Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 12, 2018
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4:19 PM
It’s been obvious to me for several hours that May was going to win, but I am still sickened to hear the news.
What this means is what we already knew: it is not simply May herself but the majority of Tories that is attempting to thwart Brexit. Because you cannot be a Brexit supporter and also a May supporter.
Politics are so utterly corrupt. Any time the people get a say in something – as they did with Brexit (and the election of Donald Trump) – the system goes into action to stop us from getting what we said we wanted.
As much as I am opposed to “democracy” as a system, and genuinely believe that it is a social necessity to have a ruling class, if we did really have this democracy, things would be 1,000 times better than they are now.
If everything that the government did was voted on directly, almost none of what is happening would be happening – even with women allowed to vote.
Theresa will be speaking on the stream above. I’m signing off.
4:11 PM
Jeremy Corbyn is saying he could have gotten a better deal:
Tonight’s vote makes no difference to the lives of our people.
The prime minister has lost her majority in parliament, her government is in chaos and she is unable to deliver a Brexit deal that works for the country and puts jobs and the economy first.
That’s why she pulled the vote on her botched Brexit deal this week and is trying to avoid bringing it back to parliament. It’s clear that she has not been able to negotiate the necessary changes in Europe.
She must now bring her dismal deal back to the House of Commons next week so parliament can take back control.
Labour is ready to govern for the whole country and deliver a deal that protects living standards and workers’ rights.
Jewish issues aside, Corbyn probably could have gotten a better deal.
What he is doing is trying to force the vote so that May fails, at which point she may just be forced to resign. Honestly, if the Tories were not failed losers, they would have been pushing for an immediate vote on her alleged “deal” instead of this no-confidence thing.
I just thought of that right now, but seriously: think about it.
If they would have demanded a vote, the deal would have failed, and she would have had to resign.
I have no idea what she is going to do now. None of what the media is saying makes any sense to me. She cannot get a better deal and she cannot sell the one she has.
4:00 PM
She won.
200 to 117.
3:55 PM
Barbaric British ruling elitesman stands on desk.
This is what they teach at Eton, kids.
Shouting, slamming desks, standing on desks.
These people have no mandate.
No person I have ever respected has ever climbed up on top of a desk.
4:47 PM
Welp.
We lost.
Seema Kennedy, May's PPS, is here in the result room, smiling looking relaxed. If she knows the result, via the PM, then May has won decently. If…
— Dan Sabbagh (@dansabbagh) December 12, 2018
This bitch, lol.
How on earth did women running governments become a thing?
Was it Jews again?
3:35
The Paki leader of the Irish (I always forget they have a Paki leader, wtf) is allying with Juncker to issue threats to the English.
That Paki might do some kind of Islamic version of the IRA if a real Brexit happens.
Tbh, the IRA was borderline Islamic historically.
3:10
Gotta wait another hour, ????.
May results news: Just been told declaration will be "nine o'clock on the dot" by a member of the '22.
— Dan Sabbagh (@dansabbagh) December 12, 2018
2:57
Defence secretary @GavinWilliamson casts what appears to be the last vote. “I think I’ll vote for the prime minister," he tells reporters. Let the counting begin.
— Pippa Crerar (@PippaCrerar) December 12, 2018
Why would counting even be an ordeal? There are only a couple hundred votes, they should be able to count that in 2 minutes.
The suspense is out of control.
2:30 PM
2:19 PM
Well, 70% have allegedly already voted.
Speculation outside committee room 14 that it might be a "100 per cent turnout" with 70 per cent of Tory MPs thought to have voted already
— Camilla Tominey (@CamillaTominey) December 12, 2018
And a majority publicly backed her.
I guess we’ll know in a few minutes here.
1:38 PM
Okay, so Theresa officially announced that her concession is that she won’t run in 2022.
Again, I don’t have any idea why this would be relevant right now. The no-confidence vote is about Brexit. And by 2022, this will either be done or it won’t be done. And if she stays, it won’t be done.
1:12 PM
Okay, so she’s saying she won’t resign for three years. That she just won’t stand next election.
