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Bookmark this post and these tweets – politicalbetting.com

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  • LeonLeon Posts: 53,215
    megasaur said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    This is PB. It's a General Election. We only get them once every half decade. YES WE GET OVER-EXCITED. It's what the whole site is for, it's like you're blaming a stud camel for getting the horn when he's got his once a year bunk up with the saucy dromedary from Baluchistan
    Is there an echo in here? Why are you talking to yourself?
    Because it's better than talking to a low-watt, mid-wit, 105 IQ surburban rizz-bypass no-mark nerdspazzer like you
    You seem to have been rebooted into "absolute fucking nonsense" mode again, perhaps it's time for you to come back as Heathener who can at least use a full stop.
    I'm in a particularly ebullient mood. Because tomorrow I'm off to A WHOLE NEW COUNTRY - one I've never been to!

    In the rankings of EXCITING NEW COUNTRIES TO VISIT this is right down there with the worst. It is the Wick of Interesting Scottish Towns, the Newent of Beautiful England. However I love travel so much - and I've been to so many countries - ANY new country gets me unduly excited. I shall send one photo a day of dreadfully boring drinks in tediously un-scenic squares, or maybe live executions
    Rwanda! You’re going to Rwanda!
    Azerbaijan
    Yawwwwwwwn. Azerbaijan, Went YONKS ago

    It is fucking brilliant. I bought one kilo of fine fresh WILD caviar in the Baku black market- I literally snuck behind the sheep's-head stall with some semi-bearded babuskha to her secret fridge where she sold it to me - that kilo of cav that I bought for $5 would now be worth...

    £3,870

    https://caviar.co.uk/product/caviar-royal-beluga-1kg/

    After that things got mad. Azerbaijan is cray cray. Sadly where I am going is nowhere near as interesting as AZERBAIJAN
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,573
    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
  • Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 698
    No further action against Rayner.

    Least surprising news of the day. The way the allegations kept shifting meant even the cheerleaders knew there was really nothing there.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,643
    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 51,088
    Ratters said:

    I'm liking the new graphic on polling from Wikipedia:
    I do wonder if a combined Reform/Green squeeze will be the main change from the polling average to actual results. Not that it would change the headline result materially.

    I prefer the squiggly line chart thingy, personally :)
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,352
    "Geert Wilders eyes former spy chief Dick Schoof as Dutch prime minister
    “It will be a surprise to many that I’m standing here,” said likely new PM at press conference."

    https://www.politico.eu/article/geert-wilders-eyes-former-intelligence-agency-boss-as-dutch-prime-minister/
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 118,503

    No further action against Rayner.

    Least surprising news of the day. The way the allegations kept shifting meant even the cheerleaders knew there was really nothing there.

    I was right, again.

    https://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2024/04/16/the-thinnest-of-thin-gruels/
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,637
    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    Once we accept the democratic welfare-state principle that we can vote ourselves well-being from other people, that philosophy stuff is outdated, because I can gain or lose from your choices around income or work schedule or even your personal life. Thus people end up supporting forced labour, and the permanent closure of pubs and nightclubs.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,648
    edited May 28
    Leon said:

    megasaur said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    This is PB. It's a General Election. We only get them once every half decade. YES WE GET OVER-EXCITED. It's what the whole site is for, it's like you're blaming a stud camel for getting the horn when he's got his once a year bunk up with the saucy dromedary from Baluchistan
    Is there an echo in here? Why are you talking to yourself?
    Because it's better than talking to a low-watt, mid-wit, 105 IQ surburban rizz-bypass no-mark nerdspazzer like you
    You seem to have been rebooted into "absolute fucking nonsense" mode again, perhaps it's time for you to come back as Heathener who can at least use a full stop.
    I'm in a particularly ebullient mood. Because tomorrow I'm off to A WHOLE NEW COUNTRY - one I've never been to!

    In the rankings of EXCITING NEW COUNTRIES TO VISIT this is right down there with the worst. It is the Wick of Interesting Scottish Towns, the Newent of Beautiful England. However I love travel so much - and I've been to so many countries - ANY new country gets me unduly excited. I shall send one photo a day of dreadfully boring drinks in tediously un-scenic squares, or maybe live executions
    Rwanda! You’re going to Rwanda!
    Azerbaijan
    Yawwwwwwwn. Azerbaijan, Went YONKS ago

    It is fucking brilliant. I bought one kilo of fine fresh WILD caviar in the Baku black market- I literally snuck behind the sheep's-head stall with some semi-bearded babuskha to her secret fridge where she sold it to me - that kilo of cav that I bought for $5 would now be worth...

    £3,870

    https://caviar.co.uk/product/caviar-royal-beluga-1kg/

    After that things got mad. Azerbaijan is cray cray. Sadly where I am going is nowhere near as interesting as AZERBAIJAN
    Yer goin' t' Barnsley?
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,675
    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    There's probably no such thing. But you can divide actions into primarily self regarding vs primarily other regarding as per JS Mill.

    What are the chances you end up in hospital after skydiving? 0.1%? If they were 99% then it's different.

    The way I see it, I'm guided by libertarian or classically liberal principles as much as possible in real life, while also accepting that no pure theoretical system survives first contact with the many compromises we all make as part of living in a vast, interconnected society of millions of individuals.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 27,660

    kle4 said:

    What a fucking wanker.

    Pope Francis ‘sorry’ for homophobic slur

    Pontiff said there was too much ‘faggotry’ in seminaries, Italian newspapers reported

    The sad thing is this: Pope Francis says this sort of sh*t, and gives support to Russia in its imperialist, fascist war.

    He's still possibly the best pope we've had in centuries.

    Which says a great deal about the Catholic church and Popes...
    A textbook case of an institution which long ago prioritised its own power and prestige over any purported mission.

    Given its age possibly the ur-example..
    I want to like Pope Francis; he seems much more forward-thinking than all of his predecessors (including the original Peter?). Then he says some sh*t and I despise him.

