17 Van der Gouw
biffa bin
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2010
- Messages
- 6,515
So they can apologise when it comes to Farage.
Corbyn...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-43463496
At least they didn't photoshop his hat though.
To be fair, I never really got the outrage over that, because just a few seconds prior they had used the same backdrop with Tory defence minister Gavin Williamson
Couldn't give a shite about either Farage or Corbyn, but glad the Beeb set the record straight today.
The BBC apologised for its inaccurate report earlier this month which said Mr Farage's account was being closed because he no longer met the wealth threshold for Coutts, citing a source familiar with the matter.
and
"In doing so, I recognise that I left Mr Jack with the impression that the decision to close Mr Farage's accounts was solely a commercial one," she said.
What?until he was proven to be entirely correct on all counts
Funny how active this thread was until he was proven to be entirely correct on all counts wasn't it
This is the least bad thing any bank in the world has done since 29 JuneALL of us should be concerned how these banks behaved attempting to be the arbiter of thought and speech.
He was part right, someone pointed out the timeline in the leak doesn't fully support Farage's view on the economic part but he is correct that his political views were a factor.Funny how active this thread was until he was proven to be entirely correct on all counts wasn't it, a story laughed off and belittled on these pages has now claimed the head of the CEO, who passed on inaccurate (i.e. lied) confidential information. The reason she lied is because the truth was completely morally unacceptable.
You know its equal parts hilarious and terrifying how most people treat politics as they would supporting a football team, with opposing sides being like sporting rivals… because people hate someone like Farage they’ll defend anything that happens to him, lawful or not, unjust or not. How are any of you hardcore politicos any different from pledge of allegiance bible thumping red belt Yank types? You’re the same breed, this isn't China ALL of us should be concerned how these banks behaved attempting to be the arbiter of thought and speech.
I’m so concerned that I’ve just opened a NatWest account.Funny how active this thread was until he was proven to be entirely correct on all counts wasn't it, a story laughed off and belittled on these pages has now claimed the head of the CEO, who passed on inaccurate (i.e. lied) confidential information. The reason she lied is because the truth was completely morally unacceptable.
You know its equal parts hilarious and terrifying how most people treat politics as they would supporting a football team, with opposing sides being like sporting rivals… because people hate someone like Farage they’ll defend anything that happens to him, lawful or not, unjust or not. How are any of you hardcore politicos any different from pledge of allegiance bible thumping red belt Yank types? You’re the same breed, this isn't China ALL of us should be concerned how these banks behaved attempting to be the arbiter of thought and speech.
This is the most boring news story to dominate the news in some time.
Quite simple really - CEO is there to fall on the sword when this kind of thing happens. The idiocy lies with Allison Rose who gave the BBC the story.Farage must have received the list from his employer, Vlad, detailing all the payments made to government officials.
How such a non-entity as Farage can have such an influence is only possible if all the dark secrets are bubbling to the surface.
Quite simple really - CEO is there to fall on the sword when this kind of thing happens. The idiocy lies with Allison Rose who gave the BBC the story.
With next to zero coverage.It was stupid it from Coutts/Natwest to break client confidentiality. But the coverage it has got is ridiculous.
Farage is playing the government and the public yet again.
Little unimportant man with no power turns his private banking affairs into a national story. The truth will out. Eventually.
I mean it might even be illegal not just stupid. Papers write about anything these days, Farage is a divisive figure and we're in a cost of living crisis so people will gladly read about a private bank having the screw turned a bit. I dislike Farage but am objective enough to see he has a point, as much as he is making a song and dance about it t thrust himself back into the eye of the public.It was stupid it from Coutts/Natwest to break client confidentiality. But the coverage it has got is ridiculous.
Farage is playing the government and the public yet again.
Little unimportant man with no power turns his private banking affairs into a national story. The truth will out. Eventually.
I mean it might even be illegal not just stupid. Papers write about anything these days, Farage is a divisive figure and we're in a cost of living crisis so people will gladly read about a private bank having the screw turned a bit. I dislike Farage but am objective enough to see he has a point, as much as he is making a song and dance about it t thrust himself back into the eye of the public.
So what is it, did he lose his bank account because he didn’t have enough money or because of his political opinions?
If it’s the latter, then the difference between Britain and Putin’s Russia is not as big as we think.
So what is it, did he lose his bank account because he didn’t have enough money or because of his political opinions?
If it’s the latter, then the difference between Britain and Putin’s Russia is not as big as we think.
So what is it, did he lose his bank account because he didn’t have enough money or because of his political opinions?
If it’s the latter, then the difference between Britain and Putin’s Russia is not as big as we think.
So what is it, did he lose his bank account because he didn’t have enough money or because of his political opinions?
If it’s the latter, then the difference between Britain and Putin’s Russia is not as big as we think.
OK that makes sense.Seems like both. They wanted to get rid because they considered him bad PR, but felt unable to do so until he fell below their minimum financial requirements. I guess if he'd remained above the requirements he'd still have an account. Equally I guess that they might have given him more of a grace period had he gone below their limits but happened to be of a different public character.
As far as I know they did offer him a regular NatWest account though, so it's not like they denied him banking. They just removed his privilege of accessing one of their more illustrious accounts.
Hyperbole, sure, but closing bank accounts because of political opinions is very Russia-like.
Looks like Gina Miller lost her party account too for political reasons. She was pretty anti-Brexit and the opposite to Farage.