The Wannabes
Use attributes for filter ! | |
First episode date | May 3, 2010 |
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Final episode date | September 17, 2011 |
Creators | Doreen Spicer |
Networks | ABC Me |
Family Channel | |
Starz | |
Reviews | www.imdb.com |
Open theme | "A Brand New Day, I'll Make My Way" |
Origin releas | May 3, 2010 –; September 17, 2011 |
Cast | Gabrielle LeMaire |
Episodes | EpisodesS02 E13 · Classroom Musical Part TwoFeb 17, 2011 S02 E12 · EP 25 - Classroom Musical Part 1Feb 16, 2011 S02 E11 · Beyond the MusicFeb 15, 2011 View 20+ more |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2403628 |
About The Wannabes
Six aspiring pop stars accidentally get enrolled into an institution for classical music and dance and deal with various issues while sidestepping their bad-tempered principal.
Rishi Sunak hits back at Tory leadership tax critics
...The process of whittling down The Wannabes is about to begin...
Noisy contest sees leadership hopefuls take potshots at Sunak on tax
... By a week on Thursday we expect MPs to have whittled The Wannabes down to a final two...
Boris Johnson resigns: First leadership bids to become next prime minister
... The Wannabes will fight a popularity contest among Tory MPs in the next few weeks, and should two of them be left at the end of that process, Conservative Party members will get the final say over the summer...
Boris Johnson resignation: New leader will shift political landscape
... The Wannabes will fight a popularity contest among Tory MPs in the next few weeks, and should two of them be left at the end of that process, Conservative Party members will get the final say over the summer...
Boris Johnson resignation: New leader will shift political landscape
He climbed high and fell fast.
Boris Johnson will be remembered as a convention smashing, rule bending, first name recognition Prime Minister .
A Man whose character strengths, in The Eyes of many Conservative MPs, were also his weaknesses.
Great at campaigning, poor at governing, many backbenchers found themselves reflecting.
Stood at the lectern in Downing Street, Boris Johnson was forced to articulate that his imagined future was being crushed.
The Boy who dreamed of being " world king" ejected.
A primary colours Prime Minister provoking colourful reactions to the near end: protesters just beyond the Downing Street gates screaming " liar" some of his most loyal MPs comparing his defenestration to the downfall of Lady Thatcher.
Boris Johnson is now, he insists, a Prime Minister emasculated, fulfilling a duty rather than a bucket list of ambitions.
His supporters are pointing to convention that departing Prime Ministers loiter until their replacement rolls up, rather than instantly skedaddle to make way for a caretaker PM.
As a spectator to this noise from Westminster, you might ponder: why them and what next?
Why them, that tiny collection of MPs, deciding who should govern and lead, so relatively soon after a big election win?
Well, in a Parliamentary Democracy , for better or worse, as opposed to those countries with a presidency, our party leaders, and so our Prime Ministers , are chosen by their parties, not the rest of us.
It means the thinnest slither of the country will get to decide who Boris Johnson 's replacement is. The electorate will the chance to endorse or reject The Chosen one, but only at The Next election.
It may not surprise you to discover that Westminster is a postcode which doesn't suffer a deficit of ambition.
The Wannabes will fight a popularity contest among Tory MPs in The Next few weeks, and should two of them be left at The End of that process, Conservative Party members will get The Final say over the summer.
Somewhere Between 100,000 and 200,000 people will be charged with selecting The Next head of our government on our behalf.
It is a safe bet The Next Prime Minister will be a very different character to Boris Johnson . Given the manner and motivations behind his toppling, being seen to ooze integrity and revere truth are qualities all the candidates will aspire to illustrate.
But beyond that there will be an intriguing debate about what it means to a Conservative in 2022.
A Conservative in a high tax, high spending era.
A Conservative in post-Brexit Britain, where neither main party at Westminster contests The Fundamentals of the UK's departure from the EU, but where Our Relations with our nearest neighbours have not normalised since.
When a new leader assumes office, the political landscape will instantly shift.
Yes, they will have novelty and freshness, at least for a bit. But no electoral mandate to call their own.
And the opposition parties will confront a new opponent.
As the Boris Johnson era concludes, so too will be turf upon which the arguments of tomorrow will play out.
Source of news: bbc.com