Tory-Reform coalition would be 'disaster for Britain', says Sir Keir Starmer
The prime minister said voters of the rival parties were "being conned" as he suggested there were attempts to merge the two parties going on "behind the scenes".
The prime minister was asked by Sky News political editor Beth Rigby whether he was "more worried" about Reform rather than the Conservatives ahead of the local and mayoral elections taking place across England this week.
He isn't much more coherent than Joe Biden, the phrases just plop out as unconvincing verbal blobs of nothing much.
7 comments:
Yes, voters for the other parties are being conned. They think they want adequate heat and light, lower taxes, revenues being spent here rather than abroad, an end to mass immigration, free speech, and truthfulness.
But how did they fall for that load of old nonsense?
Sam - it's baffling isn't it? Voters will think they need a roof over their heads soon, and some inexpensive candles for winter.
At least Joe Biden was (allegedly) senile. What is TTKs excuse?
DJ - TTK seems weirdly limited to me, not senile but like a goldfish swimming round and round in his little bowl of limitations. Going into politics was a strange choice for such an narrow man.
Coalition - or anything like it - would indeed be a disaster for Reform. If the voters suspect that it's just becoming another cheek of the Tory arse, they'll desert it instantly, and they'll be right to do so. We need real change, not more of the same dressed up in fancy verbiage.
Sir Two Tier has, of course, never conned the electorate.
Peter - I agree, a coalition with the Tories would be a disaster for Reform's credibility.
Tammly - although he'll struggle to do it again.
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