tyb
o7
IT IS A ADMISSION OF DEFEAT
https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/113580801259196546
Donald J. Trump @realdonaldtrump
Does the Pardon given by Joe to Hunter include the J-6 Hostages, who have now been imprisoned for years? Such an abuse and miscarriage of Justice!
-–
711
Feb 10, 2018 5:16:54 AM EST
Q !UW.yye1fxo ID: 567809 No. 325300
Thank you Dopey.
King to pawn.
Eyes on.
Q
711 AND 1911
1911
Aug 16, 2018 1:07:20 PM EDT
Q !!mG7VJxZNCI ID: 0b7c69 No. 2628837
Aug 16, 2018 1:02:59 PM EDT
Anonymous ID: 79d84f No. 2628758
>>2628721
Never have I been so proud to be an Army Soldier! Hooah!
Aug 16, 2018 1:03:27 PM EDT
Anonymous ID: ff083b No. 2628768
So, aha, Q
You now have half the board thinking ES is Eric Schmidt and the other half think ES is Edward Snowden
Please confirm which
>>2628758
Hooah! Soldier.
Thank you for your service.
God bless.
Q
>>2628768
It should be clear in this context ES = @Snowden
It should be clear based on prev drop re: game comms why ES was included.
It should be clear that 'ES' was used in both (GOOG + @Snowden) drops to est a link.
Q
OK ANON WILL JOIN THE KASH PATEL MEME GAME.
Something strange is habbening in the u.k
labour under kier starmer are set to relaunch on wednesday after being complete deranged schizos in power and a bunch of theiving evil globalists.
article behind paywall, but anons know how to get it for free.
ARCHIVED
INSIDE NO 10
Keir Starmer lines up Labour relaunch … but is it mission impossible?
The prime minister will spell out his Plan for Change this week with a focus on early years education. But Louise Haigh’s resignation and budget woes threaten to bring him down to earth
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/keir-starmer-labour-relaunch-mission-impossible-ccq9bfksw
https://archive.ph/XTPbU
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Planning for the speech Sir Keir Starmer will give on Thursday, outlining the new goals of his government, began in the summer, when his two senior political advisers — Morgan McSweeney and Pat McFadden — met in McFadden’s garden in north London. There they began to work out how to turn the prime minister’s ten-year “missions” into concrete “measurable milestones” deliverable before the next election.
While the list of fewer than a dozen goals has been long in the pipeline — and was always planned to be the second major intervention after the budget — the “Plan for Change” published this week will be seen as something of a relaunch for Starmer, who has suffered a turbulent start, culminating last week in his first cabinet resignation. Louise Haigh quit as transport secretary when it was revealed that she had a conviction for fraud, something Starmer knew when he appointed her.
Following a budget which unnerved business leaders and enraged farmers, the prime minister has faced a public petition signed by more than 2.5 million people demanding a new general election — a campaign which has even been fuelled by Elon Musk, the space rocket tycoon and owner of X. The speech this week is seen as a new chance to achieve lift-off for the government.
McFadden, the Cabinet Office minister who sits on all five of the “mission boards” set up to deliver Starmer’s agenda, said this weekend: “At the heart of the Plan for Change are the milestones for change on each of the missions over the course of the parliament. We want to tell the public what our key priorities are and what they should hope for in terms of delivery from the government.”
Each of the five missions will have at least one goal, some of them two. There will be just one NHS target (to lower waiting lists) and there will be a goal to curb immigration.
The others will cover the economy, housebuilding, crime and the courts, green jobs and net zero. McSweeney, the Downing Street chief of staff, said the common theme which runs through each of the milestones is that they will contribute to a stronger economy.
Early opportunity
McFadden said the “education and opportunity” milestone will focus on early years education, identified as a key to life chances. Labour’s target will be to raise the number of children “ready for school” — both educationally and socially — when they start aged four or five from 60 per cent at present to 75 per cent. Before the pandemic the figure was about 70 per cent.
