replacements.
I expect Theresa left one for Boris too, on the lines of “sorry, there’s no majority left”.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 15:27, Reply)

Liam Byrne, who left the note, was never chancellor.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 17:34, Reply)

Despite the fact that such notes are good humoured jibes between rivals and not meant to be used for political purposes
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 17:37, Reply)

You thought the note was from an outgoing chancellor FFS.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 20:08, Reply)

In fact he was chief secretary to the treasury. I still fail to see what was so reprehensible about it, beyond the political fallout.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 23:20, Reply)

is that there is not a party that has any chance of being voted into power which is not shit.
It is all down to which kind of shit you can bear swallowing.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 15:40, Reply)

because the yanks had fucked the world over with their sub-prime mortgages - so there is that. That's where the money went in case anyone is interested. It wasn't an orgy of brand new libraries, minimum wage, bursaries for nurses, student fees and more bobbies on the beat. It was greedy Tory bankers who bled this country dry and they're at it again with Brexit.

( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 16:40, Reply)

That's ridiculous. Nobody thinks the crash was caused by Wolverhampton having too many libraries. What they do think is that the government of the day was recklessly handling the budget in times of plenty, which bit us in the arse when the economy tanked through external forces.
The economy was a bubble. The money wasn't siphoned off, it literally didn't exist in the first place.
The money that supported the banks protected your savings, your mortgage, your pension, and very likely your job. It has also largely been repaid.
( , Fri 1 Nov 2019, 17:56, Reply)