OK. Multiple MP sources saying @theresa_may was “unambiguously clear” she will not fight next election. “That will help” said one influential MP
— Robert Peston (@Peston) December 12, 2018
This is getting slightly ridiculous. Another Tory MP says @theresa_may committed only to going before 2022 if election then – but would not rule out leading party into a possible “snap” election in coming year! “We’ve got her for another three years!” was the heartfelt cry
— Robert Peston (@Peston) December 12, 2018
I thought she was saying she was going to resign next year. I don’t understand why resigning in 3 years would even be relevant at all. She can’t do Brexit. That is why there is a no-confidence vote. This is about Brexit, and her not doing that.
There is absolutely zero indication she will be able to do this task. So what is the issue here? Force her out, get someone else to do it.
1:01 PM
This prick is saying there is no time for a leadership change because it’s time to do Brexit.
Powerful & moving moment in the #1922 as the PM makes clear that she has has listened, heard & respects the will of the Party that once she has delivered an orderly Brexit, she will step aside for the election of a new Leader to lead the reunification & renewal we need. Respect. https://t.co/oF9KizADEU
— George Freeman MP (@GeorgeFreemanMP) December 12, 2018
Well, George – Theresa had how long to do Brexit?
Two years.
And she comes up with the worst deal in all of history.
Rees-Mogg can get this done in two weeks, without some insane border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom.
The Good Friday open border deal became null and void when Ireland joined the EU. It is not as though you have really much going on with Irish-English conflict these days anyway. The IRA isn’t going to start bombing or assassinating anyone. This whole Irish border issue is just a hoax. Ireland and the UK are two separate countries now, and they need to be dealt with as such.
12:55 PM
Rees-Mogg says he doesn’t trust Theresa to quit, suggesting it is a trick to get out of the no-confidence vote.
Jacob Rees-Mogg says that the PM’s claim that it is her intention to stand down before 2022 is not definite as “intention” is “such a politician’s word”.
— Michael Savage (@michaelsavage) December 12, 2018
I would assume it probably is a trick.
What the hell does this bitch have to live for, other than ruling the peasants with an iron fist in the name of Brussels?
12:49 PM
Watching the replay from earlier. Right Honorable Gentleman Jeremy Corbyn is grilling this bitch.
He’s about to put her on a train with the kikes straight to Auschwitz.
But seriously though, turn that feed on – if any of you Americans haven’t seen the British Parliament, you will be shocked about how barbaric these British are. They just yell and hoot in their government building, like it’s a high school sports match of some kind. Or a WWE match.
I don’t know why the British allow their government to act like this.
This is serious business. It is not a wrestling match.
12:31 PM
Okay, yeah, so this bitch is vowing not to run next election as a way to keep from being ousted today.
May has told the 22 she won’t fight the next election. Ministers crying in the room
— Tim Shipman (@ShippersUnbound) December 12, 2018
Crying in the room. Bloody disgusting. Why did we allow women into politics? Can anyone on the planet earth say that bringing literal crying into the British Parliament is an improvement?
Is there anything on earth more disgusting than an adult female crying?
First responses coming out of Committee Room 14… deputy party chairman James Cleverly said she acknowledged concerns about her leading party to next election but did not set date for departure pic.twitter.com/tYVcDnG49q
— Tom Rayner (@RaynerSkyNews) December 12, 2018
From inside the room: May says “in her heart she would like to fight election, but recognises that the party does not want her to so it is not her intention to. Won’t when asked give a date”
— Beth Rigby (@BethRigby) December 12, 2018
Imagine you are this dirty old hag. And your entire life led up to finally being Prime Minister. And you were the absolute worst disaster in the history of the country, forced to leave in utter disgrace after failing to shill for a foreign power successfully.
Imagine it.
There has to be some part of this old wench that is just wondering “what if instead of trying to destroy Britain in the name of a bunch of unelected perverts from Germany, Netherlands and Luxembourg, I was at home baking cookies for my grandchildren?”
It is so horrible what the modern world has done to women. They really have become true monsters.
When you Google Image search “theresa may,” one of the top suggestions is “scary.”
Truly, that is what this wench is. A thing of nightmares.
I would rather be ruled by Cenobites than women.
12:10 PM
May finally arrived for her doomsday – desks were banged softly.
May just entered the 1922, banging and cheering is… not that loud. Strikingly so.
