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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » March’s Guardian ICM Poll is out

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  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    edited March 2014

    On Europe,Ed is clearly concerned with the uncertainty a referendum would create for UK business.It must be remembered too Europe is way down the list of importance to them.It's only a minority issue for voters but for Tories it's the great obsession,which is why they keep on banging on about it.
    Some people like referenda but so did Hitler.

    A compelling argument no doubt.

    In all seriousness the business uncertainty argument has some teeth, as fear and doubt are high in people's mind when it comes to the prospect of leaving the EU, and those two things normally win the day as SeanT says. It is likely the reason I would vote to stay in, out of fear of potential negative consequences, however much ardent europhiles do their best to make everyone even slightly ambiguous on the EU to became arch Euro-sceptics.

    So of course Ed M will not offer a referendum as he gains nothing from doing so and probably won't be harmed by it, nor does he really want to offer one and be defined by having to make the actual case for the EU rather than just have it be a side issue as since there is to be no choice, why bang on about it.

    But I feel very strongly a referendum should occur, even though I feel the outcome would be for us to leave and I think that we would come to regret that. The EU has changed markedly from what it was at the timethe UK joined, and EU officials and politicos show every sign that they want to accelerate the bits that the UK population dislikes, and no inclination to change anything substantive of the things they dislike, and that is not good for us or the EU.

    You cannot just ignore such an issue, as the EU would clearly prefer. It may not be a core issue for most people outside of UKIP and the Tories, but very few people seem to approve of the EU and at best the majority have a grudging acceptance of the situation. It means there is no passion for the EU and its ideals, meaning they get hijacked by a small elite not in touch with the people, which furthers the disillusionment.

    Without a referendum the UK will increasingly be a bitter to hostile member of the union, as the eurosceptics view is the common one, hence Labour not wishing to be seen as pro-EU while not wishing to suggest they are anti it either, and so any pro-EU measures will be halfhearted. That is not good for the UK or the EU, as the sides will resent each other, holding back them and upsetting us both.

    If there is a referendum and we stay in, many will not like it but the question is settled and people will have given consent in general to the EU's continued mission and development. If we are out the EU gets to be free of us as an anchor, and if we come crawling back they can make us pay through the nose for that, or we will both do fine and be very happy.
  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042
    While both coalition parties will rightly be feeling good about this poll, they should consider (especially the LDs) what that says about their position in itself. The Blues are cheering a poll which shows them in the mid-30s and Labour still within the MOE of 40. The Yellows are cheering a poll from their most generous pollster which has them on 12!

    That isn't to say that this isn't good news for them, given their current positions, but it's important to keep perspective.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    edited March 2014

    Mr. Antifrank, why do you say that (the worst decision bit, not the triangulation)?

    It's the triangulation that is the worst bit. It makes him look duplicitous, lacking in conviction and fails to achieve the Labour goal of closing the subject down for them.

    Labour should have gone for either no referendum or to offer one to clear the air. Hedging pleases no one.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    Hat's off to Ravi Bopara. 10 runs in 4 overs. Derbach rarely gives less than that every 6 balls.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,937
    antifrank said:

    Ed Miliband has stupidly triangulated on the EU. Comfortably the worst decision of his leadership.

    Worst - so far. Wait until he has to talk to us about his plans for the future direction of the economy....

    Still holding that there is a 15% chance the Labour election campaign will explode horribly on the economy...one of those presentational disasters that people will still study 50 years hence.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    Anorak said:

    Hat's off to Ravi Bopara. 10 runs in 4 overs. Derbach rarely gives less than that every 6 balls.

    He gets these occasional good spells with bat and ball Bopara, a shame he's never consistently effective with either.

  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited March 2014
    Bresnan on a Hat Trick. But no.

    Bravo's about to go nuts, I think.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,937
    It takes a heart of stone not to laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh at Leeds United taking a severe beating....
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,960
    Mr. Antifrank, fair enough.
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    edited March 2014

    It takes a heart of stone not to laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh at Leeds United taking a severe beating....