    But at least he says some stuff I think is progressive, which is more than his predecessors.
    Did he actually say 'faggotry'? I don't know what language he speaks - he'd be a Spanish speaker no? Perhaps the word is not so crude in the original language.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 51,088
    Andy_JS said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    There's nothing more exciting than PB on election night.
    I am ready, man! Ready to GET IT ON!
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 5,902

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    Well that would change things . That’s a red line for all parties .
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,527
    edited May 28

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    So, with the likelihood that that will force unwilling adults to pick fruit at a minimum stipend, you still say they “leave you and your family alone”? You have no teenaged relatives I suppose?

    Your problem is you treat politics like sport. You ignore the fact that the Tories do, in fact, micromanage people’s lives, mock them for their lifestyle choices, so that you can cheer on “your” team.

    I and my family have suffered badly as a result of this government and I am a white middle aged man. Not only am I bled white with taxes I am mocked every time a HS wants a cheap laugh. Tell me, what crime have I committed that your party hates people like me so much? What have I done? My taxes not good enough for you? Why do you hate so many people?
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127

    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
    Have you ever thought about why some people might think that of the Tories?
  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,059
    EPG said:

    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    Once we accept the democratic welfare-state principle that we can vote ourselves well-being from other people, that philosophy stuff is outdated, because I can gain or lose from your choices around income or work schedule or even your personal life. Thus people end up supporting forced labour, and the permanent closure of pubs and nightclubs.
    Well yes, that's what I mean. I don't really understand how anyone can be a libertarian within a state that has taxation and welfare provision.

    But presumably you would agree we gain more than we lose by having a democratic welfare-state?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,352
    Let's be clear: the Tories are currently heading for their worst defeat ever, in terms of both seats and vote share.

    https://x.com/BritainElects/status/1795079809049227425
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,731
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.

    I think polls consistently get responses indicating a high turnout. I wouldn't read too much into that.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 41,455

    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
    I do wonder who'd vote for the current iteration of the Conservative Party. It's well and truly lost my vote, sadly.

    I know you think you have good reasons to vote Conservative; and I think I understand them. But for me, the negatives well and truly outweigh the positives.
  • Again, JL is before the announcements, so any movement is probably not down to the campaign.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
    I once spent a night helping out with tracking and tweeting out local election results with some people from across the country, most of them from big urban areas. It was a good night for the Tories, and there were many comments about not understanding how anyone could vote Tory.

    The odd thing is people say things like that even when the Tories are riding high in the polls, never mind when they are low!

    Conversely, though I come from the shires I don't think I've heard anywhere near as much 'bafflement' at the idea of people voting Labour, even though most tend not to in these parts.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 21,448

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,060
    ian said:

    As a complete newcomer,I have beenfascinated reading comments over the last three hours. First there seemed to be a frenzy of excitement of a tory breakthrough, speculating it might be survation or r and w. Turns out both increased labour lead. Then the tumours of a single figure lead , which turned out to be 12.points. Reminded me of that Shakespear bloke. " 'full of sound and fury , signifying nothing.

    I'm just trying to remember the name of the play which contains that subtle Shakespeare reference. It'll probably come to me tomorrow and tomorrow.

    if you are suggesting that PB is an addictive and compelling narrative of tales told by idiots, this outrageous thought would be about right.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 5,902

    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
    I have quite a few Tory voting friends. We just laugh about our polar opposite political persuasions and never fall out over it .

    I’ll be honest though when it comes to Trump, I simply couldn’t stomach being friendly with someone who supported him. That’s just a red line for me .
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963
    Andy_JS said:

    Let's be clear: the Tories are currently heading for their worst defeat ever, in terms of both seats and vote share.

    https://x.com/BritainElects/status/1795079809049227425

    Rishi will be a record setter.

    And who knows, maybe that gives the next Tory leader a chance to do a Starmer.

  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 41,455

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    Or we could always hope for a Lib Dem government.

    Then again, unicorns don't exist... :)
  • ian said:

    As a complete newcomer,I have beenfascinated reading comments over the last three hours. First there seemed to be a frenzy of excitement of a tory breakthrough, speculating it might be survation or r and w. Turns out both increased labour lead. Then the tumours of a single figure lead , which turned out to be 12.points. Reminded me of that Shakespear bloke. " 'full of sound and fury , signifying nothing.

    You'll get used to the mood swings on here.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    Still will be a fuss, but if he has that answer ready to go it blunts it - if she'd been selected and then campaigned for JC it'd be too late to meaningfully punish her, so pinning her down like that (and her not lying about it) would be smart.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,643

    RobD said:

    kle4 said:

    After the open letter writing nonsense, next is celeb endorsements. I presume we will be getting wall to wall celebs saying vote Labour shortly.

    Please no, I still haven't gotten over Martin Freeman explaining once in a video that he was voting Labour because he was raised to be decent. Thanks Martin, what did that make the 70% of people who did not vote Labour?
    Scum.
    Sadly, I think there's a strong cadre of people who think like that: that if you vote Tory you're guilty of some form of moral turpitude.

    It's an outrage that some people might think there's a better option for the country.
    A very few might think that, I don't.

    Conservatives are decent, ordinary people with whom I simply disagree. I would argue since the Party they support has led the Government for the past 14 years it's not unreasonable to hold that Party to account for the state of the country.

    It doesn't seem as though the Conservative Party wants to stand on its record of Government or governance or explain how we are where we are. I'll be the first to concede they have been unfortunate - a pandemic and a war in Europe aren't normal and usual events but the fact remains they have happened on the Conservative watch and that party has had to respond both to the events themselves and with their impacts.

    Issues relating to the care of vulnerable adults and children, the problems of housing and of our transport infrastructure (to name but three) have been with us for a long time and the response of this Government, inasmuch as there has been one, has been sub-optimal to be charitable.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 48,418
    algarkirk said:

    ian said:

    As a complete newcomer,I have beenfascinated reading comments over the last three hours. First there seemed to be a frenzy of excitement of a tory breakthrough, speculating it might be survation or r and w. Turns out both increased labour lead. Then the tumours of a single figure lead , which turned out to be 12.points. Reminded me of that Shakespear bloke. " 'full of sound and fury , signifying nothing.