— Jessica Elgot (@jessicaelgot) December 12, 2018
British ruling class are a bunch of savages with this desk-banging bullshit, I’ll tell you what.
10:05
Apparently, the thing is that people are going to vote for May as long as she pledges to resign early next year.
Spoken to 3 MPs I have long had down as ‘no confidence’ swing votes—one minister, one former and one backbencher—and all say they are voting May. But, interestingly, all want her to go soon after March 29
— James Forsyth (@JGForsyth) December 12, 2018
This is some kind of greasy backroom deal going on, making it appear as though May may squeak by tonight, so she can leave with some amount of “dignity.” As if a childless old wench who waltzes around in public with short hair in view could ever have any form of human dignity.
Theresa May has less dignity than a rabid dog, foaming at the mouth and biting himself.
5:30 AM
If/when May loses, we’re not looking at a great future.
Bookies are giving a particularly distasteful gentleman better odds than Boris to replace may.
Former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab, relatively unknown outside of Westminster, is the current bookies favourite to win any leadership run-off.
Mr Raab, a prominent Brexiteer in the referendum campaign, was appointed as Brexit Secretary in July but resigned from the role in November, saying he could not support Mrs May’s deal.
In his resignation letter to Theresa May on November 15, he wrote: ‘I understand why you have chosen to pursue the deal with the EU on the terms proposed, and I respect the different views held in good faith by all of our colleagues.’
I wonder why this guy would be outpacing the obvious choice?
Oh…
Yeah.
Boris himself alleges he has a Jew Great-Grandfather. But Jew father will beat-out alleged Jew great-grandfather every time.
It’s a shame that Jacob Rees-Mogg isn’t in the running. He is objectively the best of the best.
But he is hardly even being considered – bookies give him a 9/1 chance.
The Country needs a new leader, it is time for Mrs May to resign.
— Jacob Rees-Mogg (@Jacob_Rees_Mogg) December 12, 2018
British politics are far too corrupt to allow someone who actually believes something and has zero Jewish ancestry into a position of power. Plus he wears a top hat and round glasses and is just generally much too classy for the disgusting London elite. Furthermore, Rees-Mogg is a traditional Catholic, and has argued against abortion, anal “marriage” and other Jewish social policies.
At least the Jew Raab was pro-Brexit.
I guess that’s something.
5:21
Here’s May’s statement, begging not to be taken out:
Sir Graham Brady has confirmed that he has received 48 letters from Conservative MPs so there will now be a vote of confidence in my leadership of the Conservative party.
I will contest that vote with everything I’ve got.
I have been a member of the Conservative party for over 40 years.
I have served it as an activist, councillor, MP, shadow minister, home secretary and now as prime minister.
I stood to be leader because I believe in the Conservative vision for a better future.
A thriving economy, with nowhere and nobody left behind.
A stronger society, where everyone can make the most of their talents.
Always serving the national interest.
And at this crucial moment in our history, that means securing a Brexit deal that delivers on the result of the EU referendum.
Taking back control of our borders, laws and money – but protecting jobs, our security and our precious Union as we do so.
Through good times and bad over the last two years, my passionate belief that such a deal is attainable, that a bright future lies ahead for our country, has not wavered.
And it is now within our grasp.
I spent yesterday meeting Chancellor Merkel, Prime Minister Rutte, President Tusk and President Juncker to address the concerns that MPs have with the backstop – and we are making progress.
I was due to travel to Dublin this afternoon to continue that work – but will now remain here in London to make the case for my leadership with my parliamentary colleagues.
A change of leadership in the Conservative party now will put our country’s future at risk and create uncertainty when we can least afford it.
A new Leader wouldn’t be in place by the 21st January legal deadline, so a leadership election risks handing control of the Brexit negotiations to opposition MPs in parliament.
The new Leader wouldn’t have time to renegotiate a withdrawal agreement and get the legislation through parliament by 29th March – so one of their first acts would have to be extending or rescinding Article 50, delaying – or even stopping – Brexit when people want us to get on with it.
And a leadership election would not change the fundamentals of the negotiation or the Parliamentary arithmetic.
Weeks spent tearing ourselves apart will only create more division, just as we should be standing together to serve our country.
