Thursday, 25 February 2010

Anyone For Tea?


Join Dan Hannnan and friends at the Brighton Tea Party at 5.30 p.m. this Saturday 27 February at the Best Western Hotel, 143-145 King's Road, Brighton BN1 2PQ

Actual tea optional.


TB better go get a hotel sorted...

6 comments:

Marky W said...

Given the wild-eyed, gun-toting, misinformed, fundamentalist loons that make up most of the US Tea Party Movement, I don't think it will be in any way helpful to the Tories to be associated with this.

Hannan is fast moving from hero to media-whoring liability in my eyes...

Anonymous said...

Nothing wrong with opposition to extortionate rates of tax.

Hughes.
said...

Have to concur with Marky. The GoP seems to have gone collectively insane since losing power. The carnival of Glenn Berserck fuelled badly spelled placards, thinly disguised racism and treasonous threats to the C-in-C going on at these marches across the pond is the very last thing we need to be seen to be pairing up with.

As Bowie once sang, this is not America.

Derp said...

Democrat astroturf makes me so excited. Oh curses, I have to go change my underwear now.

Anonymous said...

I totally agree with Hughes & Marky. The last thing British Conservatives need is to be anyway linked/associated with the "Home scholing" (seen on an actual placard) undereducated, gun toting, in a lot of cases already recieving some sort of US benefit that they are against (*.*!ing hard to belive that isn't it?).

Maybe Hannan is taken in by the so say Queen of Grifte- OOPS! sorry Teapartiers Sarah P or they slavishly idolise Mr R Limp****s or that very epitome of Histerical points of interest that is Glen B?

Sorry Tory Bear, but this is a really wrong move for Hannan to take.

kindest regards
Granma Josephine

The Baron
said...

Hmm, so let's see: the 'me too' Tories of BluLabor are on a solid course to a hung Parliament and 5 more years of the Brown note, whereas by embracing the 'right-wing extremist' tea party movement, the Republican Party has gone from a total wipe-out in '08 to LEADING the Democrats on the generic ballot today.

The Tories can't win outright in the worst economic environment in 50 years, while the GOP has a chance to take back the House and even possibly the Senate? Who has the wrong strategy, again?

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