Angela Rayner, who is the less English-style Labor deputy

una great frankness that sometimes verges on rudeness, a more than informal style and a notable personality make her a deputy leader of the British Labor party who is very popular precisely because of her ways that are anything but “English style”. Her name is Angel Rayner, is Sir Keir Starmer’s deputybut unlike him he always gets talked about.

Angela Rayner, the outspoken Labor that the British like

As will also happen this time after the interview with the “Financial Times”, in which he admitted without any problem that he had made a£5,600 breast lift “a figure that I had to borrow as a gift for my 30th birthday,” he said, adding that it was absurd “to have 84-year-old breasts at that age.”

Rayner, in fact, had his first child at 16 and then immediately after two more. Also to the newspaper, she explained that after losing the excess weight due to pregnancies «my upper body resembled a dachshund’s ears». And that’s why he decided to resort to cosmetic surgery.

Angela Rayner is the party’s rising star. (Getty Images)

Very direct, right down to the swear word

In the interview, the number two of the Labor party also said other things. Like, for example, swearing, even if not to offend, she specified.

Among the various times that the political enthusiast has had the spotlight on her, the one in which she defined in Parliament the “scum” conservativesor, a pejorative of “scum”, also classifying them as “a bunch of racists, misogynists, homophobes, the worst scum”. Just to make no mistake. A few days later, however, Rayner apologized.

Angela Ryner as Sharon Stone in basic instinct

Another case was when in an article of the Mail On Sunday was described as a sort of Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct during a question time in the House of Commons. According to the journalist, Rayner would have «voluntarily crossed his legs several times in front of Boris Johnsonas he spoke, to distract the Prime Minister.’

But the deputy Labor leader, in this case, came defended by most Westminster MPs and journalists and he also had widespread solidarity in Parliament and in the country.

The party needs you

Labor leader Starmer has recently thought about getting rid of Rayner, as too radical, but has not yet taken any decisions on the matter.

Also because, despite these “flaws” Rayner is crucial to Labour’s futureabove all in the aim of recovering consensus in the working-class areas, which saw the victory of the conservative Boris Johnson in the last elections.

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