Best Of
Re: Avoiding Lucy – politicalbetting.com
As a young man, one quote that had a profound impact on me and made me a Conservative and makes me recoil from the modern day Tory party is this one, Mrs Thatcher would be disgusted at the modern day Tory party.You get the dissonance nicely shown in some of the Philip Kerr cycle of novels about Bernie Gunther - especially during Gunther's service on the Eastern Front. The contrast with the respect for the law and what was happening ...About 20 years ago I read an interview with a documentary maker and he was planning on doing a dramatisation of the People’s Court after the July 20th plot but decided not to because when they read the transcripts they thought the audience would assume scenes like this were an exaggeration.The disturbing thing about Freisler - and other Nazi jurists - is that they were all highly qualified. He had a doctorate in law, from a good university. Which in turn, made it very easy for many of them to move seamlessly back into civilian life at the war's end.Judge Connolly, the first appointment of PM Farage to his new 'Peoples Supreme Court' after his general election wing of 2029.She’d be the worse judge since Roland Freisler.
You heard it here first!
Remember that bit in Conspiracy, when Klopfer asks how many lawyers are present, and more than half raise their hands.
At one point, Freisler yelled at Field Marshal Erwin von Witzleben, who was trying to hold up his trousers after being purposely given old, oversized and beltless clothing: "You dirty old man, why do you keep fiddling with your trousers?"
‘The legal system we have and the rule of law are far more responsible for our traditional liberties than any system of one man one vote. Any country or government which wants to proceed towards tyranny starts to undermine legal rights and undermine the law.’
Re: Avoiding Lucy – politicalbetting.com
Have we done this?Tell-all books about royalty are, of course, famously fact-based.
The Queen was a Remainer: her secret views on Brexit revealed
In his new book, Power and the Palace, the former Times royal correspondent Valentine Low uncovers the secretive relationship between the monarchy and government. Speaking to Palace aides, politicians and civil servants, he reveals the private side of Queen Elizabeth II
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/royal-family/article/queen-remainer-power-politics-palace-vc6dlmkzt
Re: Avoiding Lucy – politicalbetting.com
FFS. Earlier I suggested posting about Lucy C******** was so f'ing boring that the mods should consider drawing a line in the sand.
Now there's a flaming header on her. Tut.
Now there's a flaming header on her. Tut.
Re: What future for hyper-local TV news? – politicalbetting.com
Epping Council seem useless , how long does it take to deal with a planning application ?The appeal ruling will probably be highly unpopular, but it does appear correct as a matter of law.
The judges seem to be suggesting that mob rule shouldn’t be allowed to affect the law .
The original high court judge seems to have really screwed up making a number of errors .
Which is after all the judges' job.
Anyone who blames the judges, rather than the government, is plain wrong.
Nigelb
7
Re: What future for hyper-local TV news? – politicalbetting.com
It is outweighed by the undesirability of incentivising protestsThe point of that is that protests should not have a chilling effect on the interpretation of the law. So, a court refusing your appeal against refusal of an extension should not be swayed by your neighbour threatening to picket your street if they don't get their way.
This is a deeply weird line tbh.
@Dougseal Yes. Of course everyone knows the substantive issues are due to be heard in October; well I do/did at any rate.
DougSeal
5
Re: What future for hyper-local TV news? – politicalbetting.com
There is a difference between hitting workers at a plant that is intimately connected with Russia's war economy, and hitting tower blocks where people are sleeping.Who the fuck do you think works at that refinery in Saratov that Ukraine droned last week? Spetsnaz?The Atlantic reports Trump is ‘disappointed’ with Zelensky & Europe, calling their demands unrealistic. He just wants the war over ‘no matter how’, even if it means Ukraine losing land. Now he pushes for a Putin-Zelensky summit only if he’s at the table.A Ukraine peace deal was too hard, he got bored and has moved onto other topics.
To me, Trump is openly aligning with Putin, eroding any trust in the US government.
https://x.com/olddog100ua/status/1961295032167629191
It's shameful he is so neutral on this while civilians are targeted by Russia in Kyiv.
Re: What future for hyper-local TV news? – politicalbetting.com
False equivalence there. Russia has very clearly been a lot more indiscriminate in its targeting of civilians than Ukraine has.Who the fuck do you think works at that refinery in Saratov that Ukraine droned last week? Spetsnaz?The Atlantic reports Trump is ‘disappointed’ with Zelensky & Europe, calling their demands unrealistic. He just wants the war over ‘no matter how’, even if it means Ukraine losing land. Now he pushes for a Putin-Zelensky summit only if he’s at the table.A Ukraine peace deal was too hard, he got bored and has moved onto other topics.
To me, Trump is openly aligning with Putin, eroding any trust in the US government.
https://x.com/olddog100ua/status/1961295032167629191
It's shameful he is so neutral on this while civilians are targeted by Russia in Kyiv.
8
Re: I cannot see how an election takes place this year or the next – politicalbetting.com
Latest report about the Nordstream sabotage investigations:I should expect so, they are at war having been invaded and they are our allies whom we are trying to defend.
https://www.tagesschau.de/investigativ/nord-stream-sabotage-104.html
Investigators seem pretty sure they know the names of the Ukrainians who did it, and they have evidence of Ukrainian state involvement.
