After thirteen years in power, the British Tories seem to have run out of steam.

Opinion polls indicate that the vast majority of Britons would choose to rejoin the European Union.

Last week passed three years ago the United Kingdom left the European Union, and exactly fifty years ago the country joined what was then the European Economic Community. It’s also been a decade since then-Prime Minister David Cameron appeased the Brexiteers in his Conservative party by promising a referendum on Europe. The current prime minister, Rishi Sunak, looked back on his first 100 days in Downing Street last week. The stability and unity of the country and the party that was promised was not achieved. And just last week, half a million public sector workers went on strike.

All these people are protesting because their standards of living haven’t fallen this low in decades. With the political and economic disasters caused by his predecessors Boris Johnson and Liz Truss, Sunak has inherited a mountain of problems. The Tories insist they have nothing to do with Brexit, but the numbers are what they are. The UK lags behind the rest of the so-called developed world in every way. Businessmen who have always supported the party now accuse Johnson of throwing the country under the bus.

Prime Minister Sunak threatens minimum service law against strike waves.

there could be young rishi mr. Sensible Sunak – 42, extremely wealthy and Britain’s first Indian-born prime minister – still has little to blame. He did not offend European leaders, nor did he endanger the peace in Northern Ireland nor spend a fortune of taxpayers’ money on beautifying his official residence. He could be accused of not distancing himself from Brexiteers and of seeming too stubborn in speaking to people on the street. It doesn’t help that he threatens a minimum service law to break consecutive strikes.

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According to the newspaper Watchman There is now a sense of “burger” among the Brits – They regret leaving the European Union. Opinion polls indicate that a large majority would choose to rejoin the union. However, Labor is not calling for a new referendum: it is not interested in giving the Conservatives a chance to divert attention from the disastrous economic situation. The Conservatives themselves are in free fall, and Sunak has little time left before next year’s elections. He is now betting that the British will soon tire of the strike waves. But after thirteen years in power, the Tories seemed exhausted.

Amber Webster

 "Freelance zombie fanatic. Devoted web advocate. Analyst. Writer. Coffee fanatic. Travelaholic. Proud food aficionado."

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