Sir Keir Starmer must resist the incessant siren calls of Remainers in his party
Remain firm
KEIR Starmer must resist the incessant siren calls of Remainers in his party.
For the first time this decade, Britain has an Anglophile US President keen to do a deal which could transform our economic fortunes.
Sir Keir Starmer must resist the incessant siren calls of Remainers in his party[/caption]What is the point of risking that relationship by cosying up further to a failed EU which we fought so hard to free ourselves from?
Don’t take our word for it.
Listen to Shanker Singham, one of the world’s leading trade experts.
Living standards have no chance of getting better if Labour resets ties with Brussels and ends up derailing a US deal, he says.
Britain’s post-Brexit place in the lucrative CPTPP group of trading countries would also be put at risk.
Our current trade with the EU is working.
Brexit freedoms must not be thrown away at the insistence of those Remainiac MPs who have never forgiven voters for inflicting that 2016 Referendum defeat.
We trust the Prime Minister won’t make a fatal mistake by listening to them now.
No panic, Kemi
NIGEL Farage’s boast that Britain’s youngest political party now has more members than the oldest in the world is, on the face of it, bad news for the Tories.
Right now Reform is cashing in on widespread dismay at Labour’s stuttering start in Government.
But there is no need for Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch to start panicking just yet.
A General Election is not likely for at least four years.
That’s plenty of time for the Tories to put their catastrophic defeat behind them and come up with serious solutions to the country’s many problems.
Showing true Conservative values and policies is the way for Badenoch to win voters’ trust, land punches on Labour — and deal with the rise of Reform.
Hope for Beeb
FOR the first time in years the BBC served up a feast of Christmas telly.
The superb ending to Gavin and Stacey and the sublime Wallace and Gromit provided us with rare moments of national unity.
In their own ways, these brilliant shows are celebrations of traditional British values and ordinary lives.
Each had their own little digs at wokery and warnings of the stupidity of being led by social media.
Food for thought for BBC bosses obsessed with both.
This was a timely reminder that the job of the national broadcaster is to cater for the majority — not the minority.
To stop preaching and make shows that we all want to watch together.