Continued
That would help an extra 40,000 to 45,000 children get to the right stage before they start school. Children behind in language and maths development aged five are more than twice as likely not to achieve English and maths GCSEs. McFadden said: “Children who have a gap between them and the rest of the class when they start school, even at the age of four or five, find it very difficult to turn that round later in life. There is evidence that even by the age of five or six years old, if someone is starting school with that development gap, it will affect their earnings later in life.”
A “gold standard” study in 2014 found that children who attend formal early education earn £27,000 more on average over their lifetime. A decade on, ministers believe the earnings gap would now be much higher.
Unprepared children also hold back their classmates. Teachers say 37 per cent of children arriving at school are unable to listen and respond to basic instructions, and 37 per cent are unable to dress independently, according to a report by the early years charity Kindred Squared. Nine out of ten teachers say at least one child in their class is not toilet-trained, while 46 per cent of pupils are unable to sit still and 38 per cent find it hard to play or share with other children.
“Dealing with it can be very costly in terms of teacher time and distraction for the rest of the class,” McFadden said. “This has got a lot worse since Covid. It’s estimated that more than a million school days worth of teacher time each year is spent dealing with this. That would be a million more teaching days focused on reading and writing.” That equates to two hours of wasted time per teacher per day, or ten hours a week.
Labour also wants to tackle regional inequalities in early years provision. “In Manchester or Burnley, for example, about two in five children aren’t reaching this level of development compared to, say, one in four in Richmond upon Thames,” McFadden said. “It’s really important to our Labour government, because we don’t believe that the circumstances into which children are born should dictate their life chances, that many of the people sitting around that cabinet table are the products of social mobility.”
How are they planning to tackle the issue? McFadden outlined a three-pronged strategy aimed at childcare, the nursery workforce and families. The government already has put in £2.3 billion to hire 6,500 new teachers and more cash to create 3,000 new and expanded school-based nurseries. McFadden said: “Falling school rolls mean we want to use that extra space to really focus on this group of children.”
There will also be measures to improve “training and support for the workforce” to “make sure that reception year gets children really ready for the first year at school”.
In addition, there will be a greater focus on “family hubs, health visiting, really targeted support for the children who need it”.
continued
Marking out milestones
Details of which milestones to focus on were thrashed out between Starmer and his “quad” of senior ministers — McFadden, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, and Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister — in the Thatcher study, on the first floor of No 10. The effort was “put on steroids” once the budget was out of the way.
Intriguingly, McSweeney has also revived a data science group called “10DS” of expert officials set up by Dominic Cummings during Boris Johnson’s time in power to analyse problems outside departmental silos and devise solutions. The chief of staff has told colleagues that the outfit is “brilliant” and has worked not only on the milestones but was also brought in during the final stages of budget preparation and into the morning meeting in No 10. McSweeney and Cummings have neither spoken nor met, but the chief of staff has talked to senior civil servants and other Tories who worked in Downing Street, who have stressed the need to prioritise if he is to achieve anything.
McSweeney, a keen student of political history, has concluded that Labour usually fails to win a full second term because they try to do too much. While Tory governments, run by people “born to power”, focus on retaining office, Labour governments “attempt to change the world”, he has told ministers. In this analysis, good Tory governments are patriotic, bad ones self-serving. Good Labour governments create monumental change, but at their worst become fatally unfocused and move away from the views of the public.
McSweeney’s belief has only intensified as a result of the US election where the Democrats, like most incumbent governments in the West, went backwards because they failed to deliver. “We have to convince the country that government can make a difference to people’s lives,” he has told colleagues.
When he addressed the cabinet meeting earlier this month in the Foreign Office to outline the chosen milestones, the chief of staff said the Plan for Change will have to kill the “political fiction” that politicians can fix everything because raising unrealistic expectations damages public trust. “We have to show people what our priorities are,” he said.
He also made the point that the budget has set the spending envelope for this parliament and that Labour does not want to increase taxes or borrowing further — and that means spending money in a highly targeted manner. Reeves told business leaders at the CBI conference on Monday she was “not going to come back for more” in the next five years.
