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#51
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#52
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John B wrote in
: On Jun 16, 7:42*am, James Farrar wrote: Tony Polson wrote innews:amva35hma5aj7s67hm1 : "Richard J." wrote: Very few people seem to pay cash these days (outside the central area where you can't do so anyway), so I think that's a non-issue. *I don' t really see how dwell times at stops would be significantly reduced by having a rear platform. * The whole thing seems to be an ill-justifie d populist gesture. ... one that was suggested by an ill-justified populist! 1,168,738 votes strikes me as quite a large justification. ITYM 139,772 votes. Eh? |
#53
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Tony Polson wrote in
: wrote: On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 15:31:40 +0100 Tony Polson wrote: I wonder if so many people would have voted for Boris if they had realised that once in office, he would be completely ineffectual - apart from getting rid of Ian Blair, of course. His finest hour. I voted for him, can't say I've been too impressed so far. OTOH he seems fairly harmless unlike Ken. I'm not sure that your "fairly harmless" is a compliment - I don't think it is very far removed from my "completely ineffectual". Surely there is no point in a Mayor who achieves almost nothing? Achieving nothing is infinitely preferable to being actively harmful. |
#54
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On 17 June, 03:29, James Farrar wrote:
Tony Polson wrote : wrote: On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 15:31:40 +0100 Tony Polson wrote: I wonder if so many people would have voted for Boris if they had realised that once in office, he would be completely ineffectual - apart from getting rid of Ian Blair, of course. *His finest hour. * I voted for him, can't say I've been too impressed so far. OTOH he seems fairly harmless unlike Ken. I'm not sure that your "fairly harmless" is a compliment - I don't think it is very far removed from my "completely ineffectual". *Surely there is no point in a Mayor who achieves almost nothing? Achieving nothing is infinitely preferable to being actively harmful. In Boris's case, being ineffectual just means doing for the Tories what Dobbo was meant to do for New Labour, ie be a figurehead while they run London. |
#55
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#56
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On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 10:02:45 -0700 (PDT), MIG
wrote: I am in favour of being able to get off when I want to, although open platforms aren't necessarily the best way of achieving it. What do you suggest IS the best way then? -- Cheers Peter |
#57
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James Farrar wrote:
Tony Polson wrote in : wrote: On Tue, 16 Jun 2009 15:31:40 +0100 Tony Polson wrote: I wonder if so many people would have voted for Boris if they had realised that once in office, he would be completely ineffectual - apart from getting rid of Ian Blair, of course. His finest hour. I voted for him, can't say I've been too impressed so far. OTOH he seems fairly harmless unlike Ken. I'm not sure that your "fairly harmless" is a compliment - I don't think it is very far removed from my "completely ineffectual". Surely there is no point in a Mayor who achieves almost nothing? Achieving nothing is infinitely preferable to being actively harmful. I disagree. Negligence by omission (a failure to act) can be just as serious as a negligent action. As Harold Macmillan (Prime Minister 1957-63) once said, politicians are judged by their response to "Events, my dear boy, events!" Not to respond to an event that demands a response would be a negligent omission. It is the nature of the Mayor's job that he/she has to respond to a stream of events, some more significant than others. You seem to be suggesting that it is OK for Boris to do nothing, allowing these events to pass him by. Would you support other politicians who did the same? For example, the Labour government is doing all it can to cling on to power until it has to call an election, probably in June 2010. It is not addressing the colossal hole in the public finances, preferring to leave a substantially worse problem for the next government, which Labour in all probability won't lead. Presumably you support this stance? |
#58
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MIG wrote:
In Boris's case, being ineffectual just means doing for the Tories what Dobbo was meant to do for New Labour, ie be a figurehead while they run London. Or use public money (or, at least, a GLA corporate credit card as a kind of unofficial loan facility) to put a sound system into their Jaguar. http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standa...ree/article.do What's odd to me is that the Tories have apparently not addressed the back-end Major era sleaze and are just waiting for Labour to collapse to assume their God-given place at the head of everything. I've not heard of many regimes that come into power with the corruption built in. Boris and his undoubted PR abilities aren't entirely hiding what's actually going on, if even the Standard have picked up on it. Tom |
#60
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James Farrar wrote:
1,168,738 votes strikes me as quite a large justification. ITYM 139,772 votes. Eh? That's the second round majority. |
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