About Bloody Time

The poison dwarf has outstayed his welcome.

The Prime Minister will try to end John Bercow’s political career at the next election by standing a Conservative candidate against him.

In a declaration of war against the controversial Speaker, Tory HQ will put up a prospective MP in his Buckingham seat.

The move comes after Mr Bercow tore up Commons rules this week to allow backbenchers to seize control of the agenda and pass a law delaying Brexit.

Over the past two years he has repeatedly been accused of siding with pro-Remain MPs to try to undermine the Government.

The speaker is supposed to remain neutral, yet this clown demonstrated repeatedly that he is incapable of such impartiality. He should have gone by now but remains. So, yes, time to dislodge him.

11 Comments

  1. The Heir to Blair could have removed Dopey when he had a majority but didn’t. I guess they were on the same side.

    God, I hope the little sh1t doesn’t get a peerage.

    • I believe it’s the PM’s prerogative to decide whether or not to offer a peerage to the little runt. Somehow I doubt the PM has that in mind – unless it’s Brighton Pier, with odious toadius suitably kitted out with cement wellies.

  2. That has to be the most punchable face on the planet. I’m ordinarily a peaceable kind of guy, but I’d make an exception for Bercow.

  3. Yes most right minded peaceable people would like to see Bercow hanged, drawn, and quartered. I bet his constituents love him.

  4. It seems to be a problem with Parliament and the public sector in general that people are not held accountable for their actions. If the speaker of the house is supposed to be neutral, then why wasn’t he straight out on his ear as soon as he showed such blatant bias?

    • Getting rid of even the most traitorous and incompetent MP’s is tough enough, barring serious criminal wrongdoing resulting in a jail sentence of more than one year, bankruptcy or expenses fraud. Even the “recall method” used against Fiona Onasanya has a ridiculously high bar and multiple steps to actually get rid of one.

      About the only mechanism which would work is an explicit vote to dismiss the speaker by the House of Commons.

      This was raised during Michael Martin’s time as speaker

      [LINK]

      Otherwise you are left with defeating him by fielding other candidates against him during a General Election, since the speaker must be a serving MP.

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