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A resignation letter from hell?

Tuesday blog

Usually a politician’s resignation letter starts with some waffle about ‘what an honour it has been to serve with you, but….’. Not so with Labour MP Rosie Duffield’s which lambasts multi-tier Keir for his greed, corruption, nepotism and betrayal of Labour values.

Duffield, from the little I understand, had previously locked horns with ‘I-don’t-know-what-a-woman-is’ Starmer and the Labour Party as she was, it seems, the only Labour MP to insist that there are just two biological sexes. So she was a bit of an embarrassment to her cowardly, trannie-hugging Labour colleagues and they’re probably glad to see the back of her.

Anyway, here’s her resignation letter in case you haven’t already seen it:

Page 1:

Page 2:

Page 3:

One of the cleverest videos on YouTube?

Something to cheer us up on a cold autumn morning as the BBC cracks open the champagne to celebrate the closure of Britain’s last coal-fired power station and the last functioning blast furnace at the Port Talbot steel works. Of course, these two monumentally-stupid and economically-suicidal decisions will result in the loss of thousands of real jobs. But the overpaid, over-pensioned paedophiles and sexual deviants at the BBC couldn’t give a damn for the now unemployed workers.

1 comment to A resignation letter from hell?

  • A Thorpe

    I think there should be a by-election. My belief is that most people vote for the party rather than the person.

    I don�t know what the economic case is for the closures.

    Ratcliffe power station was commissioned in 1968 and I would imagine it is getting expensive and difficult to maintain. On the other hand we might need it to get us through the winter without power cuts.

    With Port Talbot, we don�t have iron for steel making and have to import it. Our energy costs are high and also our labour costs. It is probably cheaper to import steel.

    In both cases we have to consider the job losses and impact on the communities and this could justify keeping both open. The government should be more honest with us. But if we go down the route of increasing the cost of what we produce that has an impact on everything we hope to export. We become less competitive.

    My conclusion is that Britain is in a period of decline. Geography is against us. We don�t have the raw materials we need for a competitive economy and we are a high cost country. It is really the bigger countries that have resources. The USA is using fracking but the British seem opposed to anything sensible. We are our worst enemy.

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