Jessie Ames Bbc [upd] -
But watch the body language. Shadow ministers are not preparing for a vote on a bill. They are preparing for a vote on a government. I am told that a “war room” has been quietly activated in the basement of Labour’s headquarters, not for messaging, but for logistics: transport, polling station coordination, emergency media rotas.
I went to a coffee shop across from Parliament this lunchtime. A nurse in scrubs was staring at her phone, refreshing a news page. “I don’t care who wins,” she told me. “I just need to know if I can pay my rent on the 1st. You lot in the media talk about ‘process.’ I talk about my daughter’s school shoes.” jessie ames bbc
One Labour strategist put it to me bluntly: “We don’t need to push the apple. It’s already rolling off the table. Our job is to be there when it hits the floor.” But watch the body language
After three days of backroom maneuvering and a leaked Treasury memo that has reduced the government’s legislative agenda to what one aide described as “confetti,” we find ourselves at yet another inflection point. But this one feels different. This one is not about personalities. It is about arithmetic. I am told that a “war room” has