Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 4 dias · 'People Have Taken Advantage Of Benefits System' | Isabel Oakeshott x Jeremy Kyle - YouTube. TalkTV. 875K subscribers. Subscribed. 61. 3.5K views 1 day ago #rishisunak #benefits. Jeremy Kyle...

    • 5 min
    • 4,2K
    • TalkTV
  2. Há 2 dias · This week’s frontperson for what can only be the work of Armando Iannucci or Chris Morris is ghost-writer extraordinaire (Pig’s head edition), and almost permanent fixture on the BBC’s political magazines, Isabel Oakeshott, who has a solution to the problem of litter and benefit claimants. Here’s a flavour of her think piece.

  3. Há 3 dias · Jeremy Kyle and Isabel Oakeshott discuss the UK's immigration and asylum policies, particularly the controversial Rwanda plan. Isabel highlighted how migrant...

    • 1 min
    • TalkTV
  4. Há 3 dias · The Daily Telegraph. Get benefits claimants back to work – cleaning our filthy streets. 2024-04-30 - ISABEL OAKESHOTT . FOLLOW Isabel Oakeshott on Twitter @Isabeloake­shott READ MORE at telegraph.co.uk/opinion. Excuse me while I sidestep steaming piles of rubbish and try not to tread on the remains of someone’s take-away.

  5. Há 2 dias · Perhaps it would be more helpful if people of Ms Oakeshott’s generation treated young people with respect and recognised their potential, instead of imagining them as labour to clean up others’ mess. Theo Morgan. London W9. SIR – I agree with Isabel Oakeshott. Unemployme­nt benefit should be renamed community service benefit.

  6. Há 2 dias · Oakeshott married Nigel Rosser and has three children. In 2018, she embarked on a relationship with businessman and future Reform UK leader Richard Tice. During the COVID-19 pandemic, when she and Tice were apprehended at a social gathering (purportedly against the regulations at the time), Oakeshott asserted she had “tested my eyesight” in allusion to the earlier Dominic Cummings scandal.

  7. Há 3 dias · But Isabel Oakeshott’s Nazi slave-labour approach to street-cleaning simply won’t work. Her article is riddled with emotive language – which is also a Nazi technique, as it happens. “Excuse me while I side-step steaming piles of rubbish and try not to tread on the remains of someone’s take-away,” she writes.