    I'm just trying to remember the name of the play which contains that subtle Shakespeare reference. It'll probably come to me tomorrow and tomorrow.

    if you are suggesting that PB is an addictive and compelling narrative of tales told by idiots, this outrageous thought would be about right.
    How dare you, sir!

    I resemble that last remark.

    Pistols for two upon Hyde Park, breakfast at Wilton’s for one.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,583
    edited May 28
    Bit of basic maths: if undecided split 50:50 the Lab lead narrows; eg

    Original poll:

    Lab 45
    Con 25
    Others 30

    Supposed there were 20% undecided who then split 50:50 Lab:Con

    That then gives:

    Lab 55
    Con 35
    Others 30

    Scale back to 100 gives result:

    Lab 45.8
    Con 29.2
    Others 25

    So lead of 20% falls to 16.6%.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,731

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    That wouldn't surprise me, but she is mentally a shadow of her former self. Time for her to retire.
  • Foxy said:

    That wouldn't surprise me, but she is mentally a shadow of her former self. Time for her to retire.

    I think she's got dementia sadly.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.

    Nice analysis, Stodge.

    To the pollsters I say: 75% my arse.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 53,215

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Er. what?

    "Vomit inducing sexual peccadillos"?

    It must take something pretty extreme to make a tough Tory nut like you from Basingstoke reach for the puke bucket, what was it? Exactly??

    Asking for a friend, obvs
  • Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    RobD said:

    Foxy said:

    Lol Labour have apparently deleted their Business leaders letter. Too many fire and rehire merchants on it. Snicker

    We see this letter writing nonsense every GE. It always falls apart. Everybody knows its run by and signed overwhelmingly by already well know partisan supporters. I don't know why they do it.

    Remember the ones in COVID were "leading scientists" say...and within a few hours it was clear it was the lab cleaner, some students not even doing degrees in science, etc.
    Labour is circulating one for NHS employees to sign (with donate pop-up).

    https://labour.org.uk/resources/nhs-staff-open-letter-sign-up/

    I didn't sign or donate.
    Are civil servants allowed to campaign in an official capacity?
    No, but nurses and nhs staff aren’t civil servants.

    Civil servants who are outside the senior levels and aren’t in politically restricted roles can, with permission, campaign in a personal capacity, e.g. letter drops etc.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946
    MikeL said:

    Bit of basic maths: if undecided split 50:50 the Lab lead narrows; eg

    Original poll:

    Lab 45
    Con 25
    Others 30

    Supposed there were 20% undecided who then split 50:50 Lab:Con

    That then gives:

    Lab 55
    Con 35
    Others 30

    Scale back to 100 gives result:

    Lab 45.8
    Con 29.2
    Others 25

    So lead of 20% falls to 16.6%.

    The nowcasters tell us the story now, the adjusters what the story will be on July 4. They should draw nearer each other over the last month of campaigning. Redfield supports a narrowing to come, JLP models it
  • LeonLeon Posts: 53,215
    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    So, with the likelihood that that will force unwilling adults to pick fruit at a minimum stipend, you still say they “leave you and your family alone”? You have no teenaged relatives I suppose?

    Your problem is you treat politics like sport. You ignore the fact that the Tories do, in fact, micromanage people’s lives, mock them for their lifestyle choices, so that you can cheer on “your” team.

    I and my family have suffered badly as a result of this government and I am a white middle aged man. Not only am I bled white with taxes I am mocked every time a HS wants a cheap laugh. Tell me, what crime have I committed that your party hates people like me so much? What have I done? My taxes not good enough for you? Why do you hate so many people?
    Why on God's green earth are you "hated"?
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 39,451
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.

    JLP, like Opinium, provides a final outcome projection based on polling and in-house interpretations of it. The others are snap shots of current voting intention. That's why they produce different headline numbers. It is very interesting that the underlying data is so similar. But I think you could look at Survation and at R&W, and then at JLP, and think they all make sense. A final Labour lead of 12 based on current snapshot polling does not seem too outlandish to me.

  • maxhmaxh Posts: 1,059
    kyf_100 said:

    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    There's probably no such thing. But you can divide actions into primarily self regarding vs primarily other regarding as per JS Mill.

    What are the chances you end up in hospital after skydiving? 0.1%? If they were 99% then it's different.

    The way I see it, I'm guided by libertarian or classically liberal principles as much as possible in real life, while also accepting that no pure theoretical system survives first contact with the many compromises we all make as part of living in a vast, interconnected society of millions of individuals.
    Yes, very fair. Thanks for the reply.

    And as for your question, depends what type of skydiving you do. Canopy piloting involves pointing your parachute directly at the ground, accelerating to ~100mph and hoping you'll plane out before you get to zero altitude. Percentage chances of a hospital appointment roughly correspond to where you fall on the scale of 1 to idiot.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    Leon said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Er. what?

    "Vomit inducing sexual peccadillos"?

    It must take something pretty extreme to make a tough Tory nut like you from Basingstoke reach for the puke bucket, what was it? Exactly??

    Asking for a friend, obvs
    Chris Pincher, Charlie Elphicke, Neil Parish, Mark Menzies.. the list goes on. But it's worth noting most aren't like that.

    And, if you think the next Parliament will be totally clean, then I have a bridge to sell you.

  • RobDRobD Posts: 59,573
    Ghedebrav said:

    RobD said:

    Foxy said:

    Lol Labour have apparently deleted their Business leaders letter. Too many fire and rehire merchants on it. Snicker

    We see this letter writing nonsense every GE. It always falls apart. Everybody knows its run by and signed overwhelmingly by already well know partisan supporters. I don't know why they do it.

    Remember the ones in COVID were "leading scientists" say...and within a few hours it was clear it was the lab cleaner, some students not even doing degrees in science, etc.
    Labour is circulating one for NHS employees to sign (with donate pop-up).

    https://labour.org.uk/resources/nhs-staff-open-letter-sign-up/

    I didn't sign or donate.
    Are civil servants allowed to campaign in an official capacity?
    No, but nurses and nhs staff aren’t civil servants.

