He simply cannot make his brain work. You can see it trying to stutter to life, but it's suffocated by all that lazy stands-to-reason Telegraph
— Ian Dunt (@IanDunt) March 27, 2021
-guzzling reactionary bullshit. https://t.co/acwBTg7zRk
The last line quoted is the zinger. What policy would Johnson ever moderate or sacrifice for the sake of the Union? It's one thing to gush about "our precious Union"; quite another to let that influence how the government behaves – on Brexit or anything else.
— Robert Saunders (@redhistorian) March 27, 2021
Jennifer Arcuri 'admits to Boris Johnson affair. Would this reopen criminal investigation into allegations that Johnson influenced the payment of thousands of pounds of public money to Acuri, or secured her participation in foreign trade trips that he led?https://t.co/JZeJM7FbXV
— Prem Sikka (@premnsikka) October 17, 2020
"You're so hot I'm going to plagiarise Raymond Chandler" pic.twitter.com/wHgFVZ02V5
— Philip Cowley (@philipjcowley) March 27, 2021
Sad to see him trashing his reputation for being… a totally disastrous PM… in this way pic.twitter.com/cRZWPiB9Zh
— Sathnam Sanghera (@Sathnam) March 27, 2021
The news about vaccine passports, facial recognition technology for pubs, workplace surveillance in the home relate directly to reports of police violence against protestors. These aren’t separate and coincidental processes; this is authoritarian capitalism coming into view.
— James Meadway (@meadwaj) March 27, 2021
UK PM Boris Johnson describes protesters who threw “bricks, bottles and fireworks” at police in Bristol as "a mob intent on violence", after third night of protests in the city https://t.co/OPQ5N9dNg0
— BBC Breaking News (@BBCBreaking) March 27, 2021
A full account of the sickening scenes on the streets of Bristol last night.
— Tristan Cork Post (@TristanCorkPost) March 27, 2021
Police used dogs, horses, batons and shields to break up an overwhelmingly peaceful sit-down demonstration in the Haymarket.https://t.co/k7giMGYhcv
Sheffield out today in solidarity with Bristol demanding to #KillTheBillpic.twitter.com/oWsbAzQCll
— Pileus Media (@thepileus) March 27, 2021
This is just so frustrating how the Guardian can get this so wrong.
— Matty Edwards (@MattyEdwards23) March 27, 2021
Me and my colleagues at @TheBristolCable were among the many journalists at the scene, who got lots of photos and video showing peaceful protestors being attacked
Local media matters. https://t.co/JSSSgJ5ci3
One of the Mirror’s own journalists was brutally assaulted in a completely unprovoked attack by the police in Bristol last night, and *this* is how they choose to frame the protests?!!
— Evolve Politics (@evolvepolitics) March 27, 2021
Not much surprises me about the UK media nowadays, but fucking hell guys. https://t.co/oELDNEbe90
The police dog in this clip clearly knows who the aggressors were in this police assault on a photographer at the Bristol protests.
— The Prole Star (@TheProleStar) March 27, 2021
The dog went for the police officer and had to be pulled off… pic.twitter.com/rFSk2WdG00
On BBC Radio 2, they segued seamlessly from talking about the 'protests' in Myanmar to the 'riots' in Bristol. You are not immune to propaganda.
— pez (@periuspb) March 27, 2021
Michael Gove was asked about this directly in 2016 and he was adamant there would be no disruptions to UK citizens living in EU countries.
— Mike Galsworthy (@mikegalsworthy) March 27, 2021
This is a government choice. Plain & simple. They insisted on ending our citizens’ #FreeMovement rights. pic.twitter.com/jrzm8PnEXl
You were saying @michaelgove? https://t.co/avrkjK4JyJ https://t.co/aMPxLxz52A
— Haggis_UK 🇬🇧 🇪🇺 (@Haggis_UK) March 27, 2021
#NEW
— Richard Chambers (@newschambers) March 27, 2021
Sunday Times (UK): “Britain to offer Ireland spare COVID vaccines.”
3.7 million doses. pic.twitter.com/y9psvnXxro
I'm told this is related to the large number of doses that were in the Rome finishing site
— Naomi O'Leary (@NaomiOhReally) March 27, 2021
The background is that a Dutch factory waited until this week to apply for cert to supply the EU, for unexplained reasons. It was approved yesterday, bringing it into the EU AZ supply chain https://t.co/PNczzrmZKr
***
RESISTANCE GROWS TO GEORGIA VOTE LAW
The Republican voting restrictions in Georgia will have an outsize impact on Black voters, who make up roughly one-third of the state's population and vote overwhelmingly Democratic. https://t.co/GlWxcrDNAP
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) March 27, 2021
The economic consequences of voter suppression could soon hit home in Georgia. https://t.co/d6zaTxsaDb
— NewsandGuts (@NewsandGuts) March 27, 2021
.@Delta has decided to applaud the Georgia GOPs blatant voter suppression laws that would disproportionately impact nearly 1/4 of their workforce https://t.co/3Jv3B5AOP9
— The Lincoln Project (@ProjectLincoln) March 27, 2021
For years, we debated whether Donald Trump would topple democracy. But the threat continues to come from the system itself. https://t.co/nNoC0NtUR9
— The New Yorker (@NewYorker) March 27, 2021
Democrats have spent several years clamoring to raise taxes on corporations and the rich to combat widening economic inequality.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 27, 2021
Now, under President Biden, they have a shot at ushering in the largest federal tax increase since 1942. https://t.co/52V3ayZkAN
Biden administration fires most Homeland Security Advisory Council members https://t.co/xsFJCaVnxr
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) March 27, 2021
JUST IN: United States reports 3.5 million coronavirus vaccination doses administered in one day, a record.
— The Spectator Index (@spectatorindex) March 28, 2021