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Tynwald Questions July 16th


Moghrey Mie

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2 minutes ago, 2112 said:

IOMG and many of its cheerleaders on here, will have you believe that there is no poverty, the island is booming, money is no object and the island is paved with gold, and is the land of milk and honey. 
 

 

It is if you're in the tent pissing out!

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52 minutes ago, cissolt said:

Some fiery exchanges around the appointment of Mr Shimmins to the board at the steam packet.

Mr Thomas suggesting that Treasury appointed a friendly face in the role who would do their bidding. 

As some suggested on here. Whilst others declared it all above board and without subterfuge :whatever:

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1 hour ago, 2112 said:

IOMG and many of its cheerleaders on here, will have you believe that there is no poverty, the island is booming, money is no object and the island is paved with gold, and is the land of milk and honey. 
 

 

2 4 6 8

Who do we appreciate 

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1 hour ago, cissolt said:

Some fiery exchanges around the appointment of Mr Shimmins to the board at the steam packet.

Mr Thomas suggesting that Treasury appointed a friendly face in the role who would do their bidding. 

To be fair that's sort of the idea when a major shareholder appoints someone to a Board.  The problem is that is not what they are saying they are doing.

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59 minutes ago, Roger Mexico said:

To be fair that's sort of the idea when a major shareholder appoints someone to a Board

They appoint someone who is going to represent the interests of the shareholders. In this case they are likely to appoint someone who does not represent the interests of the taxpayers, but instead represents the interests of the <fill in the blanks>.

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32 minutes ago, Two-lane said:

They appoint someone who is going to represent the interests of the shareholders. In this case they are likely to appoint someone who does not represent the interests of the taxpayers, but instead represents the interests of the <fill in the blanks>.

Well quite, but it's hardly unknown for corporate shareholders to to do the same and appoint people who will look after the interests of those running the company rather than the eventual owners.

What I also find interesting is how more and more these appointments seem to be restricted to two main groups of people - former civil servants and former politicians.  Plus 'fly-ins' those living in the UK who can be relied on to have no local knowledge or commitment, but who are very experienced in sitting on Boards.

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34 minutes ago, Roger Mexico said:

What I also find interesting is how more and more these appointments seem to be restricted to two main groups of people - former civil servants and former politicians.  Plus 'fly-ins' those living in the UK who can be relied on to have no local knowledge or commitment, but who are very experienced in sitting on Boards.

"Proven steady hands on the tiller"....? 🤭

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4 hours ago, Roger Mexico said:

Well quite, but it's hardly unknown for corporate shareholders to to do the same and appoint people who will look after the interests of those running the company rather than the eventual owners.

What I also find interesting is how more and more these appointments seem to be restricted to two main groups of people - former civil servants and former politicians.  Plus 'fly-ins' those living in the UK who can be relied on to have no local knowledge or commitment, but who are very experienced in sitting on Boards.

They did mention that the chief finance officer had to be excused due to a conflict of interest, was it a conflict with the person being interviewed?

Do the board need a banker who was also on the board of govts new favourite hotel the comis.  Our spending there has gone through the roof in recent years..

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On 7/16/2024 at 10:45 AM, Non-Believer said:

Wouldn't you think that in the "oldest Parliament in the world", a basic democratic institution such as Hansard to record the goings on would be maintained as a priority?

You would. But Tynwald isn't the oldest parliament in the world. It's the oldest continuous parliament depending on how you define 'parliament'. Tynwald was established around 979CE by which time Iceland's parliament had been going for about fifty years. The King of Norway disbanded the Althing for a considerable time but no one ever found a way to shut down Tynwald once they got going.

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1 minute ago, Expat. said:

You would. But Tynwald isn't the oldest parliament in the world. It's the oldest continuous parliament depending on how you define 'parliament'. Tynwald was established around 979CE by which time Iceland's parliament had been going for about fifty years. The King of Norway disbanded the Althing for a considerable time but no one ever found a way to shut down Tynwald once they got going.

You wouldn't give up that salary easily either!

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On 7/17/2024 at 7:49 PM, cissolt said:

Do the board need a banker who was also on the board of govts new favourite hotel the comis.  Our spending there has gone through the roof in recent years..

And such a favourite venue that they'd prefer to use it rather than Govt's own venue apparently....

Screenshot_20240801-094253_Samsung Internet.jpg

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5 minutes ago, Non-Believer said:

And such a favourite venue that they'd prefer to use it rather than Govt's own venue apparently....

Screenshot_20240801-094253_Samsung Internet.jpg

Since we used the commis as a prison it's become governments number 1 venue.  Do we have another sefton scenario? 

The last conference cost £31,000 including £6800 for the villa.

 

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1 hour ago, Non-Believer said:

And such a favourite venue that they'd prefer to use it rather than Govt's own venue apparently....

Screenshot_20240801-094253_Samsung Internet.jpg

I think that IOMG would prefer these kind of events at venues like this, amongst other things, it will stop the riff raff from coming into the venue. Getting to the Comis involves a bus ride and some walking. The Villa Marina was easy to access. Overall, I think the IOMG conference is a complete waste of time and money down the drain. 

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