    Oh crap mr mark ;-)

    Sunder Katwala ‏@sundersays · 4 mins
    Leeds have just scored two in a couple of minutes. But trail 2-4. Almost 20,000 at Elland Road





  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,410
    Didn't get on, but laying Munich was obviously THE football bet for tonight.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    SeanT said:

    For all ye hodges fans ;-)

    Dan Hodges ‏@DPJHodges · 30 secs
    That noise you hear is the champagne corks popping in No.10 at Ed Miliband's decision to rule out a Euro referendum

    Hodges getting it wrong again. This will not significantly affect votes either way. Sadly.
    He has a reputation as the 'Always interpret any event as bad for Ed M' to maintain after all, but I suspect you are correct. It's an issue that some people get very very incensed about, and most people when pressed might be unhappy about, but if it truly moved the electorate in a significant fashion, we'd have seen a UKIP surge even greater that the past year, and a lot sooner as well.
  • David Roe ‏@DavidRoe92 9s

    Aw bollocks. We're back into the game and now guess who comes back on?!?
  • GrandioseGrandiose Posts: 2,323

    For all ye hodges fans ;-)

    Dan Hodges ‏@DPJHodges · 30 secs
    That noise you hear is the champagne corks popping in No.10 at Ed Miliband's decision to rule out a Euro referendum

    Labour wants to hand the Tories the rope; make Europe and issue with which Labour simply isn't concerned. I think it'll work.
  • BobaFettBobaFett Posts: 2,789
    @Antifrank

    No-one cares.

    @SeanT is right.
  • Life_ina_market_townLife_ina_market_town Posts: 2,319
    edited March 2014
    Miliband's stance is interesting. He claims that:
    [T]he next Labour government will legislate for a new lock: there would be no transfer of powers from the UK to the EU without a referendum on our continued membership of the EU.
    Under the provisions of the European Union Act 2011, most major transfers of powers to Brussels cannot happen without a referendum on that proposal. So, in effect, what Miliband proposes is making referenda on such proposals referenda on EU membership. As a result, people who dislike the proposal but support, however inchoately, membership of the EU, and under the current framework could vote to reject the proposal, would be forced to choose between "In" and "Out". Every proposal of further transfers of power to the EU is therefore more likely to be ratified under a Labour government, because opponents of the transfer will be forced to vote in favour of it, for fear of negativing the United Kingdom's membership of the EU.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,507
    A future Labour government would call an in/out referendum on the UK's membership of the EU - but only if it was being asked to transfer more powers to Brussels, Ed Miliband has said.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-26538420

    Spin me round, right round baby....spin me...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578

    Miliband's stance is interesting. He claims that:

    [T]he next Labour government will legislate for a new lock: there would be no transfer of powers from the UK to the EU without a referendum on our continued membership of the EU.
    Under the provisions of the European Union Act 2011, most major transfers of powers to Brussels cannot happen without a referendum on that proposal. So, in effect, what Miliband proposes is making referenda on such proposals referenda on EU membership. As a result, people who dislike the proposal but support, however inchoately, membership of the EU, and under the current framework could vote to reject the proposal, would be forced to choose between "In" and "Out". Every proposal for further transfers of power to the EU is therefore more likely to be ratified under a Labour government, because opponents of the transfer will be forced to vote in favour of it, for fear of negativing the United Kingdom's membership of the EU.
    Sneaky. But effective I would guess. He is a canny one, Ed M.
  • Sun Politics ‏@Sun_Politics 7s

    YouGov/Sun poll tonight - Labour lead down to four points: CON 34%, LAB 38%, LD 10%, UKIP 12%
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    Keith Vaz MP ‏@Keith_VazMP · 5m
    Delighted to hear that Labour will have an in-out referendum. A giant step forward #onthe roadtodamascus

    LOL,someone better tell keith ;-)
  • Ozil or Dernbach... SPOTY?
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746

    A future Labour government would call an in/out referendum on the UK's membership of the EU - but only if it was being asked to transfer more powers to Brussels, Ed Miliband has said.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-26538420

    Spin me round, right round baby....spin me...