The Plan for Change will consequently be rolled out in tandem with the full spending review, which will determine precisely where the money will be spent. That process will begin next week, after Starmer’s speech.
“These mission milestones will help to shape the spending review that’s coming next year,” McFadden explained. “This plan has been developed in conjunction with the Treasury and the mission leads and it will help to give a sense of the priorities, of where the money will be spent. One of the other reasons for publishing these mission milestones is it helps to galvanise the government system. It sends a strong signal out that this is what we want effort to be focused on.”
New blood at No 10
The job of driving through the changes will fall in part to the new cabinet secretary, who is due to be appointed this week. Three serving civil service mandarins — Dame Antonia Romeo, Tamara Finkelstein and Sir Chris Wormald — plus Sir Oliver Robbins, the former Brexit negotiator, were interviewed last week. McSweeney has kept his counsel and Starmer is “playing his cards very close to his chest”.
continued
Robbins is seen as the most able and the highest flyer, groomed for the job for years, but some think Starmer might prefer a lower-profile candidate following the departure of his former chief of staff, Sue Gray, whose secretive management style (shared by Robbins) became a lightning rod for criticism among political aides. That could also count against the charismatic and high-profile Romeo. Some think Finkelstein’s star is rising, though others say she is the candidate of the outgoing cabinet secretary Simon Case, which is thought to count against her in political circles.
Jonathan Powell, Sir Tony Blair’s former chief of staff who has been appointed national security adviser, starts work in No 10 on Monday. Liz Lloyd, his former deputy, arrives as Downing Street’s head of policy delivery next month. Both appointments were regarded as “moonshots” by McSweeney, who would have been pleased to land one of them and was delighted that both agreed to come.
Starmer will be praying for a smooth landing for the milestones after an opening five months where he has been criticised for lacking a strong political narrative or technocratic drive.
Too vague on Haigh
Ministers privately expressed incredulity that he appointed Haigh to the cabinet when he knew she had been convicted of fraud in 2014, just as she was becoming a Labour candidate.
Questions also remain about what Gray, the former head of Whitehall’s propriety and ethics team, knew about Haigh’s conviction, which has left a nasty whiff over a government which vowed to stamp out the sleaze of the Tory years.
Inside Labour the finger of suspicion has pointed at Sam White, Starmer’s former chief of staff who was also Haigh’s colleague at Aviva, over the leaks about Haigh. He denies such claims.
The budget, too, failed to land as Starmer and Reeves hoped. In the Treasury, officials privately admit that they have not got everything right. The scale of the backlash to the rise in inheritance tax on farms surprised the chancellor and her aides. Some openly question whether it was worth picking a damaging political fight with pensioners over cuts in winter fuel allowance for savings of just £1.5 billion.
However, McSweeney’s internal polling suggests the broad coalition of voters who gave Labour its landslide buys the argument that the government has tried to fix the economic problems it inherited in a “fair” way. Even in rural areas, where farmers are in uproar about inheritance tax increases which will hit many family farms, his numbers suggest that most voters there are more concerned about the fuel duty freeze, which has a greater impact on their household incomes. “If you knock on a door in a rural area the top three issues are the cost of living, the NHS and fuel duty,” one aide said. “Fuel duty affects people far more in rural areas because there’s less public transport.” In each rural seat, strategists estimate that only one or two farms will be affected by the change.
Labour and the Conservatives are neck and neck in the latest polling of Westminster voting intention. A survey conducted by More in Common last week had the Conservatives leading on 30 per cent with Labour on 27 per cent. BMG’s polling on the same days put the Conservatives on 27 per cent and Labour on 29 per cent. Starmer’s net approval rating is at -30 per cent, according to the think tank More in Common.
Starmer’s team will hope the mission milestones are seen by voters as a response to their wishes. The prime minister said: “This Plan for Change is the most ambitious yet honest programme for government in a generation. Mission-led government does not mean picking milestones because they are easy or will happen anyway. It means relentlessly driving real improvements in the lives of working people. Given the unprecedented challenges we have inherited we will not achieve this by simply doing more of the same, which is why investment comes alongside a programme of innovation and reform.”
