table and chairs used dudley

table and chairs used dudley

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Table And Chairs Used Dudley

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Featuressee allMain Coloursee allBrandsee allMaterialsee allStylesee allNumber of Piecessee allTo Seatsee allConditionsee allPrice-Buying Formatsee allItem locationsee all2 miles5 miles10 miles15 miles20 miles50 miles75 miles100 miles150 miles200 miles500 miles750 miles1000 miles1500 miles2000 milesDelivery optionssee allShow onlysee allMore refinements...dining table and chairsSolid Oak Dinning Table with 6 ChairsSouth Croydon Range Webber Dining Table and chairsVintage Wooden Dining Table And ChairsKitchen Tiled Table and 4 ChairsWooden extending dining table with 6 matching chairsWooden Dining Table And 6 Faux Leather Chairsdining table and chairsMercers Furniture Corona Mexican Pine Dining Table and Chairs Sets See more like thisdining table and chairsvintage dining room table and six chairsOSLO DINING SET White and Oak Finish - Table & Chairs Available Separately See more like thisNew 2pcs Brown Dining Chairs Kitchen Chair Set Solid Pine Wood Furniture See more like thisNew 2/4/6 pcs Wood Dinning Chair Room Kitchen Pine Wood Furniture Modern WhiteWooden Dining Table And 2 Chairs / 4 Chairs Set Kitchen Furniture 3 Colors NEW




Solid Pine chairs 4butterfly table and chairsFarmhouse Style Table & ChairsNEW Brooklyn 4-6 Seat Extending Dining Table with 4 Chairs - Beech EffectNew Quality Wooden Dining Table and 4 Chairs Set Kitchen Furniture White / Brown See more like thisGIOVANI Black/White High Gloss Glass Dining Table Set and 6 Leather Chairs Seats Glass dining table and 4 chairs ...-Farmhouse table and 4 Chairs dining table 4 chairsDining Table and 4 Chairs Contemporary Dining Set in Choice of Colours Annika See more like thisGot one to sell?Our Full Terms and Conditions can be viewed here. Returns within 14 days (please see our Returns page) bhf_shops unfortunately do not accept: Any payment method other than PayPal Offers and/or requests to end auctions early Collection in person (unless specified as a 'Collect in Store' listing) Exemptions or to open auctions to excluded bidders Requests to wait longer than 7 days for payment - we have an automated system




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£289.99 Instant buy Item 23h 42m 29 sDonate to our shops Book a free furniture collection Free collection of clothes, books and more Gift Aid your donations How your donations help Items we can't sell Partner with our shops Recycling in our shops We collect all sorts of items: Tables, chairs, desks, cabinets Beds and bedroom furniture TVs, Hi-Fis, washing machines, small electricals We can also collect clothes, shoes, books, DVDs, CDs, bric-a-brac and toys at the same time. For valuable or specialist items our dedicated team of experts will ensure that we receive the best resale value possible. Visit our eBay shop to find out what is currently available. If you only have small items we also offer free collections of clothes, books and more. Gift Aid your donations and help save more lives Did you know that by adding Gift Aid to your donations they're worth 25% more to us? That will help us to fund more life saving research at no extra cost to you.




Before booking your collection All your items are in good condition, complete and work correctly Each individual upholstered item has a fire label attached We are able to collect your item: there are some items we can’t sell for legal, safety or quality reasons. We recycle as many of these items as we can but we won’t always be able to accept everything. Unfortunately we cannot collect furniture and electrical items in Northern Ireland. Book a free collection or call 0808 250 0030One of America’s most powerful and outspoken opponents of climate change regulation received election campaign contributions that can be traced back to senior BP staff, including chief executive Bob Dudley. Jim Inhofe, a Republican senator from Oklahoma who has tirelessly campaigned against calls for a carbon tax and challenges the overwhelming consensus on climate change, received $10,000 (£6,700) from BP’s Political Action Committee (PAC). Following his re-election, Inhofe became chair of the Senate’s environment and public works committee in January, and then a month later featured in news bulletins throwing a snowball across the Senate floor.




Before tossing it, the senator said: “In case we have forgotten – because we keep hearing that 2014 is the warmest year on record – it is very, very cold outside. The BP PAC is funded by contributions from senior US executives and company staffers who sent in contributions to the PAC totalling more than $1m between 2010 and 2014. Over the same period the committee paid out $655,000 to candidates, with more than 40 incumbent senators benefiting. Yet, BP and Dudley have long called for world leaders to intervene and impose tough regulatory measures on the fossil fuel industry. Publishing its 98-page research paper, Energy Outlook 2035, last month, BP warned: “To abate carbon emissions further will require additional significant steps by policymakers beyond the steps already assumed.” Dudley has personally given $19,000 since June 2011 to the BP PAC – very close to the $5,000-a-year maximum allowable by law. Although Dudley is resident in Britain, he is eligible to give via the BP PAC because he is a US national.




