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https://news.sky.com/story/row-over-new-greggs-vegan-sausage-rolls-heats-up-11597679 (https://archive.ph/5Ba6o)

A heated row has broken out over a move by Britain's largest bakery chain to launch a vegan sausage roll.

The pastry, which is filled with a meat substitute and encased in 96 pastry layers, is available in 950 Greggs stores across the country.

It was promised after 20,000 people signed a petition calling for the snack to be launched to accommodate plant-based diet eaters.


But the vegan sausage roll's launch has been greeted by a mixed reaction: Some consumers welcomed it, while others voiced their objections.

View image on Twitter


spread happiness@p4leandp1nk
https://twitter.com/p4leandp1nk/status/1080767496569974785

#VEGANsausageroll thanks Greggs
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7
10:07 AM - Jan 3, 2019
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Cook and food poverty campaigner Jack Monroe declared she was "frantically googling to see what time my nearest opens tomorrow morning because I will be outside".

While TV writer Brydie Lee-Kennedy called herself "very pro the Greggs vegan sausage roll because anything that wrenches veganism back from the 'clean eating' wellness folk is a good thing".

One Twitter user wrote that finding vegan sausage rolls missing from a store in Corby had "ruined my morning".

Another said: "My son is allergic to dairy products which means I can't really go to Greggs when he's with me. Now I can. Thank you vegans."

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pg often@pgofton
https://twitter.com/pgofton/status/1080772793774624768

The hype got me like #Greggs #Veganuary

42
10:28 AM - Jan 3, 2019
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TV presenter Piers Morgan led the charge of those outraged by the new roll.

"Nobody was waiting for a vegan bloody sausage, you PC-ravaged clowns," he wrote on Twitter.

Mr Morgan later complained at receiving "howling abuse from vegans", adding: "I get it, you're all hangry. I would be too if I only ate plants and gruel."

Another Twitter user said: "I really struggle to believe that 20,000 vegans are that desperate to eat in a Greggs."

"You don't paint a mustach (sic) on the Mona Lisa and you don't mess with the perfect sausage roll," one quipped.

Journalist Nooruddean Choudry suggested Greggs introduce a halal steak bake to "crank the fume levels right up to 11".

The bakery chain told concerned customers that "change is good" and that there would "always be a classic sausage roll".

It comes on the same day McDonald's launched its first vegetarian "Happy Meal", designed for children.

The new dish comes with a "veggie wrap", instead of the usual chicken or beef option.

It should be noted that Piers Morgan and Greggs share the same PR firm, so I'm thinking this is some serious faux outrage and South Park KKK gambiting here.
 
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Even if Susan Hall does win the 2024 London Mayor Election (not likely), people will still blame Khan for London's shit.
 
Thomas Kingston died from traumatic head wound, inquest hears

Seems he "died suddenly" of shooting himself in the head. I've not heard much about him before now, but it sounds like he had quite a life. He was apparently in good spirits just a few days beforehand, which sounds like the uplift that tends to happen when someone commits to taking their own life. You have to wonder what drove him to it.


Time to pull out the old spandex, George?

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Why is it racist to ask a question regarding the influence a group holds over an important political office ?
Do the Metropolitan Police appreciate how much their reputation diminishes by even paying these spurious accusations lip service ?
Looks like Whothefuck's post ( below ) is already being inacted by the PCMet.

On another note, looks like the UK's gonna be under Sharia Law once Labour gets in. Buckle up boys.
https://twitter.com/IncMonocle/status/1762162699750826175

The Met really are lost. At least before all the woke PC nonsense they investigated crime. They've wasted so much money to try to court other sections of society that were always going to hate them no matter what they did and what have they achieved - lost the support of the people who used to support them. So now nobody does....
 
How dare you hold muslims collectively responsable for something they collectively did!

Does that mean we have to hold them individually responsable? No…wait…can’t do that either it seems.
shut up you colonialist pig, you can't comment on the flaws of Islam because it is your fault they're so fucked up. You personally* fucked up their countries.


*Alright maybe not you personally but some dudes a few hundred years ago who were also British which means it's our responsibility to take in their immigrants.
 
No jam tomorrow, either, apparently:
Jeremy Hunt has been told Wednesday’s budget risks condemning Britain to a second “lost decade” for living standards that would leave working families £1,900 a year worse off. The chancellor enters a crunch week under pressure from his party to deliver a package of pre-election tax cuts, but analysis by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) finds a widening gulf between these political demands and the reality facing millions of struggling people.

