Politics

  • Caught: Reform UK antagonist

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a suspect alleged to have compiled a fake “Blank” dossier against Nigel Farage MP to ruin his name and stain the reputation of Reform UK has been spotted.

    A suspect alleged of malicious interference seen here in Leicester Square, in central London.

    Her alleged involvement is said to be on the back of increased German Intelligence activity in the UK, and across Europe.

    The strong links with the nation state implies powerful forces are trying to ruin our democracy and wreck our prosperity in future.

  • Exclusive: Iran’s Supreme Leader in hot water

    Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, has been accused of state interference and is requested to attend a meeting in London with UK law enforcement.

    It’s believed the accusations relate to attempts by Iran-based forces – such as its existing Revolutionary Guard – and other secretive groups to harass UK-based public figures.

  • The socialist Left aren’t the answer

    Much of the self-declared Your Party platform is their opposition to things that aren’t right for people. While it’s not a perfect state of affairs, for example, capitalism needn’t be replaced by a system that has gone wrong on multiple occasions by itself.

    The fact is many people also see the same problems, but they don’t see the same solutions. This is the party’s real standpoint.

    It joins a chorus of the self-righteous to declare billionaires are bad people, but it hasn’t stipulated how there are any good people anywhere else. The Bill may become law, but there’s plenty of room for manoeuvre for those who want to scupper its progress elsewhere.

    Your Party lack a momentum of real integrity because the socialist Left is a criminal cabal intent on wrecking our lives.

    The protest movements that truly help are few in number. Overall they don’t impress change and it hasn’t resulted in any significant improvement of life chances for the “many” that socialists point out in our society. This is a stubborn problem for all in modern politics.

  • Gaza is not a New York issue

    The first New York City Mayoral debate is perhaps a chance to flesh out responses to any crisis that exists in the City.

    It’s a place of meeting for all types of creed and character. It produces its own problems and has taken in many more.

    This is the forum for that sort of tricky interaction with difficult and often controversial topics.

    Andrew Cuomo – an NYC Mayoral candidate – stipulates his position on Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    However, Gaza simply isn’t one of them. An example is Andrew Cuomo, who has already been challenged over his visits to Mosque’s during his campaign.

    He faced questioning about Gaza also, although the Strip is thousands of miles away.

    In last nights debate he stuck to an obvious line about Hamas, and denouncing the infrastructure of hate that supports it.

    This isn’t the point in New York politics, or America, but protests ship it in as if it’s a legitimate import and a product ready to sell.

    The sadness is that candidates like Mamdani can’t see the irrelevance of so much activity over the investment of time needed in the City he lives in and seeks to govern.

  • Russia puts the UK on notice

    The deteriorating state of affairs here over who poses what threat to us is made worse now by a statement from the Director of Russia’s FSB, Alexander Bortnikov.

    According to TASS, a Russian news network, Bortnikov called out recent comments by Sir Richard Moore regarding the defection of Russian citizens to MI6 to serve the interests of the UK.

    “Mr. Moore is perhaps aware of what such calls may imply, given the problems in politics, the economy and society facing England itself and numerous ill-wishers of the British empire.”

    This is bad news for the UK. It’s because we rely on good things being said about us by foreign states. The fact this has been declared means that we may have more problems in future.

    However, the comments are purely one-sided. Russia itself is a broken up federation of former Soviet states. It suffers strongly with riddled crime and other inhumanities that Russians can’t overcome.

    They barely get any help. Putin’s authoritarian leadership structure is largely impervious to complaints. It puts out wise words to the Russian people but it doesn’t back these up with firm action.

  • Our MP’s hate who we are

    It’s a scandal that MP’s are free to accuse military personnel of war crimes without rebuke.

    The anti-war rhetoric is a poison. It seeps deep into the soul of a country that thinks hard about defence and its consequences.

    It’s now clear if the victims are Muslim the claim will be made. It’s unlikely terrorism is called out or that Muslim leaders are called on to safeguard Muslim populations from tyrants of their own.

    This credence is deeply damaging. It’s misguided in a more enlightened era.

    The narrative suggests we’re less informed but the truth is most people have access to sources of information they can use to build a responsible worldview.

  • Call for information: Lobbying fraud

    In a stunning exclusive for Conservative News Site, a so- called “Lobbying Specialist” accused of profiteering by activity in Parliament has now been spotted.

    A suspect alleged of political interference seen here in Reading, Berkshire.

