Tweet deleted
Tweet deleted
Tweet deleted
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Deleted tweet? What did it say?
in the middle of a pandemic... without a ballot?Any NHS staff affected by the above should go on strike now.
In the middle of the pandemic they're being told to essentially feck off.in the middle of a pandemic... without a ballot?
so they should basically say we are going to break the law to risk peoples lives till you change the law to suit us ... thats pretty much blackmail.In the middle of the pandemic they're being told to essentially feck off.
The Government give zero fecks about them, this is the time they have most leverage.
Unfortunately, a lot of NHS staff care too much what the public think and the Government were far better at PR the last time someone in the NHS tried to pipe up (the junior doctors, who've ended up having a shitty contract imposed on them).In the middle of the pandemic they're being told to essentially feck off.
The Government give zero fecks about them, this is the time they have most leverage.
Yes.I actually think if starmer deals with it well pointing out that the conservatives are busy yaaaaa booooing like children whilst people are dying will work well for him (provided his own side can resist the urge to join in the pantomime)
And this is why workers rights have stagnated as they have. We all go on about shitty working conditions and bullshit like this but then as soon as people suggest we do something about it, they're the ones who get villified.so they should basically say we are going to break the law to risk peoples lives till you change the law to suit us ... thats pretty much blackmail.
Yet on the previous page you had a problem with a trade union leader acknowledging that the law protected workers from being put at risk. Now you are clutching your pearls at the suggestion workers should break the law.so they should basically say we are going to break the law to risk peoples lives till you change the law to suit us ... thats pretty much blackmail.
You're odds on for retaining your Worst Poster award, you know?Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Yes, its best to do this kind of thing when you have most leverage....remember, these people have done nothing wrong, they're heroes.so they should basically say we are going to break the law to risk peoples lives till you change the law to suit us ... thats pretty much blackmail.
For a strike to be legal does it not have to have a compliant ballot rather than people simply walking out (leaving essential medical services unstaffed in a pandemic for an added bonus i guess)Yet on the previous page you had a problem with a trade union leader acknowledging that the law protected workers from being put at risk. Now you are clutching your pearls at the suggestion workers should break the law.
isnt it best to do these things legally...Yes, its best to do this kind of thing when you have most leverage....remember, these people have done nothing wrong, they're heroes.
But it's ok for the employer to make these decisions themselves without consulting their employees?isnt it best to do these things legally...
you know having a ballott in line with the regulations
giving due notice to the employer (in this case NHS) so they can ensure an adequate level of care is available to patients in the middle of a pandemic
rather than just walking out ... and potentially killing a lot of people who have done nothing wrong (which would go against the heroic description a tad)
Just ban me now.You're odds on for retaining your Worst Poster award, you know?
Just tell us what it said ffs Elvis.
pretty sure its a government decision and essentially they have stuck to what they always said ... (income thresholds / who is entitled to what etc in the immigration bill)But it's ok for the employer to make these decisions themselves without consulting their employees?
They're doing the work, putting themselves on the line, and then going to get told to pay up or get out.isnt it best to do these things legally...
you know having a ballott in line with the regulations
giving due notice to the employer (in this case NHS) so they can ensure an adequate level of care is available to patients in the middle of a pandemic
rather than just walking out ... and potentially killing a lot of people who have done nothing wrong (which would go against the heroic description a tad)
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Can't help but think this will end up back firing massively. Heckling from Conservative backbenchers against a calm opposition leader focused on the facts of just how terrible the government's coronavirus response has been will only serve in making the opposition look like the grown ups in the debate. Especially since this new format has exposed Boris Johnson and his cabinet for the lying chancers that they are.
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Admittedly I didn't care much for it until the virtual format was introduced. It's so much more productive and watchable without the childish booing and heckling over ministers raising important questions. I'll be sad to see it go back to normal.Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
It literally doesn't matter as no one sadly cares about PMQ's.
Agree with you here, its far better than the norm and it's going to be pretty awful when it returns back.Admittedly I didn't care much for it until the virtual format was introduced. It's so much more productive and watchable without the childish booing and heckling over ministers raising important questions. I'll be sad to see it go back to normal.
Hopefully it's just them still riding high due to the pandemic. In times of crisis people tend to rally around the government(Almost all western governments have had a massive polling boost since the pandemic).On YouGov's polls, it truly baffles me that people would still vote Conservative. They may not be watching PMQ's but the media is certainly not giving them an easy ride on the way they have handled this situation.
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Guardian said:According to Sky’s Tamara Cohen, the Independent Office for Police Conduct will announce shortly that it will not be launching a criminal investigation into Boris Johnson and his relationship with the American businesswoman Jennifer Arcuri when he was mayor.
Maybe they should just write a strongly worded email instead? All workers rights have been won that way, right?isnt it best to do these things legally...
you know having a ballott in line with the regulations
giving due notice to the employer (in this case NHS) so they can ensure an adequate level of care is available to patients in the middle of a pandemic
rather than just walking out ... and potentially killing a lot of people who have done nothing wrong (which would go against the heroic description a tad)
Also does not follow government advice of work from home if possible.Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Can't help but think this will end up back firing massively. Heckling from Conservative backbenchers against a calm opposition leader focused on the facts of just how terrible the government's coronavirus response has been will only serve in making the opposition look like the grown ups in the debate. Especially since this new format has exposed Boris Johnson and his cabinet for the lying chancers that they are.
BBC news saying no evidence to investigate further but record keeping at the mayor's office has been criticised while Johnson was in office.Boris Johnson will not face criminal inquiry over Jennifer Arcuri
https://www.theguardian.com/politic...ot-face-criminal-inquiry-over-jennifer-arcuri
We laugh at America, but this shit has been going on over here for longer. But.....clap, clap
I'm just picturing huge stacks of paper being tossed by Boris' team into a bonfire with the independent investigators standing beside it ticking a few boxes in their notebooks and shouting "nothing to see here"BBC news saying no evidence to investigate further but record keeping at the mayor's office has been criticised while Johnson was in office.
Hmmmmmmmm.
This is literally so dumb. I don't know if anyone has done a take down of his points but anyway.Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date