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  1. Cedric Gervais & Howard Jones - "Things Can Only Get Better (Original Mix)" ... This is the place where you can go rolling in the deep, do the harlem shake, gangnam style, or just ride the wrecking ball. Post your favorites from 2010 - 2019 Members Online. School ...

  2. Hace 3 días · The song was “Things Can Only Get Better” by Northern Irish band D:Ream, known to many from former Labour leader Tony Blair ’s 1996 general election campaign, which soundtracked his road to victory in the 1 May 1997 contest. Anti-Brexit campaigner Steve Bray, who has been protesting outside Westminster for the past five years, was behind ...

  3. Hace 4 días · Rishi Sunak shouting over a protestor playing THINGS CAN ONLY GET BETTER in the pouring rain is peak Britain. 10/10. — Joanna Hardy-Susskind (@Joanna__Hardy) May 22, 2024. 4. Talking on in the pouring rain to the accompaniment of Things Can Only Get Better. You wouldn’t script it like this. Too much of a humiliation, it wouldn’t seem ...

  4. Hace 4 días · Rishi Sunak shouting over a protestor playing THINGS CAN ONLY GET BETTER in the pouring rain is peak Britain. 10/10. — Joanna Hardy-Susskind (@Joanna__Hardy) May 22, 2024. 4. Talking on in the pouring rain to the accompaniment of Things Can Only Get Better. You wouldn’t script it like this. Too much of a humiliation, it wouldn’t seem ...

  5. Hace 3 días · Standing in the rain and drowned out by protesters playing the Labour Party’s 1997 victory anthem “Things Can Only Get Better” will not have been Rishi Sunak ’s preferred backdrop for his ...

  6. Hace 4 días · Things Can Only Get Better is not the first pop song to cause consternation in political circles. Liz Truss angered M-People’s Mike Pickering when she used the song Moving On Up.

  7. Hace 3 días · "And of course, it had to be Things Can Only Get Better. Because everybody can relate to that and the 1997 election. "I didn't do it for Labour. I did it because it was the top trolling song for the Conservatives." Irrespective of Mr Bray's distancing from Labour, the song is still synonymous with the party decades on from Sir Tony's campaign.