Nigel Farage was making up policy on the hoof on Question Time. He wants to ban the burkha again.
But there has been some incredulity as to the audience hostility that he received, considering how well UKIP did in Boston at this year's local elections.
Around the country, surprisingly many of the seats that UKIP won in May have already fallen vacant. That party has failed to retain any of them. Not a single, solitary one.
Speaking of Nigels, with next week's edition having been moved to Portsmouth in light of recent events, Lawson of that name can wait.
Penny Mordaunt, MP for Portsmouth North, Royal Naval Reservist, and Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Defence, ought to be invited onto the panel.
The Conservative Party ought to be informed that no one else from its ranks would be welcome as a panellist that week, and that, should Mordaunt fail to present herself, David Dimbleby would explain that situation at the start of a live broadcast.
A live broadcast, with or without Penny Mordaunt.
BBC bias on display again. Boston, (the town that took to the streets in support of Peter Hitchens article on how immigration had destroyed the place) failed to produce more than one audience member who agreed with UKIP on mass immigration.
ReplyDeleteThe town has been ruined by immigration. How hard did the BBC have to look to find some pro-immigration liberals in Boston?
Disproving your own point.
ReplyDeleteOh, not at all.
ReplyDeleteThis week's anti-UKIP audience actually cheered a liberal audience member who described concerns about mass immigration as "scaremongering".
There is literally nobody living in Boston who thinks concerns about mass immigration are just "scaremongering".
Watch (below) what happened on BBC Question Time, last time the BBC allowed a normal person from Boston to sit in the audience.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QYCTDXq56w
And the BBC probably only let her in by accident..
Then they voted UKIP onto the council.
ReplyDelete