    Civil servants who are outside the senior levels and aren’t in politically restricted roles can, with permission, campaign in a personal capacity, e.g. letter drops etc.
    Would such permission be needed to sign this? If it’s asking for your job title it is surely in an official capacity.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    That's actually about as good a defence of this government as I think it's possible to write, congratulations. I mean, I'm not sure it's entirely factually accurate, but it's certainly a better attempt at defending their record than I've heard any member of the government make.
    Thanks, I think.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,350
    edited May 28
    Blaming or finger pointing about voters for their choice, I always find very low and wrongheaded. Instead people should be asking why those people choose to vote that way.

    e.g. not exactly news I don't like Jezza*. But I absolutely understand why people were voting for him, particularly in 2017. There are some serious problems that have only worsen over the past 20 years, and he was addressing those and proposing solutions (the fact that I don't believe those solutions would work any better than when they had previously tried is irrelevant).

    Just dismissing that whole group as (insert insult) doesn't achieve anything.

    Also the reality is the vast vast majority of the electorate aren't really hardcore one way or the other. They might lean right or left ideologically, but don't actually spend that much time thinking about nor are instantly anti any solution proposed juts because it came from the other side. It certainly doesn't say anything about the decency of the group.

    * Actually I don't really hate the guy, I just think he is wrong about basically everything.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127
    Foxy said:

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    That wouldn't surprise me, but she is mentally a shadow of her former self. Time for her to retire.
    I really can't see Diane standing as an independent, she's 70 and ready to retire. To be honest, I think Corbyn would have stood down this time had things gone differently and the CLP had a free hand in selecting his successor but he doesn't want to end his career as a loser. The one thing that inspires Corbyn is a fight against the establishment.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    You've got to do what you think is right.

    So do I.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    Leon said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Er. what?

    "Vomit inducing sexual peccadillos"?

    It must take something pretty extreme to make a tough Tory nut like you from Basingstoke reach for the puke bucket, what was it? Exactly??

    Asking for a friend, obvs
    Chris Pincher, Charlie Elphicke, Neil Parish, Mark Menzies.. the list goes on. But it's worth noting most aren't like that.

    And, if you think the next Parliament will be totally clean, then I have a bridge to sell you.

    With 650 MPs an argument could potentially be made that the number is possibly on the low side, or we are probably missing quite a few.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    Andy_JS said:

    Let's be clear: the Tories are currently heading for their worst defeat ever, in terms of both seats and vote share.

    https://x.com/BritainElects/status/1795079809049227425

    T'is only a flesh wound.
  • There's another poll out tonight in Scotland by Survation.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,637
    maxh said:

    EPG said:

    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    Once we accept the democratic welfare-state principle that we can vote ourselves well-being from other people, that philosophy stuff is outdated, because I can gain or lose from your choices around income or work schedule or even your personal life. Thus people end up supporting forced labour, and the permanent closure of pubs and nightclubs.
    Well yes, that's what I mean. I don't really understand how anyone can be a libertarian within a state that has taxation and welfare provision.

    But presumably you would agree we gain more than we lose by having a democratic welfare-state?
    Yes, but it means a new philosophical perspective is required, lest we end up with a state that veils selfish avarice of the majority under the language of equity and rights,
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 5,902

    Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.

    None of the news outlets have this yet . There was talk they might do that but I haven’t seen it confirmed yet .
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    maxh said:

    kyf_100 said:

    kyf_100 said:

    Leon said:

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1795487724083810337?s=19

    Net support for national service as proposed

    I SAID the reaction on here was a load of geriatric bien pensant bollocks on acid with bells tied on by a trans hooker from Tirana on Ket with a belisha beacon fetish standing next to a labradoodle with herpes
    Again, as I said downthread, look at the strength of support. If you like it, you might like it a bit. But if you dislike it, you strongly dislike it. So it's more likely to motivate people voting against it, than for it.

    I was in the "undecided whether I'll just stay at home or actually vote Labour this time round" camp last week, now I'm in the "I will crawl naked on my bare belly across broken glass to vote Labour this time round, since the Tories think that forced fruit picking labour camps are a good idea and they need to be turfed out pronto lest they come up with any more of their horrible, authoritarian shit" camp.
    I find your insight interesting, may I ask if you are a younger voter or what sort of age group you fall into?
    Early 40s.

    My opinions often out of whack with most people because I skew very far libertarian on the lib/authoritarian axis but very centrist on the left/right axis. "People should be free to make their own decisions as much as possible, and do what they want so long as it harms none" sorta sums up my rationale for most things. So an instinctive fear of big state leftists and also a fear of fashy state social conservatives.

    Forcing people to do stuff against their will = bad in my book.
    Can I ask a follow up question?

    I'm philosophically libertarian (well, probably more anarchist) for exactly the reason you quote.

    But in our interconnected, globalised world, is there really any decision that fits into the category "harms no-one"?

    One example - I am a skydiver and many of my friends base jump. It would be an almost perfect example of your quote if we could only agree that you void any implicit contract with the NHS as you step off the phone mast in the darkness.

    But I've seen too many people injure themselves and get air lifted to hospital at the public's expense.

    So what meaningful decisions can you really make that harm no-one but yourself?
    There's probably no such thing. But you can divide actions into primarily self regarding vs primarily other regarding as per JS Mill.

    What are the chances you end up in hospital after skydiving? 0.1%? If they were 99% then it's different.

    The way I see it, I'm guided by libertarian or classically liberal principles as much as possible in real life, while also accepting that no pure theoretical system survives first contact with the many compromises we all make as part of living in a vast, interconnected society of millions of individuals.
    Yes, very fair. Thanks for the reply.

    And as for your question, depends what type of skydiving you do. Canopy piloting involves pointing your parachute directly at the ground, accelerating to ~100mph and hoping you'll plane out before you get to zero altitude. Percentage chances of a hospital appointment roughly correspond to where you fall on the scale of 1 to idiot.
    But the distribution is skewed. Most skydiving fuck ups are straight-to-morgue
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128

    Andy_JS said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    There's nothing more exciting than PB on election night.
    I am ready, man! Ready to GET IT ON!
    17 days?! I've got news for you, pal, our poll lead ain't gonna last 17 hours!!
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    RobD said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    RobD said:

    Foxy said:

    Lol Labour have apparently deleted their Business leaders letter. Too many fire and rehire merchants on it. Snicker

    We see this letter writing nonsense every GE. It always falls apart. Everybody knows its run by and signed overwhelmingly by already well know partisan supporters. I don't know why they do it.