None of that would be in the national interest.
The only people whose interests would be served are Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell.
The British people want us to get on with it. And they want us to focus on the other vital issues that matter to them too.
Building a stronger economy, delivering first-class public services and the homes that families need.
These are the public’s priorities – and they must be the Conservative Party’s priorities too.
We must – and we shall – deliver on the referendum vote and seize the opportunities that lie ahead.
But the Conservatives must not be a single issue party; we are a party of the whole nation.
Moderate, pragmatic, mainstream: committed to re-uniting our country and building a country that works for everyone – the agenda I set out in my first speech outside this front door.
Delivering the Brexit people voted for.
Building a country that works for everyone.
I have devoted myself unsparingly to these tasks ever since I became prime minister.
And I stand ready to finish the job.
5:12 AM
A bunch of shills have come out in support of May – including David Cameron (lol?).
I hope Conservative MPs will back the PM in the vote today. We need no distractions from seeking the best outcome with our neighbours, friends and partners in the EU.
— David Cameron (@David_Cameron) December 12, 2018
Furthermore:
Today’s Leadership contest is a self indulgent distraction at a critical time for the country.
Conservatives must unite behind @theresa_may
She continues to have my full support.
— Jackson Carlaw MSP (@Carlaw4Eastwood) December 12, 2018
Vital to support @theresa_may today. She is working hard in the interest of the U.K. to get a good Brexit deal and she has my full support.
— Andrea Leadsom MP (@andrealeadsom) December 12, 2018
I fully support the Prime Minister and believe it would be completely wrong to have a leadership election now. She is the right person to deliver Brexit and has shown herself to be strong and determined.
— Liz Truss (@trussliz) December 12, 2018
I will be supporting the Prime Minister in tonight’s confidence vote. This is about the national interest not personalities and naked ambition. Theresa May has the most difficult job imaginable and I think, whatever your view of Brexit, this is a time to stand together.
— Steve Brine MP (@BrineMP) December 12, 2018
A total of 100 MPs have tweeted support.
4:10 AM
Theresa May, affectionately known as “the batty old prune,” was doing a whirlwind tour of Europe as she claims to be negotiating new terms for her failed Brexit deal.
But after the EU declared there would be no concessions at all, she is now blazing down in blazes.
Conservative MPs have triggered a vote of no confidence in Theresa May, plunging the Brexit process into chaos as Tory colleagues indicated they no longer had faith in the prime minister to deliver the deal.
Sir Graham Brady, the chair of the 1922 Committee, has received at least 48 letters from Conservative MPs calling for a vote of no confidence in May. Under party rules, a contest is triggered if 15% of Conservative MPs write to the chair of the committee of Tory backbenchers.
A ballot will be held on Wednesday evening between 6pm and 8pm, Brady said, with votes counted “immediately afterwards and an announcement will be made as soon as possible”.
In a press release, he said: “The threshold of 15% of the parliamentary party seeking a vote of confidence in the leader of the Conservative party has been exceeded.”
The prime minister will now need the backing of at least 158 Tory MPs to see off the Brexiters’ challenge, and her position would then be safe for 12 months. However, the prime minister could decide to resign if votes against her were below the threshold to topple her, but significant enough in number.
6:00 PM GMT is 1:00 PM EST, for those of you who cannot into time zones.
We’ll have ongoing updates on this issue.
May was in Europe yesterday, and met with fellow prune person Angela Merkel and others as she attempted to pretend she was going to fix this.
In all likelihood, May is going to try and pull something out of a hat today before the vote. It is probable that drunken lunatic Jean-Claude Juncker will give some type of concession before the deadline, even if it is something he is planning to go back on later, or at least water down.
Because I’m sure he’d rather be dealing with May, an anti-Brexit campaigner, than Boris Johnson, who has been Leave from the beginning.
Boris apparently saw this coming, because he just cut his goofy hair.
Oh no.. Boris has cut his hair into a smart, Prime Ministerial crop. This sh*t just got serious. #marr pic.twitter.com/5VUpvwv1rE
— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) December 9, 2018
I don’t make predictions, but if I were going to make a prediction, I would predict that May will lose the vote tonight.