The poverty charity said fixing Britain’s crumbling public realm and tackling sky-high NHS waiting lists ranked significantly higher in the list of voter priorities than the level of tax on earnings.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/mar/03/tories-austerity-budget-cuts-westminster-worse
Publishing an opinion poll of almost 5,000 people across Britain carried out by YouGov, it found almost three quarters were “very worried” or “fairly worried” about funding for the NHS and other public services, compared with less than half who were concerned about tax on earnings.

Speaking on Sunday, Hunt said he wanted to move Britain towards becoming a lower-tax economy, but that he would only be able to do so “as and when we can afford it”.
Hosing down Tory hopes for a large package of giveaways in a round of media interviews, he said the most “unconservative” thing he could do would be to announce tax cuts funded by higher borrowing. “This will be a prudent and responsible budget for long-term growth,” Hunt said.
His comments come as he grapples with self-imposed rules requiring government debt to be falling as a share of the economy by the fifth year of forecasts made by the Office for Budget Responsibility, the tax and spending watchdog.
It is understood the Treasury has been handed forecasts from the OBR showing headroom of just under £13bn within this target before any new tax or spending decisions are made – significantly less than the £30bn in pre-measures headroom before last year’s autumn statement.
Aiming to find extra room to fund broad-based tax cuts, Hunt has considered poaching Labour’s policy to scrap the non-dom tax regime, alongside proposals for a new duty on vaping, and raising £300m a year by putting up taxes on second-home owners who profit from holiday lets.

Hunt is also planning a £1.8bn public-sector productivity drive, arguing efficiency gains can be found to improve the quality of services while freeing up cash for lower taxes.

Abolishing the non-dom tax regime would raise an estimated £3.6bn a year, but would be highly politically charged, given that Rishi Sunak’s wife, Akshata Murty, had used it to save paying millions in UK tax.
Unions said more than a decade of austerity had already squeezed the public sector, and that a fresh productivity drive was only likely to result in further cuts to public services.
The general secretary of Prospect, Mike Clancy, said: “Every time this government finds itself in a difficult spot, it conjures up a phantom villain to pin its failings on. But after 14 years in charge, blaming hardworking civil servants and supposed wokery simply won’t wash with voters.”
Asked about the claims on Monday morning, the economic secretary to the Treasury Bim Afolami claimed certain groups of people were better off than when the Tories took office in 2010.
He told LBC Radio: “If you look at the record since 2010, for people on the lowest incomes, they are 30% – better off people on minimum wage if they’re working full time – they’re 30% better off in real terms ... So the picture is not is not uniformly bad; particularly for average people on average incomes.”

With Sunak scrambling to reboot his premiership before a general election expected later this year, two main tax cuts in consideration are thought to be reductions in employee national insurance or income tax. A cut in national insurance of 1p would cost the Treasury about £5bn a year, however, while reducing the 20p basic rate of income tax by a similar amount would cost about £7bn a year. An extension of a reduction in fuel duty worth about £1bn a year is also being explored.
Tory backbenchers have urged the chancellor and the prime minister to “be brave and bold” and fund tax cuts on Wednesday amid fears it is the party’s last chance to convince the public they actually have a plan.

One Tory MP said people needed to see an improvement in their finances “sharpish”. “It’s not enough to make a statement saying how much you love this country. They need to show it with a 2p tax cut.”
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/mar/03/jeremy-hunt-budget-2024-pre-election-tax-cuts
Another said: “Labour may find another way to trip themselves up, but we need to focus on tax cuts. It’s the only way we can show we understand the difficulties people are facing with high costs at the moment. It’ll be hard to fight ‘out of touch Tory’ slogans this election campaign.”

The former Tory chancellor Ken Clarke, however, said he was fed up with speculation and briefing over the government’s plans to buy votes with tax cuts. He told Times Radio the public wanted to be reassured that there was a prospect of “getting back to the kind of growth with low inflation that steadily improves our public services and daily way of life”.
In a report urging Hunt to look at areas other than tax cuts to support hard-pressed people, JRF said the budget risked keeping the UK economy locked on track to leave working families £1,900 a year worse off in 2029 than they were in 2021.
It said households’ average post-tax earnings at the start of 2024 were as much as £2,400 a year lower than at the start of 2021. Working households could benefit from rising wages and lower inflation as the UK economy recovers from recession, but it said progress would be limited and unable to overcome this earlier shortfall.
JRF’s chief economist, Alfie Stirling, said the prospect of a “second lost decade” would come after 14 years of stalling progress to raise living standards, including the failure to increase average workers’ pay substantially above pre-2008 levels after inflation was taken into account.
“Unless policy makers intervene, the 2020s are set to see an unprecedented second lost decade of living standards in a row. As an economy, as a society and as a country, we simply can’t afford this to happen,” he said.
“With the budget just days away, renewed political energy and policy bravery is needed urgently to avert a second period of unthinkable decline.”
 
for balance....