    The current government intend to transfer powers over Justice and Home Affairs to the EU after the May elections. Will Labour push for a referendum over that?

    http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/benedictbrogan/100260182/the-next-tory-plot-to-embarrass-david-cameron-on-europe-is-already-taking-shape/
  • BobaFettBobaFett Posts: 2,789
    There are a group of voters who wake up in the morning and, after they have wondered, sometimes aloud, how we might roll back the state today, turn to leaving the EU while munching on their cornflakes. They assume most other men breakfast like they do. But we don't. We drain a coffee and wonder why the BBC had to give Susanna Reid gardening leave.
  • Keith Vaz MP ‏@Keith_VazMP · 5m
    Delighted to hear that Labour will have an in-out referendum. A giant step forward #onthe roadtodamascus

    LOL,someone better tell keith ;-)

    Oops....
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    BobaFett said:

    @Antifrank

    No-one cares.

    @SeanT is right.

    It's not the policy. It's the mess.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    "Current Affair’s exclusive on the “astounding breaches of security” evinced in the encounter featured one of the girl’s firsthand accounts of being invited into the cockpit by the pilots, one of which included a co-pilot of Flight 370.

    'Throughout the entire flight they were talking to us. They were actually smoking, which I don’t think they were allowed to be doing. And they were taking photos with us in the cockpit while we were flying. I was just completely shocked. I couldn’t believe it'.

    One the way back from a vacation in Thailand, the teen girls had been spotted at the boarding gate by the pilots and asked if they would like to join them in the cockpit. There the pilots smoked and took pictures with the girls. The teens remained in the cockpit for the entirety of the international flight, from take-off to landing.

    The young woman described the intentions of the pilots as “possibly a little bit sleazy,” stating that they had asked the girls to change their flight plans when they arrived so the pilots could take them out."


    http://www.truthrevolt.org/news/co-pilot-flight-370-invited-teen-girls-cabin-entire-flight#.Ux9_uzpSQ4U.twitter
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited March 2014
    BobaFett said:

    There are a group of voters who wake up in the morning and, after they have wondered, sometimes aloud, how we might roll back the state today, turn to leaving the EU while munching on their cornflakes. They assume most other men breakfast like they do. But we don't. We drain a coffee and wonder why the BBC had to give Susanna Reid gardening leave.

    Most of my mornings are spent looking for the f*cking keys and phone. Both are often found in the bin, which my son appears to think is the storage container for anything and everything he gets his sticky mitts on.

    Musings on EU membership, not so much.
  • Ozil or Dernbach... SPOTY?

    It's a straight fight between Lamela and Soldado.
  • Life_ina_market_townLife_ina_market_town Posts: 2,319
    edited March 2014
    BobaFett said:

    There are a group of voters who wake up in the morning and, after they have wondered, sometimes aloud, how we might roll back the state today, turn to leaving the EU while munching on their cornflakes. They assume most other men breakfast like they do. But we don't. We drain a coffee and wonder why the BBC had to give Susanna Reid gardening leave.

    Many interested in politics attribute to the average member of the public a far higher level of interest in politics than he/she actually has. It is a habit by no means confined to opponents of the European Union.
  • BobaFettBobaFett Posts: 2,789
    antifrank said:

    BobaFett said:

    @Antifrank

    No-one cares.

    @SeanT is right.

    It's not the policy. It's the mess.
    It's neither. It's nowt.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,534

    Miliband's stance is interesting. He claims that:

    [T]he next Labour government will legislate for a new lock: there would be no transfer of powers from the UK to the EU without a referendum on our continued membership of the EU.
    Under the provisions of the European Union Act 2011, most major transfers of powers to Brussels cannot happen without a referendum on that proposal. So, in effect, what Miliband proposes is making referenda on such proposals referenda on EU membership. As a result, people who dislike the proposal but support, however inchoately, membership of the EU, and under the current framework could vote to reject the proposal, would be forced to choose between "In" and "Out". Every proposal of further transfers of power to the EU is therefore more likely to be ratified under a Labour government, because opponents of the transfer will be forced to vote in favour of it, for fear of negativing the United Kingdom's membership of the EU.

    People might resent being backed into a corner, and vote No, anyway, particularly if the Referendum was at a time of mid-term unpopularity.

  • Christ, Spurs spent £56 million on Lamela and Soldado.

    Liverpool spent the same signing Suarez and Carroll.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Keith Vaz MP ‏@Keith_VazMP · 5m
    Delighted to hear that Labour will have an in-out referendum. A giant step forward #onthe roadtodamascus

    LOL,someone better tell keith ;-)

    @DPJHodges: Becoming pretty clear Labour have messed up on this EU announcement. Wanted the headline to be "Ed promises referendum".