Get it right, and McSweeney and McFadden will have plenty to cheer.
end
>>22093089, >>22093099, >>22093106, >>22093112 INSIDE NO 10 Keir Starmer lines up Labour relaunch … but is it mission impossible? - the times
Keep signing the petition - they are guilty of crimes against humanity along with all the others on all sides apart from reform u.k
2,939,609 signatures
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/700143
summary of the whole article
Note: There is a mission statement and rebranding on Thursday 5th.
This is Tony Blair inserting his assets in place to keep the same agenda, just word it into a different perception.
Nothing will change, it will just be presented differently, the tax rises, remain, the foreign investment is blackrock and not local or national complanies, the indoctornation of children will continue and the green agenda remains.
The times tabloid is like the nyt and wapo in the usa.
THIS IS A SHIT P.R STUNT BY TONY BLAIR AND THE GLOBALIST
>Jonathan Powell, Sir Tony Blair’s former chief of staff who has been appointed national security adviser, starts work in No 10 on Monday. Liz Lloyd, his former deputy, arrives as Downing Street’s head of policy delivery next month. Both appointments were regarded as “moonshots” by McSweeney, who would have been pleased to land one of them and was delighted that both agreed to come.
>Starmer will be praying for a smooth landing for the milestones after an opening five months where he has been criticised for lacking a strong political narrative or technocratic drive.
baker, below is notable and the bun has been constructed for you.
>>22093089, >>22093099, >>22093106, >>22093112, >>22093176 INSIDE NO 10 Keir Starmer lines up Labour relaunch … but is it mission impossible? - the times and anons summary opine.
copy and past it the links for now anon.
will definitely bring it there when anon gets time.
p.s have screenshot and archived offline.
corp o7
we will have freedom or there will be torch fires in the shires and pitch forks on the manors.
Pretty much
TODAY THE U.K HOUSE OF COMMONS HAD A DEBATE ON ASSISTED DEATH AND THE HOUSE WAS FULL, BUT WHEN THERE WAS A DEBATE ON EXCESS DEATH? - WELL ANIMAL FARM COMES TO MIND!!!
note; George Orwell again. if anon was a conspiracy theorist anon would think they want to kill the people injured by the vaccines to hide the evidence and shut people down.
They shut everyone down, arrested people while they partied.
they jabbed and killed the elderly etc etc etc
>>22093251, >>22093253 kier starmer p.r stunt by tony blair - posted to u.k bread.
in minecraft of course.
torches are expensive, got to use them to keep warm.
LABOUR GAVE THE W.H.O £350 MILLION AND WANT TO SIGN THE U.K UP TO THE PANDEMIC TREATY
Note: farage launches a bell toll campaign to reform the w.h.o or get out all togather, it is corrupted by bill gates, china and tony blair who wants the digital health passports.
oh and the elon musk bait.
gbnews title is misleading and completely leaves out the w.h.o treaty.
===
Nigel Farage breaks silence on Elon Musk donation in HUGE Reform boost: 'He's a big supporter!
https://youtu.be/Mvknyrg6ZkU
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2 Dec 2024 #nigelfarage #elonmusk #reformuk
Nigel Farage breaks silence on Elon Musk donation in HUGE Reform boost: 'He's a big supporter!'
11:11
24 delta's for the 2nd Dec
What was the date provided for the fisa release?
seems like Q was getting desparate to keep the anons believing in this holding psyop.
=
https://operationq.pub/?q=Dec%2002
3646
Dec 02, 2019 6:55:23 PM EST
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 735c71 No. 7414768
Anons, why would we provide the date of the FISA release?
Logical thinking.
Ammunition is finite.
Q
kash will do great.
but the memes must flow.
kash has a good sense of humour.
reminds anon of blazing saddles and a indian sheriff.
this will catch on as a on going meme.
kek
swordy