    Remember the ones in COVID were "leading scientists" say...and within a few hours it was clear it was the lab cleaner, some students not even doing degrees in science, etc.
    Labour is circulating one for NHS employees to sign (with donate pop-up).

    https://labour.org.uk/resources/nhs-staff-open-letter-sign-up/

    I didn't sign or donate.
    Are civil servants allowed to campaign in an official capacity?
    No, but nurses and nhs staff aren’t civil servants.

    Civil servants who are outside the senior levels and aren’t in politically restricted roles can, with permission, campaign in a personal capacity, e.g. letter drops etc.
    Would such permission be needed to sign this? If it’s asking for your job title it is surely in an official capacity.
    NHS workers aren’t civil servants and not bound by the same restrictions.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    There's another poll out tonight in Scotland by Survation.

    Shock Alba poll lead incoming*

    *do not use this when making a bet.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 17,444
    edited May 28
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    ...

    I'll stop you right there. Here are the turnouts in recent general elections (and the Brexit referendum), back to the last general election with turnout of around 75%.

    2019: 67.3%
    2017: 68.8%
    2016: 72.2%
    2015: 66.4%
    2010: 65.1%
    2005: 61.4%
    2001: 59.4%
    1997: 71.3%
    1992: 77.7%

    Is it remotely likely that turnout will be in the 72-78% range? I think this is more likely to be a sign that people more likely to vote are more likely to respond to opinion polls - which raises the question as to whether this peculiar, opinion poll-responding subset of people is representative of those who will vote.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    Or we could always hope for a Lib Dem government.

    Then again, unicorns don't exist... :)
    The smirk on Ed Davey's face alone should preclude any sensible person from voting for that.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,350
    edited May 28

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    Or we could always hope for a Lib Dem government.

    Then again, unicorns don't exist... :)
    The smirk on Ed Davey's face alone should preclude any sensible person from voting for that.
    Well I think all of us had a good laugh at this expense today.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    ...

    I'll stop you right there. here are the turnouts in recent general elections (and the Brexit referendum), back to the last general election with turnout of around 75%.

    2019: 67.3%
    2017: 68.8%
    2016: 72.2%
    2015: 66.4%
    2010: 65.1%
    2005: 61.4%
    2001: 59.4%
    1997: 71.3%
    1992: 77.7%

    Is it remotely likely that turnout will be int he 72-78% range? I think this is more likely to be a sign that people more likely to vote are more likely to respond to opinion polls - which raises the question as to whether this peculiar, opinion poll-responding subset of people is representative of those who will vote.
    I think we'll be at 2001 levels.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 27,660
    DM_Andy said:



    Foxy said:

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    That wouldn't surprise me, but she is mentally a shadow of her former self. Time for her to retire.
    I really can't see Diane standing as an independent, she's 70 and ready to retire. To be honest, I think Corbyn would have stood down this time had things gone differently and the CLP had a free hand in selecting his successor but he doesn't want to end his career as a loser. The one thing that inspires Corbyn is a fight against the establishment.

    She'd make quite a good token leftie on GBnews if she could stick it and brain wise she's OK. Quite tempting to team her up with Portillo again - they had good chemistry.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 53,215

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Actually, having teased you about the "sexual peccadilos" that induced you to vomit (tho I am curious what they are??), I would venture to agree with @OnlyLivingBoy - your statement, through gritted teeth, is likely the best defence of this Tory government I have heard, anywhere. Yes, the Tories are shit, but we live in shit times, and Labour would be shitter

    It's not unfair, and you phrase it rather well

    However, I CANNOT forgive the Tory govt 2 MILLION net migrants in about 3 years, it is utterly inexcusable, in one year we had more migramts that the last two decades of the 20th century combined, and this will forever alter our nation, and not, I fear, for the better. For that they must be punished, if not extinguished, they did it deliberately and I loathe them

    Sadly, there is no sane party of the right to replace them, so the only way to smite them is to vote Labour who will almost certainly be worse. But that is the system we have. At least Labour might have the guts to reform the NHS, they may have no choice, fiscally

    For me it is Sir Kir Royale Starmer, PM, First Lord of the Treasure, and I ABHOR him
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,003
    Dianne Abbott given back Labour whip according to Sky
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    So, with the likelihood that that will force unwilling adults to pick fruit at a minimum stipend, you still say they “leave you and your family alone”? You have no teenaged relatives I suppose?

    Your problem is you treat politics like sport. You ignore the fact that the Tories do, in fact, micromanage people’s lives, mock them for their lifestyle choices, so that you can cheer on “your” team.

    I and my family have suffered badly as a result of this government and I am a white middle aged man. Not only am I bled white with taxes I am mocked every time a HS wants a cheap laugh. Tell me, what crime have I committed that your party hates people like me so much? What have I done? My taxes not good enough for you? Why do you hate so many people?
    Because we don't give a fuck about seals.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,519
    I still feel quite at sea in terms of predictions at the moment. Gut still says Tories on 160-200. Probably at the upper end of that range. But I would like to see more evidence of a shift towards them in the polls.

    I think the big moment for me will be when the Tories pledge to abolish IHT as their headline manifesto pledge (we all know it’s coming). If that does not shift the polls, then I may need to reassess.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,731

    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.

    JLP, like Opinium, provides a final outcome projection based on polling and in-house interpretations of it. The others are snap shots of current voting intention. That's why they produce different headline numbers. It is very interesting that the underlying data is so similar. But I think you could look at Survation and at R&W, and then at JLP, and think they all make sense. A final Labour lead of 12 based on current snapshot polling does not seem too outlandish to me.

    It all hinges on whether the forecast assumptions are correct, if the data are so similar. They may be, or maybe not.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,590
    edited May 28
    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get an absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Andy_JS said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    There's nothing more exciting than PB on election night.
    I am ready, man! Ready to GET IT ON!
    17 days?! I've got news for you, pal, our poll lead ain't gonna last 17 hours!!
    We’re on an express elevator to hell!
  • eekeek Posts: 27,481
    edited May 28
    Foxy said:

    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    A cursory look at the data tables tells me the Survation, R&W and JL Partners polls are much closer together than the headline numbers suggest.

    All three have a "likely" turnout of around 75% (range is 72-78% on likelihood so for those looking to play on turnout that's a noticeable increase on 2019).

    The sample of those likely to vote as follows:

    JL Partners
    Labour: 39%
    Conservative 23%
    Liberal Democrats: 9%
    Reform 9%
    Don't Know 10%

    Survation:
    Labour: 42%
    Conservative 21.5%
    Liberal Democrats: 10%
    Reform: 7%
    Don't Know 10%

    Redfield & Wilton:
    Labour: 41%
    Conservative: 20%
    Reform: 11%
    Liberal Democrats: 8%
    Don't Know 11%

    Not a lot of difference. If you look at how the DKs split - R&W have 20-19 to the Conservatives, JL& Partners 22-18 to the Conservatives - again, very little difference.

    Take away the noise from the headline numbers and the truth is Labour's lead is 16-21 points currently.

    It's also worth noting JL Partners fieldwork was last Friday and Saturday but the 12,000 sample R&W poll was later - starting Saturday and ending yesterday.

    I appreciate for Conservative supporters the JL Partners poll is going to be talked up as a big sign of change - the truth is, it isn't.

    JLP, like Opinium, provides a final outcome projection based on polling and in-house interpretations of it. The others are snap shots of current voting intention. That's why they produce different headline numbers. It is very interesting that the underlying data is so similar. But I think you could look at Survation and at R&W, and then at JLP, and think they all make sense. A final Labour lead of 12 based on current snapshot polling does not seem too outlandish to me.

    It all hinges on whether the forecast assumptions are correct, if the data are so similar. They may be, or maybe not.
    JLP are very much treat all unknown as closet Tory voters

    1) I just dont believe that's true
    2) even if it is it's in landslide rather than destruction territory...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 53,215

    Leon said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Er. what?

    "Vomit inducing sexual peccadillos"?

    It must take something pretty extreme to make a tough Tory nut like you from Basingstoke reach for the puke bucket, what was it? Exactly??

    Asking for a friend, obvs
    Chris Pincher, Charlie Elphicke, Neil Parish, Mark Menzies.. the list goes on. But it's worth noting most aren't like that.

    And, if you think the next Parliament will be totally clean, then I have a bridge to sell you.

    Aren't we just talking run of the mill adultery, groping, secret gayness, some BDSM, allegations of rape, I dunno. Nothing that would make the average punter chuck his guts. No bestiality or pedo weirdness, unless I missed some scandal?

    Indeed this Tory government has been relatively mild on that front, tho that might be because we are all so jaded and watching people wank pandas on TikTok
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    Ghedebrav said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    There's nothing more exciting than PB on election night.
    I am ready, man! Ready to GET IT ON!
    17 days?! I've got news for you, pal, our poll lead ain't gonna last 17 hours!!
    We’re on an express elevator to hell!
    Miss Bill Paxton.

    Might stick that on again.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,648
    edited May 28

    Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.

    That just makes it worse...
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,519
    edited May 28

    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get and absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?

    The blame game will start on 4th and it will be that the Tories weren’t (in no particular order):

    A) Brexity enough
    B ) Anti-woke enough
    C) Anti-immigration enough
    D) Mean to everyone enough

    I would like to think the party will avoid a lurch to the right. But I really can’t see that, sadly.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,128
    Leon said:

    DougSeal said:

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    Have you been enjoying this Conservative one? Really?

    I've been critical of it, embarrassed about it and, at times, held my head in both my hands. A handful of them are only interested in lining their own pockets, and indulging in vomit-inducing sexual peccadillos. They've failed to deliver several core areas of their policy platform and, at times, displayed breathtaking incompetence. It's not a great record.

    But, they have delivered important reforms on pensions, education and welfare, they have reduced unemployment, they have delivered a reset of our relationship with the EU, they have moved us a little way to sensible market-based decarbonisation, and are putting up at least some opposition to the idiocies of identity politics. Their foreign policy is sensible and logical.

    Perhaps most importantly, fundamentally, the Conservatives leave me and my family alone. They don't look to nanny me, regulate me, or come after my rights, choices or money. They at least aspire to keep tax low, and look to balance the books, and there have been some truly horrid events in the world in the last few years that have made that much much harder. Now, we're almost out the woods. There is some light - some.

    I know Labour will be coming for me, and I don't think it will do either me or the country much good. So, it's a slightly sheepish vote for the Tories for me - but still a vote.
    Actually, having teased you about the "sexual peccadilos" that induced you to vomit (tho I am curious what they are??), I would venture to agree with @OnlyLivingBoy - your statement, through gritted teeth, is likely the best defence of this Tory government I have heard, anywhere. Yes, the Tories are shit, but we live in shit times, and Labour would be shitter

    It's not unfair, and you phrase it rather well

    However, I CANNOT forgive the Tory govt 2 MILLION net migrants in about 3 years, it is utterly inexcusable, in one year we had more migramts that the last two decades of the 20th century combined, and this will forever alter our nation, and not, I fear, for the better. For that they must be punished, if not extinguished, they did it deliberately and I loathe them

    Sadly, there is no sane party of the right to replace them, so the only way to smite them is to vote Labour who will almost certainly be worse. But that is the system we have. At least Labour might have the guts to reform the NHS, they may have no choice, fiscally

    For me it is Sir Kir Royale Starmer, PM, First Lord of the Treasure, and I ABHOR him
    Fair enough, as long as you accept that if you cut off your nose to spite your face you will still lose your nose.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 56,226
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Jordan Peterson has said he will no longer visit the UK if Starmer is elected Prime Minister.

    It is therefore with heavy heart that I will be voting Labour: there is no enthusiasm in my choice, just the cold recognition that a Britain with no Jordan Peterson is a happier, better place.

    What a bloody weird way for him to put it. He's not a UK citizen as far as I know, so he's basically saying he won't visit us on his holidays if Labour win?
    He’s a right-wing social media influencer. He’s just posturing. That’s all they do.
    Naturally, but the type of posturing can be revealing.

    I think a problem a lot of people have when they become middling famous and garner an online following is they get a rush from the acclaim and start to devolve into a parody of themselves, repeating the same old points in an ever more extreme way to please a fanbase (or provoke a hatebase) and inserting themselves into matters they know very little about.

    Sometimes they are self aware about it, sometimes they aren't, but if someone is treating his own not visiting a country as some kind of grand statement, I think it shows the ego has really started to get to them.
    Wait: are you talking about Jordan Peterson or Matt Goodwin or Owen Jones?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get an absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?

    Which option will be most comforting to the party membership? There's your answer.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 70,603

    Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.

    That just makes it worse...
    Is Keir Starmer Rishi Sunak in disguise?

    He seems to have the same tin eared approach to personnel management.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    DM_Andy said:



    Foxy said:

    nico679 said:

    nico679 said:

    Taz said:

    eek said:

    Times - Diana Abbott will not be allowed to stand for Labour...

    Shocked !! Her face doesn’t fit. All the fake outrage from labour when the Tory dumpy made racist comments about her was simply political opportunism.

    Labour are really getting a free ride from the current stitch ups and very late standings down of MPs. All of whom to be replaced with SKS loyalists.

    Oh, and Dr Shola is not happy.

    https://x.com/sholamos1/status/1795433421084197375?s=61
    The purge continues;

    Exclusive with @patrickkmaguire

    Diane Abbott will not be allowed to stand as a Labour candidate in the general election, bringing an end to her 37-year career in Parliament

    There are no circumstances in which she will stand under the Labour banner on July 4

    Senior aides to Starmer have held discussions about restoring her to Labuor whip before election to allow her to leave politics 'with dignity'

    t.co/wgAyXKLqji


    https://x.com/steven_swinford/status/1795507562596421771?
    It's not just the Left: he pushes out into the cold anyone who doesn't toe the line. Witness Rosie Duffield.

    I get the whole "ruthless" argument for a leader to win but, in that case, it doesn't actually make much sense since her position resonates electorally.
    I just don’t understand this decision . She apologized and withdrew her comments and did a course . Something else must have happened behind the scenes.
    Is she actually still any good at the job even forgetting all the baggage and risk? Five years ago she sounded a shell of the person of twenty years ago.
    Well it should be upto her constituents to make that decision . It just seems very cruel given others have had the whip restored.
    I heard from a reliable source is that she refused to give assurances that she wouldn't campaign for Jeremy Corbyn.

    So Starmer's made the right call.
    That wouldn't surprise me, but she is mentally a shadow of her former self. Time for her to retire.
    I really can't see Diane standing as an independent, she's 70 and ready to retire. To be honest, I think Corbyn would have stood down this time had things gone differently and the CLP had a free hand in selecting his successor but he doesn't want to end his career as a loser. The one thing that inspires Corbyn is a fight against the establishment.

    She'd make quite a good token leftie on GBnews if she could stick it and brain wise she's OK. Quite tempting to team her up with Portillo again - they had good chemistry.
    One of those MPs not really suited, for better and worse, for the front benches. There's dozens of them getting along just fine without trying their hand at ministerial or shadow ministerial office.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,350
    A white Labour candidate who publicly apologised after saying he had the “worst tan possible for a black man” at a Black History Month event privately dismissed criticism as being “part of a smear campaign” against him.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ck558ky6273o

    What a weird thing to say.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,500

    kle4 said:

    What a fucking wanker.

    Pope Francis ‘sorry’ for homophobic slur

    Pontiff said there was too much ‘faggotry’ in seminaries, Italian newspapers reported

    The sad thing is this: Pope Francis says this sort of sh*t, and gives support to Russia in its imperialist, fascist war.

    He's still possibly the best pope we've had in centuries.

    Which says a great deal about the Catholic church and Popes...
    A textbook case of an institution which long ago prioritised its own power and prestige over any purported mission.

    Given its age possibly the ur-example..
    I want to like Pope Francis; he seems much more forward-thinking than all of his predecessors (including the original Peter?). Then he says some sh*t and I despise him.

    But at least he says some stuff I think is progressive, which is more than his predecessors.
    Did he actually say 'faggotry'? I don't know what language he speaks - he'd be a Spanish speaker no? Perhaps the word is not so crude in the original language.
    He’s Argentinian which means a strong cultural connection with Italy, so I imagine he has some understanding of the language. I’ve managed thus far not to have heard the term frociaggini let alone be outraged by it, but I imagine Francis has some awareness of the nuances.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963
    rcs1000 said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Jordan Peterson has said he will no longer visit the UK if Starmer is elected Prime Minister.

    It is therefore with heavy heart that I will be voting Labour: there is no enthusiasm in my choice, just the cold recognition that a Britain with no Jordan Peterson is a happier, better place.

    What a bloody weird way for him to put it. He's not a UK citizen as far as I know, so he's basically saying he won't visit us on his holidays if Labour win?
    He’s a right-wing social media influencer. He’s just posturing. That’s all they do.
    Naturally, but the type of posturing can be revealing.

    I think a problem a lot of people have when they become middling famous and garner an online following is they get a rush from the acclaim and start to devolve into a parody of themselves, repeating the same old points in an ever more extreme way to please a fanbase (or provoke a hatebase) and inserting themselves into matters they know very little about.

    Sometimes they are self aware about it, sometimes they aren't, but if someone is treating his own not visiting a country as some kind of grand statement, I think it shows the ego has really started to get to them.
    Wait: are you talking about Jordan Peterson or Matt Goodwin or Owen Jones?
    You will not be short of options to choose.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 21,448

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    You've got to do what you think is right.