Putinists might be outraged at the damage, however screw them.
The named individuals should be getting awarded medals for a job well done.
Re: I cannot see how an election takes place this year or the next – politicalbetting.com
I have to apologise to Luckyguy.
While his suggestions regarding QE were economically eccentric, and essentially ignored the costs of what he was proposing, the recent sharp rise in interest rates has somewhat changed the situation. And while his remedy might well have been as bad as the problem he was seeking to address, he was quite right to identify a large problem which the rest of us really didn't.
In the environment, the BoE continuing its program of steadily unwinding QE (something which theEU and the US aren't doing) effectively means that it takes very large losses on its continuing gilt sales - which also help depress market prices, and create something of a downward spiral.
Also the banks are now making outsize profits (something never intended) by virtue of the scheme.
The IPPR has a report out which makes some much more sensible, and quite simple suggestions to address those two things.
You can download the full report here:
https://www.ippr.org/articles/fixing-the-leak
..after a period of making significant profits on this programme, the Bank of England is now making record losses, which is historically very unusual for central banks. The Treasury is paying for these losses, making the UK an international outlier, and the sums involved are staggering: Bank of England losses will cost the taxpayer £22 billion a year in every year of this parliament.
These losses come from two sources: valuation losses from selling government bonds below purchase value; and interest rate losses.
In this report we recommend a two-pronged approach to address this issue.
First, to recoup interest rate losses for the taxpayer currently occurring at the Bank of England, the government should implement a ‘QE reserves income levy’ on commercial banks.
Second, the government should urge the Bank of England to review and better manage the fiscal implications of its policies, in particular slowing the pace of the unwinding of quantitative easing – so-called quantitative tightening – and any future quantitative easing.
Seems like a no brainer for a Chancellor desperate for cash.
With very little downside.
While his suggestions regarding QE were economically eccentric, and essentially ignored the costs of what he was proposing, the recent sharp rise in interest rates has somewhat changed the situation. And while his remedy might well have been as bad as the problem he was seeking to address, he was quite right to identify a large problem which the rest of us really didn't.
In the environment, the BoE continuing its program of steadily unwinding QE (something which theEU and the US aren't doing) effectively means that it takes very large losses on its continuing gilt sales - which also help depress market prices, and create something of a downward spiral.
Also the banks are now making outsize profits (something never intended) by virtue of the scheme.
The IPPR has a report out which makes some much more sensible, and quite simple suggestions to address those two things.
You can download the full report here:
https://www.ippr.org/articles/fixing-the-leak
..after a period of making significant profits on this programme, the Bank of England is now making record losses, which is historically very unusual for central banks. The Treasury is paying for these losses, making the UK an international outlier, and the sums involved are staggering: Bank of England losses will cost the taxpayer £22 billion a year in every year of this parliament.
These losses come from two sources: valuation losses from selling government bonds below purchase value; and interest rate losses.
In this report we recommend a two-pronged approach to address this issue.
First, to recoup interest rate losses for the taxpayer currently occurring at the Bank of England, the government should implement a ‘QE reserves income levy’ on commercial banks.
Second, the government should urge the Bank of England to review and better manage the fiscal implications of its policies, in particular slowing the pace of the unwinding of quantitative easing – so-called quantitative tightening – and any future quantitative easing.
Seems like a no brainer for a Chancellor desperate for cash.
With very little downside.
Nigelb
5
Re: What future for hyper-local TV news? – politicalbetting.com
I prefer this to anything by Gerard Manley Hopkins.On other local news:The CCN based their
The UK government did not do its own analysis of the cost of the biggest reorganisation of councils in England for decades, the BBC has learned.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said "a significant amount of money" could be saved by merging councils in 21 areas into single authorities.
Rayner's department, the ministry of local government, based its cost estimates on a 2020 report commissioned by the County Council Network (CCN) that said £2.9bn could be saved over five years.
But the CCN has since revised its analysis and now says the reorganisation could make no savings and actually cost money in some scenarios.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj9wxnlnrxdo
I wonder how much time Rayner spends doing her job compared to her own housing dealings:
Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, has been accused of avoiding £40,000 in stamp duty on her new flat by the sea after she told authorities it was her primary residence.
Rayner, who is also the secretary of state for housing, communities and local government, was said to have removed her name from the official deed to her house in Greater Manchester weeks before buying an £800,000 flat in Hove, East Sussex.
According to The Telegraph, Rayner would have had to pay £70,000 in stamp duty on a second property, so the change saved her £40,000. She is thought to have paid only £30,000.
She also told Tameside council in Greater Manchester that the house in her constituency was still her main home, before telling Brighton and Hove council that her new flat was her second home, which would change her status for council tax.
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/angela-rayner-avoided-40000-stamp-duty-on-new-seaside-flat-76m7g6zkb
As we know Rayner has a long history of dubious housing transactions.
projections on single unitary
authorities replacing county
council areas and the district
councils in those areas.
However it looks like up to
three unitary councils per
county council area and
district councils pushing for at least that
boulay
5