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation is a left-of-centre pressure group that supports higher taxes and higher spending. It has a left-of-centre view in everything that it suggests. It is never, ever described as that by the BBC or other Left wing press; it is always described as an anti-poverty charity or think-tank, or in some kind of a positive way.
 
That would make very good book cover art.
Private Eye nail their covers a lot. Even when using only text.
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I doubt anyone in London was willing to read it in public with that cover.

Edit - so I'm not just praising Private Eye Galloway has now decided to target Angela Rayner's seat.


George Galloway has said he wants to oust Labour's deputy leader from Parliament, as he began work as an MP.
The Workers Party of Britain leader said his party could overturn Angela Rayner's majority in her Ashton-under-Lyne constituency at the next election.
He was sworn in as an MP, following his by-election win last week.
Speaking to reporters afterwards, he listed more areas with large Muslim populations and vowed to "win or make sure that Keir Starmer doesn't win".
He named the Labour deputy leader's seat as a target, saying: "There's at least 15,000 supporters of my point of view in her constituency."
Mr Galloway was expelled from the Labour party in 2003 over his views on the Iraq war and said his Rochdale win was "for Gaza".

Following his swearing-in ceremony, the 69-year-old listed a number of local priorities, before telling reporters his first words in Parliament would be about Gaza, and added he hoped he'd get a chance to speak at this week's PMQs.
When asked by the BBC if Hamas, which is proscribed as a terrorist group by the UK, US, Israel and several other countries, should be allowed to run Gaza, he responded the question was "dripping with imperial condescension" and queried whether the UK or the BBC should decide who runs Gaza instead.
"I would not myself have voted for Hamas - I am an Arafat man and have been since the 1970s - but the people picked Hamas," he said, adding that "no good can come" from foreign countries meddling in others' affairs.
He later responded to questions about Israel, saying "Israel exists, it's not up to me" but that "no state has the right to exist - not the Soviet Union, not Czechoslovakia, not the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" and that he supported the Oslo Agreement but was "still waiting for a Palestinian state".
During his initial speech, Mr Galloway went on to invoke the Holocaust, saying: "There's a genocide going on....If the by-election had been in February of 1940 or 41, would anyone seriously have condemned me for putting the crimes of the Holocaust at the centre of my election campaign?"
The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism lists "drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis" among its examples.
The IHRA definition is intended to show how certain ways of speaking target Jewish people, and includes attacks on the state of Israel, over and above criticism that would be levelled at any other country.

Earlier, Mr Galloway had struck a defensive note as he arrived at Westminster, saying: "I've always loved the building - the people in it not quite so much."
Mirroring that view, Conservative minister Bim Afolami told ITV's Good Morning Britain: "We're going to have to endure him and that is really the fault of the Labour party."
Mr Galloway was sworn in by the Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle before business got under way in the House of Commons.
He was escorted by the Father of the House Peter Bottomley and Neale Hanvey, the Westminster Leader of the Alba Party.
Mr Galloway won a clear victory in Thursday's by-election, which had seen Labour withdraw support for candidate Azhar Ali over remarks widely alleged to be antisemitic.
Mainstream parties were beaten into third place after a chaotic campaign, sparked by the death of Labour MP Sir Tony Lloyd, with independent and local businessman Dave Tully taking second place.
Mr Galloway has previously been an MP for Labour until 2003. He then sat in the Commons as an independent and Respect Party MP for three constituencies between 2003 and 2015.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said Mr Galloway only won in Rochdale because Labour withdrew support from its own candidate about a fortnight before polling day.
Sir Keir apologised to voters for the decision, which forced Labour to effectively withdraw from the race due to electoral law, the but said it was "the right decision".
Mr Galloway has long campaigned for causes in the Middle East and the first words of his victory speech in Rochdale were "Keir Starmer: This is for Gaza".
Following his win, the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) said it was "extremely concerned" by Mr Galloway's victory, accusing him of having an "atrocious record of baiting the Jewish community", including calling for Bradford, when he was an MP there, to be declared an "Israel-free zone".
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he was "very concerned" at reports of intimidation during what he labelled "one of the most divisive campaigns we've seen in recent times".

It's absolute 2 idiots fighting but this is exactly what Angela has earned.
 
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