    She’s said to have implicated herself into policy development circles for decades. It involves private meetings and separate discussions with party staff and Civil Servants.

    Any information relating to this individual must be passed to a relevant public body. It will be used to build an accurate case, if one exists.

  • Ukraine has a right to win

    Ukraine’s need for safety is not the same as ours. Theirs is a need for territorial integrity. It includes a promise of no Russian boots on their soil. It also means no land is lost to its illegitimate claims. There can’t be a stronger Ukraine with a lesser strategic position. Finally, no vital infrastructure can be open to cursory destruction.

    President Zelenskyy is aware that Putin bargains for more than he’s worth. It’s why he fights back so hard. He orders his country to do so too. He knows the illegality of this war. He already gets that a Russian tyrant can’t win, for the sake of the world too. His effort is to hold out against an enemy that is sabre rattling at us.

  • Stop hazing us on Gaza

    The direct appeal to protesters today is to stop hazing us.

    We don’t need to be initiated into your movements. We don’t need to learn your politics the hard way. We don’t need to feel as you do and learn things by your frame of mind.

    The issues are stark before us too. It’s not just you.

    This message isn’t getting through. The impact of repeated protests is now a negative thing. It feels threatening. It’s a chaotic – if not mixed – message. It’s a flow, not a statement, of people and jumbled up emotions.

    We haven’t seen eye to eye properly as a nation for a long while. This stands true throughout the UK. It’s time for more politics, not more self-funded, shadowy groups passing on messages from terrorists.

  • Russia and Cuba pal up again

    The Russia-Ukraine war is striking deep divisions into the soil of international relations, and yet Russia is striving to make further incisions.

    The recent ratification by Russia’s Federation Council of an agreement for an exploration of strategic ties with Cuba is a haunting echo of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

    It’s also a show of contempt for the efforts of world leaders to make peace today. The old Russia makes new waves in a modern facade of a warmongering nation.

  • Macron loses his 7th PM

    Just under a month into the job, President Macron’s seventh Prime Minister has now resigned.

    It shows a deep problem set into the heart of French politics.

    While some may wish it away as part of the era, it’s not easy to do so.

    The tumult that French people endure is not easy to embrace, and this makes it difficult to justify or to even defend leadership.

    The social discord at the heart of the problem is more than just protest, and the causes of it, but also the entanglement of migration into the very core of the jurisdiction of the French Republic.

    It’s not a straightforward matter, and French voters want the representation of it to be fair but also open.

  • Polanski is a crazy firebrand

    The new leader of the Green Party is certainly making waves, but only amongst the membership. His crazy way about politics is hardly endearing to the wider public. He has all sorts of views, far beyond the cosy confines of climate righteousness and into the deep end of an ongoing liberal rights saga. The maelstrom is overwhelming at times and it’s as populist as his targets.

    Zack Polanski speaking at his party’s annual conference in Bournemouth (via YouTube).

    The right way ahead for him is shouting to the rooftops about the same issues as before. He may be able to pump a room but the doorstep is a much different encounter. He needs to find warmth in his soul to counter the arguments people already have. The UK public is dead set against many of the policies he chooses to trumpet, and have long harangued those promoting their worth.

  • Do Your Party run the risk of a revolt?

    The Your Party brand has barely launched and already socialist groups are jumping at the opportunity to unite to defeat the country. An X account for it suggests the grassroots movements that populate our streets time after time with hateful slogans should form a super-group to take on the “failed political class”. This is no mere glass of grass juice, it’s the reorganisation of agitators into a much larger force.

    The need to clarify events is pressing now on the fledgling party. This is to reassure the rest of the political class that it doesn’t have designs on power – or our lives. It will take some doing. Most people are aware of the disruptive effects of activism in our towns and cities. They know its roots and its shoots. The need now is to move away from such revolt and turn back to democracy. This is the hope of most of us now.

  • The UN knows the world is in chaos

    The UN knows the world itself is out of control. It seems to have little restraint in advising it at times of intense uncivil behaviour. It has a limitless belief in human kindness and political decency.

    The fact is this is naive. Many of its members have deeply set problems in their polities. These are disregarded to enable the movement of people in any direction. There are no routes like flight paths or lines for nautical journeys.

    The humour is that random voices proclaim an era of jubilee for hardship, but no plans for this are forthcoming. It’s an unrealistic dream to fulfil. It’s a marginal goal in even the best of times.