Best Of
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
Head in hands....It is all a bit Golgafrinchan isn't it.
Turning to the new prison next to HMP Gartree, I can advise that Ministry of Justice have signed an order with Wates Construction Limited to complete the main works for the new prison, which we expect to be complete by early 2029. You are likely aware that the new prison will be given a new name. We are preparing to launch a consultation with both stakeholders and the local community to find a name for the prison, so that it will have its own clear identity separate to HMP Gartree. I think it is very important that local culture and history is appropriately reflected in the choice of name and that we hear and consult with those living close to the prison on what they would like it to be called.
https://order-order.com/2025/06/17/exc-labour-blocks-plan-to-build-240-places-at-existing-prison/
Its a f##king prison....it should take you 5 minutes to decide on one. Nobody living very close to a new prison will be going well at least they conducted a consultation and went with HMP Rainbow rather HMP Gulag for Slags.
People in the MoJ not qualified to discuss the design of the prison or the choice of structure spend weeks deciding what to call it in order to appear busy.
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
Vanilla closed the thread because people ignored the ban about talking about the grooming story.Please can we all now finally agree not to discuss this story? Period.
The ban is in place until further notice. I cannot make this any clearer.
My patience is close to being exhausted on this.
There's a million other things happening in the world and politics.
And if anyone simply can't cope without gushing forth on the banned subject then maybe try another forum.
PB continuing is more important.
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
This header silently makes the unhinged assumption that there is a Cabinet Minister whose performance has been "optimal"
Leon
5
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
Being anti-abortion is an honourable position to take imo.I don't know what point you are making, Anne.I am saddened that my dad, who worked on the 1967 Abortion Act, died a few months ago and will miss the abortion vote today. The '67 Act was a mess of compromises to get the vote over the line and the reformers never wanted it to be the final say on the subject.It would be a lot less messy to put something in the water to prevent women from conceiving.
My dad's overwhelming professional concern was to give women (and men) the choice over their fertility.
7
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
The Spanish report into their Grid failure is out: https://www.euractiv.com/section/eet/news/spanish-government-blames-power-plant-and-grid-operators-for-catastrophic-blackout/
No big surprises. Basically what was speculated (a cascading failure of generators dropping off the grid after an initial perturbation) has turned out to be the case.
The one interesting wrinkle is that the report claims that electricity generators who were being paid to dampen grid oscillations completely failed to do so. It says that conventional generators were up & running & being paid to step in to compensate for grid power loss but failed to do so.
It’s not clear whether there was actually enough capacity available to compensate for the solar providers going offline though - the majority of the criticism is apparently aimed at the National Grid operator for not having the means to stabilise the grid.
No big surprises. Basically what was speculated (a cascading failure of generators dropping off the grid after an initial perturbation) has turned out to be the case.
The one interesting wrinkle is that the report claims that electricity generators who were being paid to dampen grid oscillations completely failed to do so. It says that conventional generators were up & running & being paid to step in to compensate for grid power loss but failed to do so.
It’s not clear whether there was actually enough capacity available to compensate for the solar providers going offline though - the majority of the criticism is apparently aimed at the National Grid operator for not having the means to stabilise the grid.
Phil
5
Re: Next cabinet minister to go – politicalbetting.com
How utterly dense is she? It was seemingly a settled issue, with no public debate on restricting it further.Stella Creasy is calling it a pre-emptive move against the right.Yes, decriminalising abortion up to the point of birth is just ridiculous.Is there some massive clamour amongst the public to hugely liberalise abortion? If so I must have missed it. Why on earth are Labour doing this, "decriminalising" full term abortions by doctors is a shocking change. Was it in the manifesto?Decriminalising full term abortions is grotesque, any MP backing it isn’t fit for office. Agreed that 24 weeks feels too late these days too. Ideally you’d want universal early dna screening and bringing the date back, not moving it forwards (or eliminating it).Personally id be moving the latest time to abort a long way towards conception from 24 weeksDecriminalising abortion up to birth ought to be enough for any of them.There must be quite a few parents of extremely young infants who would wish they could turn the clock back a few days. Why not, what's the difference?
Kendall, for she is disgusting (and a massive rebellion looms)
This is a government of cranks, traitors and incompetents, all pushing their own crazy theories
One of the few blessings of being British rather than a Yankee is that we don't have their horrible abortion arguments. This risks importing that toxic debate
Why??
https://x.com/TheNewsAgents/status/1934853519900856573
RobD
7
Re: Will we will see Nigel Farage’s rumba this parliament? – politicalbetting.com
As ever, it depends.Anyone who has worked in IT is familiar with this. We could spend a day or two understanding what this program does and where the bug lies, but instead we need to rewrite the whole thing from scratch in a more fashionable language.He is still ploughing the only solution is burn it all down and start again.I have a lot of respect for Cummings’ diagnoses of the problems the UK faces. Rather less respect (understatement of the year?) for his ability to actually implement solutions.Dominic Cummings' (I know) recent lecture is also interesting on this topic.We didn’t take a decade back in the 50s or 60s either. See the Stonehaven report I linked to previously for an analysis of the legal barriers to “just building things” that have built up in the UK since the early 70s.China isn't a democracy.China doesn't take a decade to build new energy plants, I'm not sure why we should.In other words, the most patriotic thing the opposition can do right now is make themselves unelectable enough that the next election is a boring walkover. (One of Blair's failures was to largely fail to seize the opportunity presented to him by Hague, IDS and Howard.)
Theo Bertram
@theobertram
·
3h
The Catch 22 of British politics is that to win a second term you need to tackle the cost of living but to tackle the underlying causes of the cost of living (increase housing supply, build new energy plants) you need two terms.
Theo Bertram
@theobertram
·
3h
Solving this Catch 22 is the key to avoiding a doom loop of failed progress & populism. Part of my answer would be to make Permanent Secretaries not only accountable for progress on 10 year goals but for public confidence in those goals. Progress needs to be metered & clear.
https://x.com/theobertram/status/1934882411994558905
On that basis, the Conservatives are being true patriots right now.
EDIT: Also, I think 5 waste to energy plans are being built in Scotland right not, in less than a decade.
We saw this of course during the Covid pandemic. All the experts agreed there was a problem with Imperial's modelling but despite its source code being published, wanted to replace it rather than fix it.
If you have a pile of spaghetti code, there is of course a very strong temptation to rewrite the lot from scratch in a (hopefully) much more structured way. Sometimes you really have little choice; the original code is so badly broken that it has become unmaintainable. Then a rewrite becomes unavoidable.
It's not a decison to be taken lightly, though. That old spaghetti code has had years and years to take into account every possible edge case, and its shiny new replacement will almost invariably take much more blood, sweat and tears to create than anticipated as well as reintroducing a whole load of bugs from edge cases that had previously been dealt with in the old version.
The best compromise is typically to methodically isolate particular functionality and rewrite just that part of the code in a modular fashion. Then move on to the next part, and so on. The iterative approach has a lot to be said for it.
Socially, it's the approach that Britain has generally taken over the years. We don't really do revolutions, but we have typically followed a policy of renewing the bits that need to be renewed. This way of doings things has served us well; we abandon it at our peril.
Re: Will we will see Nigel Farage’s rumba this parliament? – politicalbetting.com
Mortality is far far worse in hot weather than in cold for the elderly. We don't do summer air con payments though.BBC BREAKING NEWS...Yellow Health Alert, temperature sets to be 28o in London this week, maybe getting up to 33o by the weekend...Absolutely, its not a heatwave, its summer.
Are we getting a bit silly with these, its not 40+. Most people have been on a foreign holiday to Europe in the summer where it is that hot every day.
Re: Will we will see Nigel Farage’s rumba this parliament? – politicalbetting.com
Catherine Belton
@CatherineBelton
·
15h
As Israel expands its attacks deeper into Iran, nervousness is growing in Russia that the Israeli attacks could lead to regime change in Iran & the potential loss of one of Russia’s most important allies in its efforts to create an “anti-Western alliance”
https://x.com/CatherineBelton/status/1934698367113687247
Oh dear how sad etc...
@CatherineBelton
·
15h
As Israel expands its attacks deeper into Iran, nervousness is growing in Russia that the Israeli attacks could lead to regime change in Iran & the potential loss of one of Russia’s most important allies in its efforts to create an “anti-Western alliance”
https://x.com/CatherineBelton/status/1934698367113687247
Oh dear how sad etc...
Re: Will we will see Nigel Farage’s rumba this parliament? – politicalbetting.com
Where can I buy one?You want a VacMaster Air Mover Fan.....I feel your pain, part of my house has air con which is a bliss, but where I WFH is an east facing glass oven, but I am grateful for having Dyson blade less fans, they are amazing.If it makes you feel any better my small, south-facing office easily becomes a cooker. Glad the worst of the heat is over the weekend, but it'll probably somewhat curtail activity at the end of this and start of next week.It annoys me that we built the Cairo to Khartoum railway but a little bit of heat in the UK brings the trains to a standstill.Few years ago now but at the time I started writing for a new client and had to cry off my very first day of work because of the heat. Luckily it was the hottest day recorded ever in the UK, so that did at least make it look more reasonable and a bit less wet blanket.Mortality is far far worse in hot weather than in cold for the elderly. We don't do summer air con payments though.BBC BREAKING NEWS...Yellow Health Alert, temperature sets to be 28o in London this week, maybe getting up to 33o by the weekend...Absolutely, its not a heatwave, its summer.
Are we getting a bit silly with these, its not 40+. Most people have been on a foreign holiday to Europe in the summer where it is that hot every day.
One of the reasons I work early is to help mitigate the problem of summer heat. 'Only' 26C is way more in here.
Just found this website called OnlyFans, will it be on there?



