JOHN DLUDLU | Lessons from Britain’s imperfect democracy
Last week, with barely a whimper of protest, Britain was cut off from the most powerful technology on the planet - and consigned, I fear, to a future as a…
- Center-left1
- Center1
- Right3
3 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
Last week, with barely a whimper of protest, Britain was cut off from the most powerful technology on the planet - and consigned, I fear, to a future as a defenceless, third-rate power. Sterling fell modestly on the news, trading 0.19% weaker against the dollar, while UK gilt yields were largely unchanged, although they were sold off on Friday following Burnham’s by-election win. The date, 22 June, fell almost precisely 10 years after Britons voted to leave the European Union .
Furthermore, Keir Starmer’s ousting by Labour Party opens door to a competitive elective conference, while in South Africa ANC deployees take orders from unelected task teams. While the Labour Party is consumed by its own political circus, a diplomatic crisis is going unnoticed.
Cross-referenced from 5 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Last week, with barely a whimper of protest, Britain was cut off from the most powerful technology on the planet - and consigned, I fear, to a future as a defenceless, third-rate power.
reliability low1/4 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
Sterling fell modestly on the news, trading 0.19% weaker against the dollar, while UK gilt yields were largely unchanged, although they were sold off on Friday following Burnham’s by-election win.
according to Daily MaverickThe date, 22 June, fell almost precisely 10 years after Britons voted to leave the European Union .
according to Daily MaverickKeir Starmer’s ousting by Labour Party opens door to a competitive elective conference, while in South Africa ANC deployees take orders from unelected task teams
according to Business Day LiveWhile the Labour Party is consumed by its own political circus, a diplomatic crisis is going unnoticed.
according to Daily Mail +2
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
Left side
- illegal
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
Last week, with barely a whimper of protest, Britain was cut off from the most powerful technology on the planet - and consigned, I fear,…
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight side