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Whatever happens in the whole scenario, I really hope that this Boris Johnson clown never makes it to Prime Minister or any ministerial position as he has only distinguished himself by lying & cheating through all of his life with constant instances of gross disloyalty to his wives, his girlfriends, his friends, his party, the electorate. This disgraceful oily Eton character must be stopped in his tracks once & for all or we will all suffer the consequences for many years to come - awful person..!

kford Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> On the contrary, I want him to have to deal with

> the clusterfuck he's helped create. If May gets

> in, for example, the Brexiters will just say it's

> her fault the country's wrecked.


Yes, I want him to have to deal with the mess but only from the dunce's corner where he can remain in a clown's costume as purdah & where he can observe what decent people represent & what they can achieve. May, Osborne or anyone else would be preferable to this flawed lunatic who will only go on to worse depredation of the UK & elsewhere in order to live out a fantasy that he is Churchill re-incarnated. He has nothing to offer except an fantasy cartoon character of being a Churchillian character. He is obsessed with Churchill [ both were born in the US], wrote a book [The Churchill Factor: How One Man Made History], tries to speak like Churchill & now wants to foist his pantomime Churchill character into the political vacuum ably assisted by his hapless painted dame, that other disaffected fool, Mr Gove who almost ruined education in the UK. The whole world will guffaw loudly if Johnson is made PM and worse still we will suffer the experience for decades to come. Johnson has made history alright, but not in the manner he thought he might & we must all combine as a coalition to prevent him getting his oily wish lest he causes more mayhem - I wonder what Churchill would have thought of Johnson? - methinks he would have dismissed him with a flick of cigar ash and walked quickly away to do something more important such as building a brick wall to keep Johnson out. I am reminded of Churchill's comment about Lord Beresford ?He is one of those orators of whom it was well said: Before they get up, they do not know what they are going to say; when they are speaking, they do not know what they are saying; and when they have sat down, they do not know what they have said.? Johnson to a T - Best Johnson is never given the opportunity to speak for us..!

It is a HUGE mistake to think of Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson as a Clown.

'Boris' is a well educated man and a lot cleverer than David Cameron..


We have all long known his ambition to become The U.K. Prime Minister and he will most likely acheive that ambition.


Alexander (Boris de Pfeffel) Johnson

Born in New York City to upper middle-class English parents,

Johnson was educated at the European School of Brussels ... How ironic is that..

Perhaps he knows something we all don't.


DulwichFox

Funnily enough, I am wondering whether the most charismatic leader of the leave rag-tag campaign is now not the only person who can - and who jolly well should - be left to confront article 50, the likely hard line of the EU, and reconcile the electorate he deceived to the truth. Turns out, folks, the adage was right: cake, eat. I cannot after all, for all my expensive education and erudite turn of phrase, unilaterally impose new terms upon the single biggest market in the world. Don't know what I was thinking. Madness! Oh, and that thing about the recession - guffaw! Sorry! We are in one after all. And what I said about not needing the single market....well you know, golly now I am in charge, I realise, yes we do! We need it. We're staying.


No one who campaigned for Remain can deliver this message.


I am only worried how long it takes us to get there and what happens while we wait.

He's also of Turkish heritage. Its not ironic, it just shows the depths of his hypocrisy and ambition.


Part of me wants the Leave Campaign to have no scapegoat for the likely difficulties the UK will face vis-a-vis the promises made during the campaign. However, I'm not sure I trust Boris to do the right thing for the country. I feel like more sensible, steady hands are needed to navigate through these uncharted waters.


I just hope the Labor party can put in place a decent leader before the next general election which may now take place well before 2020.


DulwichFox Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> It is a HUGE mistake to think of Alexander Boris

> de Pfeffel Johnson as a Clown.

> 'Boris' is a well educated man and a lot cleverer

> than David Cameron..

>

> We have all long known his ambition to become The

> U.K. Prime Minister and he will most likely

> acheive that ambition.

>

> Alexander (Boris de Pfeffel) Johnson

> Born in New York City to upper middle-class

> English parents,

> Johnson was educated at the European School of

> Brussels ... How ironic is that..

> Perhaps he knows something we all don't.

>

> DulwichFox

"We have all long known his ambition to become The U.K. Prime Minister and he will most likely acheive that ambition."


And that's the problem with him - he only joined the Leave campaign because he felt it gave him the best chance to be PM. He never really thought they would win, but that in losing by a narrow margin he could claim a moral victory and that he was speaking for a large swath of the population. He would then ride that wave into number ten.


But now he's been given an actual mandate to act on that he didn't actually want; it will fall to him to enact Article 50 and I'm not convinced he wants to.

JohnL Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'd like to see formed a middle ground coalition

> of remain

>

> They couldn't do anything about this silly

> referendum but at least would fight an election.


That is absolutely what i want very soon too. But I am only wondering if leaving Boris as PM to deal with the short term article 50 MESS, is the best idea after all.


We will know a lot more once the EU officially speaks (I really hope, to confirm what it has always said. Article 50 is a divorce procedure, not a re-marriage.)

If you want to extend the argument for Johnson being in charge then we ought to press for Farage to be his number 2...who would want these two oiks in charge of anything..? Johnson failed in his big promise in regard to provision of housing for London & waltzed blithely away as if it were a thing of nothing...this is his style. The current fiasco reminds me of a dog chasing a car - when he catches up with it he doesn't know how to drive it & merely sniffs around it proudly wagging his tail for having caught up with it - Johnson, Gove, Farage & others - just a pack of ill-mannered mongrels.

miga Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Not even the Leavers want Farage at the table,

> he's been useful but his job is done.


The same applies to Johnson ..............they have done enough damage...now they can pi** off..!

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