While the sums channelled to Inhofe’s campaign represent only a small proportion of the BP PAC’s election spending and the senator’s own campaign funds, they show how unafraid the committee has been to spread its donations to the most controversial candidates. According to the BP PAC website, it financially supports election candidates “whose views and/or voting records reflect the interests of BP employees”. Records suggest Inhofe’s 2014 campaign was a funding priority for the BP PAC, ranking as one of the top recipients of committee funds when compared with disbursements to other serving senators. This was despite Inhofe’s senate battle not being a close one. His opponent, Matt Silverstein, who Inhofe beat comfortably in last November’s midterms, had a tiny campaign war chest by comparison. BP was asked whether it was appropriate for the PAC to make campaign contributions to such a vocal opponent of action on climate change, or for Dudley to be contributing towards such payments.




In a statement BP replied: “Voluntary donations [by staff] to the BP employees’ political action committee in the US are used to support a variety of candidates across the political spectrum and in many US geographies where we operate. “These candidates have one thing in common: they are important advocates for the energy industry in the broadest sense.” It added: “BP’s position on climate change is well known and is long-established. We believe that climate change is an important long-term issue that justifies global action.” The company declined to comment on Dudley’s own donations. PACs exist in the US where companies and trade unions cannot give directly to the campaigns of those running for office. Instead funds are pooled from staff – often senior executives – into a PAC, and disbursed by a committee board, often in a manner sympathetic to the company’s lobby and other interests. Other US oil industry leaders, including Exxon Mobil chief executive Rex Tillerson, make contributions to their own corporate PACs – money which in many cases can then be traced to Inhofe and other climate-sceptic politicians.




But Tillerson and other peers have not been as outspoken as BP and Dudley in calling for state intervention to tackle climate change, making the BP boss’s links to Inhofe campaign finance more controversial. Last week Obama said it was “disturbing” that Inhofe had been made chair of the senate environment committee. In broader criticism of unnamed political opponents, he then went on to say: “In some cases you have elected officials who are shills for the oil companies or the fossil fuel industry. And there is a lot of money involved.” Inhofe is unabashed about election campaign financing he receives from the industry. In his 2012 book, The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future, he wrote: “Whenever the media asked me how much I have received in campaign contributions from the fossil fuel industry, my unapologetic answer was ‘not enough’.” According to data compiled from public filings by the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), Inhofe’s campaign raised $4.84m between 2009 and 2014, with $1.77m coming from PACs, many of them sponsored by fossil fuel companies.




BP’s PAC was more active in the US 2014 election cycle than any other for more than a decade. Despite insisting it is non-partisan, 69% of contributions to federal election candidates in recent years have been to Republican politicians. This is a stronger bias than most other corporate PACs, according to the CRP. Not all recipients of BP PAC donations are climate change sceptics. Indeed, among other top recipients in recent years has been Steny Hoyer, House Democrat whip, one of the strongest advocates for government measures to tackle climate change. There are, however, other leading recipients who have attracted criticism from climate change campaigners, including Republican House speaker John Boehner and fellow Republican, Sen Mike Enzi from Wyoming. When asked his views on climate change in January, Boehner said: “We’ve had changes in our climate, although scientists debate the sources, in their opinion, of that change. But I think the real question is that every proposal out of this administration with regard to climate change means killing American jobs.”




“I don’t see [Obama] as trying to control pollution. I see him trying to put business out of business,” Enzi said last year. Campaign contributions is just one aspect of US political engagement linked to BP and its staff. Filings show the oil and gas group spends millions on lobbying efforts. The CRP classifies BP as a “heavy hitter”, ranking it among the top 140 biggest overall donors to federal elections since 1988. Its PAC ranks as the six largest such body with a sponsor company that is ultimately part of a non-US multinational. Those on the PAC board, deciding how to spend staff donations, are senior executives and lawyers at the company. The board’s vice-chair is Bob Stout, BP’s Washington-based head of regulatory affairs, who also sits on the group’s global policy making body. Dudley does not sit on the PAC board. According to its website, the PAC makes donations to “candidates who support the principles of free enterprise and good government, support a fair and reasonable business environment for the energy industry and share our philosophy that energy diversity advances energy security.”

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