    So do I.
    Indeed, we all do.

    I hope that in 4-5 years time then we are able to be on the same side again in politics. That depends probably in no small part in who replaces Sunak and what lessons are learnt.

    If the Tories become the party of having people keep more of their own income we work hard for again, then I will support them again.

    If the Tories become the party of having everyone have the opportunity to own their own home again, then I will support them again.

    If I support them now, when they stand against what attracted me to the Party, then what's the point? Simply not being Labour is not enough.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,519
    edited May 28
    I have to say that Diane Abbott is far from my cup of tea, but I do feel she has been unfairly done by there. And the “you can retire a Labour MP” thing just looks like knife twisting. If I were her I’d tell them to p*ss off.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    Ghedebrav said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Heathener said:

    I think I might take a little step back from this site for a bit. It’s getting just a trifle silly when respected posters are leaping on 1% or 2% movements either way, especially when in the process they are breaking Mike Smithson’s Golden Rule.

    The fact is that so far nothing has happened.

    There's nothing more exciting than PB on election night.
    I am ready, man! Ready to GET IT ON!
    17 days?! I've got news for you, pal, our poll lead ain't gonna last 17 hours!!
    We’re on an express elevator to hell!
    Miss Bill Paxton.

    Might stick that on again.
    I bet you wouldn't call him Miss to his face
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 41,455

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    Or we could always hope for a Lib Dem government.

    Then again, unicorns don't exist... :)
    The smirk on Ed Davey's face alone should preclude any sensible person from voting for that.
    You say that; but it's actually meaningless. Attack policy and actions. It's the same as attacking Sunak because he's short, or Starmer because he has a constant rabbit-in-headlights look.

    Please, give me a solid reason to vote Conservative. I have in the past, before Boris. 'Smirks' aren't a reason.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946

    Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.

    That just makes it worse...
    Like giving Peggy Ollerenshaw her yellow coat the day Maplins closed
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963

    Jonathan said:

    Personally, I expect the polls to move soon. The Conservatives have been dominating the campaign so far with a very Trumpian approach. The more their campaign is mocked, the happier they will be I reckon.

    It amplifies the message every time someone does it.
    Yes, but that's only a good thing if the message is is a good one.

    Personally I'm the kind of voter you should be getting, but Sunak's messaging is pushing me further and further away, not closer.

    Edit: Which is a shame as Jeremy Hunt's messaging lately has been one I really support, so if that had been the Tory agenda I could have been won back, but the opposite is happening with this.
    Fair enough, and my only caution is be careful what you wish for.

    I don't think you'll enjoy a Labour government.
    I don't think I'll enjoy a Labour government either.

    But I don't enjoy a Tory government that isn't on the side of people working for a living either.

    At least with a Labour government I might get a semi decent Tory opposition eventually, who can then return to office fit for purpose.
    Or we could always hope for a Lib Dem government.

    Then again, unicorns don't exist... :)
    The smirk on Ed Davey's face alone should preclude any sensible person from voting for that.
    You say that; but it's actually meaningless. Attack policy and actions. It's the same as attacking Sunak because he's short, or Starmer because he has a constant rabbit-in-headlights look.

    Please, give me a solid reason to vote Conservative. I have in the past, before Boris. 'Smirks' aren't a reason.
    Unless it's twitter vs Priti Patel.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 120,995
    edited May 28
    kle4 said:

    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get an absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?

    Which option will be most comforting to the party membership? There's your answer.
    Sunak toppled Boris, Hunt challenged Boris for the leadership, if they lead the party to heavy defeat it is hardly surprising if the membership conclude a shift right back to Boris style populism is the way.

    Had Boris been allowed to lead the party to defeat a different conclusion may have been drawn but Rishi couldn't wait and toppled him.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 61,451
    Which day are we expecting the Tory cancellation of IHT?

    Manifesto launch?

  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,378

    Abbott has been given the Whip back so she can retire as a Labour MP.

    That just makes it worse...
    I don't think so. Abbott has been at best blunder-prone for some time. Starmer has been very tough with her but many (most?) of us on here have been in management roles and know that you have to be tough at times to manage effectively. Starmer has shown some mettle here I think.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 120,995
    Andy_JS said:

    Let's be clear: the Tories are currently heading for their worst defeat ever, in terms of both seats and vote share.

    https://x.com/BritainElects/status/1795079809049227425

    JL Partners gives 170 Tory seats tonight ie more than 1997 and 2001 so not all polls show that
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 70,603
    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get an absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?

    Which option will be most comforting to the party membership? There's your answer.
    Sunak toppled Boris, Hunt challenged Boris for the leadership, if they lead the party to heavy defeat it is hardly surprising if the membership conclude a shift right to Boris populism is the way.

    Had Boris been allowed to lead the party to defeat a different conclusion may have been drawn but Rishi couldn't wait and toppled him.
    Helpfully, before the SPC would have done it for them by suspending him from Parliament.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,350

    Which day are we expecting the Tory cancellation of IHT?

    Manifesto launch?

    I presume we have some other greatest hits like bringing back the death penalty before we get to that.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,378
    Been away for an hour - any new polls?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 94,963
    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    What we need to establish is this: if the Tories get an absolute hiding, will the British Right introspect at all or will they just blame it all on feckless old Boris and doltish old Rishi?

    Which option will be most comforting to the party membership? There's your answer.
    Sunak toppled Boris, Hunt challenged Boris for the leadership, if they lead the party to heavy defeat it is hardly surprising if the membership conclude a shift right to Boris populism is the way.

    Had Boris been allowed to lead the party to defeat a different conclusion may have been drawn but Rishi couldn't wait and toppled him.
    What has Rishi done that Boris would not have? And the Truss economic stuff does not count, as Boris made no moves in that direction until after he was ousted.

    I was going to say the NI Protocol stuff, but IIRC Boris' surrogates were complaining at Rishi taking credit for work done earlier on that.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,378
    edited May 28

    Which day are we expecting the Tory cancellation of IHT?

    Manifesto launch?

    Is that another £6bn of tax avoidance savings?
This discussion has been closed.