Sentences with phrase «coalition of chaos»

A modern day coalition of chaos to match anything that a DUP parliamentarian might recite from the Book of Revelation to terrify their children into saying their prayers, going to church on Sunday and not watching Hollyoaks.
According to the Daily Mail, Communities and Local Government Secretary, Sajid Javid said: «Conservatives will support church and faith schools... but Jeremy Corbyn, supported by a coalition of chaos, would wage war on faith schools, reducing choice for parents and undermining these schools» unique character and ethos.
He called the government a «coalition of chaos» - a term the Conservatives once used to describe a potential pact between Labour, the SNP, and the Greens, and he spoke of the «shambles» that Brexit negotiations have become.
A coalition of chaos.
«Every vote for him is a vote for a coalition of chaos, a weak leader propped up by the Liberal Democrats and the Scottish nationalists; every vote for me is a vote for strong and stable leadership in the national interest, building a stronger and more secure future for this country.»
She's got a «coalition of chaos» around her own cabinet table - Phillip Hammond and Liam Fox, Boris Johnson and David Davis.
But this coalition of chaos is no joke.
During the election campaign, Theresa May told voters they faced the threat of a «coalition of chaos.
The Conservative Party's William Hague says the possibility of a combination of any of the opposition parties would lead to a «coalition of chaos».
Following the debate, William Hague described the possibility of a combination of any of the opposition parties would lead to a «coalition of chaos».
Instead of what she called «a coalition of chaos» involving the centre - left parties, she offers the clarity of a majority Conservative government.
And how might her deal turn out to be exactly the «coalition of chaos «she warned would appear under Labour?
Conservative chairman Patrick McLoughlin said: «The threat of Jeremy Corbyn making it to Downing Street propped up by a coalition of chaos is very real — and these recordings show the Lib Dems are scheming to make it happen.
«Theresa May only needs to lose six seats for the Conservatives to lose their majority — leading to Jeremy Corbyn in Downing Street propped up by the SNP and Lib Dems in a coalition of chaos, bankrolled by militant union barons like Len McCluskey.»
During the election campaign leading Conservatives, including Mrs May, characterised a Labour minority government as a «coalition of chaos».
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