Cameron still a Wanker

John Marwood

I ♥ cryptic crosswords
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/8844773/Nicolas-Sarkozy-tells-David-Cameron-Were-sick-of-you-telling-us-what-to-do.html


Nicolas Sarkozy tells David Cameron: 'We’re sick of you telling us what to do'

Not the only one monsieur
 

Tinkerbell

Well-Known Forumite
6cdtlug


These pictures always cost me forum points, but they make me laugh :)
 

Tinkerbell

Well-Known Forumite
:hugs: ta -

I agree with you - hate this word too ordinarily - but for some reason on these two individuals it doesnt bother me :)
 

Hetairoi

Well-Known Forumite
I don't think that this pair have done anywhere near the damage that the Blair/Brown combo did to this country, but there is still plenty of time!
 

Wolfenrook

Well-Known Forumite
Hetairoi said:
I don't think that this pair have done anywhere near the damage that the Blair/Brown combo did to this country, but there is still plenty of time!
As you say, that's because they haven't been in power as long, YET. lol

Ade
 

United57

Well-Known Forumite
Another example of him being a wanker

"David Cameron Pledges To Name And Shame Failing Adoption Councils. Launching the Give a Child a Home campaign at the start of national adoption week, the premier said: "It is shocking that of the 3,600 children under the age of one in care, only 60 were adopted last year - this is clearly not good enough."


The man lives in cloud cuckoo land. A lot of those children under the age of 1 in care, will be subject to legal proceedings. Some maybe there temporarily whilst the situation changes. No one wants to take a child away from its mother unless there is no alternative.

There will be processes to decide whether the child should remain with the mother / parents. These cannot be rushed the childs interest is paramount and not a political sound bite. The mother / parent may contest the adoption.

Children are not commodities. The decision has to be correct. So will Cameron succeed in this ? No.

Judges will not allow the legal process to speed up if its not in the childs interest.

Also Mr Cameron has failed to recognise that by implementing cuts in local authorities there will be even less social workers to implement his Give a Child a Home campaign.

I guess Cameron sought the advice of Madonna on speeding up the child adoption process.
 

John Marwood

I ♥ cryptic crosswords
According to my money this is our next Prime Minister - 20-1 with Paddy Power
( the bloke on the left )



And is this his successor - 8-1 with Stan James



George Osborne is 7-1

Ed Milliband - hahahaha!
 

stoofer34

Well-Known Forumite
Walking Eagle

On a recent visit to The United States David Cameron addressed a major gathering of Native American Indians.
He spoke for almost an hour on his plans for a Carbon Trading Tax for thr UK and Europe.
At the conclusion of his speech they gave him a plaque with his new Indian name .... Walking Eagle.
Off David went, chuffed to bits, in his motorcade.
A reporter asked on of the Indians how they came to choose the name Walking Eagle.
The Indian explained that that was the name they gave to birds which were so full of crap that they could no longer fly.
 

United57

Well-Known Forumite
"David Cameron, his wife and three children had enjoyed an afternoon meal with two other families at The Plough in Cadsden, Bucks, when they took their eye off their eldest daughter Nancy.
The family left in separate cars and only realised Nancy was missing when they pulled up at Chequers, two miles away.
A Downing Street source Mr Cameron jumped straight back in the car and rushed back to collect his daughter from pub staff who were looking after her."

I wonder if they will have a visit from social services and if they are one of the troubled families announced today.
 

Gramaisc

Forum O. G.
I understand that it was really a failed escape attempt and this story is just a bit of spin - allegedly..
 

John Marwood

I ♥ cryptic crosswords
Seen this on the BBC News? - nor me



The end of Equality Assessments,slash three-month consultation periods on future government policy proposals, signalling that the public may not get a say at all on some proposals, with the final decision left to individual ministers

"All part of a return to the nasty party approach.

Although Cameron gave a lot of rhetoric before the election which the media fell for about how the party had changed and how socially liberal he and the Notting Hill set were, the reality has been very different.

The funding for the Equality and Human Rights Commission has been cut in half.

Legal Aid has been removed from all employment cases save in theory from discrimination law. However from next April the number of legal aid discrimination providers across England and Wales able to provide discrimination advice is being cut from 179 to 3 nationally.
Other protections provided by the Equality Act 2010 are being removed for example an end to employees ability to use discrimination questionnaires to find out whether or not companies have been applying discriminatory practices. In addition an end to the power for Employment Tribunals to make wider recommendation powers in discrimination cases.

Recent evidence is showing that redundancies in the Civil Service are disproportionately affecting minority groups.

Other cuts to employment protection are in the pipeline with Employment Tribunal fees being introduced next year which will allow fees up to £1,200 to take a discrimination case to hearing for the first time."

David Cameron has axed standard assessments used to gauge how policies affect different social groups as part of a drive to get rid of the "bureaucratic rubbish" that gets in the way of British business.
Cameron also vowed to slash three-month consultation periods on future government policy proposals, signalling that the public may not get a say at all on some proposals, with the final decision left to individual ministers. Other measures include reducing the time limit for bringing judicial reviews, hiking up the legal charge involved, and halving the number of possible appeals.
The prime minister outlined plans to axe equality impact assessments at the CBI conference, saying new government measures needed to be "tough, radical and fast" to help British business compete in the global race. He said "faster government" was one of the key steps Britain needs to take to thrive – "in this global race you are quick or you're dead", he said. Dead then
 
Top