
UK Tories Quitting Party Like “Rats Leaving a Sinking Ship”
Well over one-tenth of the Conservative Party’s current stock of MPs have already announced they will not stand again at the next general election.
Well over one-tenth of the Conservative Party’s current stock of MPs have already announced they will not stand again at the next general election.
The Tories have made it as plain as they can: they will do nothing to stop the boats. And not one of them will entertain hosting an illegal migrant, but they’ll make sure you do.
A former Conservative Party health minister said the government should implement a preventative approach to reduce the rise in “costly” chronic illnesses.
Media groups in more than 60 countries were represented by an open letter accusing the Conservative Party of undermining press freedom.
Migration Watch chairman Alp Mehmet told The European Conservative that much needs to be done to fix the “shambolic” migration system, but “there’s scant evidence that the government is up to the task.”
Farage has officially gone public with his intention to re-enter the fray. Whatever else might be said about him, his track record of leading insurgencies is second to none.
Their arguments on Brexit are, after more than half a decade, tired; but I would struggle to argue that some of the points being repeated over and over inside the conference were any less spent.
After 13 years of Tory governments pledging to cut immigration while presiding over record numbers, Rishi Sunak has expressed his “clear view” that entrance into Britain “must be controlled.”
If the electorate had not already done so, it must now accept the reality: the Conservative Party is the party of uncontrolled immigration and it has lied to us, of that there can be no doubt.
Various Tory prime ministers, first David Cameron, then Boris Johnson, then Liz Truss, then Rishi Sunak, have promised British voters to drastically reduce immigration, and they have all failed, purposefully or not, to deliver.