Eh? Labour got 34% of the popular vote, not 20%. Also we don't have presidential elections in this country.But it seems I've been wrong about Keir Starmer. Current polling puts his personal popularity at 26%, which is a 6% increase on the percentage of the electorate that voted for him. Clearly he's doing a bang-up job![]()
of the popular vote
of the electorate
Still not sure what your point is. I'm no Starmer fanboy (if any such thing exists) but this just looks like a bit of a cope, tbh.
Popularity used to bring people together, now anti-popularity does.
Popularity used to bring people together, now anti-pope does.
Still not sure what your point is. I'm no Starmer fanboy (if any such thing exists) but this just looks like a bit of a cope, tbh.
"popularity used to bring people together, now anti-popularity brings anti-people together."You sound like a French philosopher.
I reckon a party called the Anti-people's Unpopular Front would clean up at the next election."popularity used to bring people together, now anti-popularity brings anti-people together."
That's how they do it. Make up a new word when there was a perfectly good one already available. But people love it!You sound like a French philosopher.
That's how they do it. Make up a new word when there was a perfectly good one already available. But people love it!
Investors at Thames Water, Yorkshire Water, and Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water will be forced to pick up the tab for executive bonuses after the regulator determined that the sector had awarded “undeserved” extra payments, worth £6.8m.
Ofwat said on Thursday it had used new powers to ensure that bonuses at the three companies were paid by shareholders and bondholders – rather than through customer bills – because the payments had not “adequately reflected overall company performance issues”.
Does MI5's brief generally include enforcing water quality standards?He will do whatever MI5 tell him to do