    @SkyNews: FINANCIAL TIMES FRONT PAGE: "Miliband rules out early EU poll" #skypapers http://t.co/hYGRTB4Dgc

    @Spectator_CH: Ed Miliband rules out EU referendum http://t.co/oT1nPBhXB1

    @TelePolitics: Ed Miliband will not hold an EU referendum http://t.co/odRxJnfiSS

    @DanHannanMEP: Labour: "We'll do anything for The People except ask their opinion". http://t.co/QLlgzub8b5
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    New Zealand PM John Key wants to change the national flag despite polls showing 72% of people are happy with the current version:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-26524132
  • Sean_F said:

    People might resent being backed into a corner, and vote No, anyway, particularly if the Referendum was at a time of mid-term unpopularity.

    That is true, but I have little faith in "the people". Miliband has adopted the Liberal Democrats' policy at the time of Lisbon, which was to conflate rejecting an unpopular transfer of powers to the European Union with secession therefrom.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited March 2014
    AndyJS said:

    New Zealand PM John Key wants to change the national flag despite polls showing 72% of people are happy with the current version:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-26524132

    Is he related to Alex Salmond?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,507
    Scott_P said:

    Keith Vaz MP ‏@Keith_VazMP · 5m
    Delighted to hear that Labour will have an in-out referendum. A giant step forward #onthe roadtodamascus

    LOL,someone better tell keith ;-)

    @DPJHodges: Becoming pretty clear Labour have messed up on this EU announcement. Wanted the headline to be "Ed promises referendum".

    @SkyNews: FINANCIAL TIMES FRONT PAGE: "Miliband rules out early EU poll" #skypapers http://t.co/hYGRTB4Dgc

    @Spectator_CH: Ed Miliband rules out EU referendum http://t.co/oT1nPBhXB1

    @TelePolitics: Ed Miliband will not hold an EU referendum http://t.co/odRxJnfiSS

    @DanHannanMEP: Labour: "We'll do anything for The People except ask their opinion". http://t.co/QLlgzub8b5
    Its ok, the BBC are still on message...
  • IOSIOS Posts: 1,450
    Tim has won a bet.

    Will he come back now?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    edited March 2014
    SeanT said:

    Re Red's EU roundabout.

    I have a strange feeling the europhiles - who would surely have won an in/out referendum at any point in the last 3 decades, and probably would win one in the next five years - will, in their cowardice and pusillanimity, delay a vote so long, and annoy the voters so much by their delay, that in the end they will be forced to call a vote at the worst possible time for their cause - and thus they will lose. And we will quit.

    Quite so - by refusing to countenance the possibility now, while doing next to nothing to address the concerns many people have about the EU, it just gives more time for that discomfort to transform into a desire to leave. Lip service about the need for reform, when the bureaucrats and arch europhiles' words indicate they do not truly believe there should be change away from the things the UK public at least does not like - and in fact they are insulted at the very idea - and therefore no such reform will take place of any substance, will do nothing but save the problem up for a future goverment.

    But then what politician/person would not put off a problem today to be dealt with tomorrow? That's future them's problem.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,507
    IOS said:

    Tim has won a bet.

    Will he come back now?

    He never went away.

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    AndyJS said:

    New Zealand PM John Key wants to change the national flag despite polls showing 72% of people are happy with the current version:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-26524132

    So weird - it's an issue for which apparently there is little appetite, and it is planned 'within three years', which may as well be 100 in terms of political relevance for minor plans, so why announce it now anyway?

  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,469
    SeanT said:

    Re Red's EU roundabout.

    I have a strange feeling the europhiles - who would surely have won an in/out referendum at any point in the last 3 decades, and probably would win one in the next five years - will, in their cowardice and pusillanimity, delay a vote so long, and annoy the voters so much by their delay, that in the end they will be forced to call a vote at the worst possible time for their cause - and thus they will lose. And we will quit.

    And I speak as an ex eurosceptic who is now more euro-agnostic; though I agree with kle that, morally, we should have a vote.

    I must admit that my position on the fence is unsteady, and I'm veering towards BOO. But not at any cost, and not until there is a firm vision of what exactly BOO means.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578

    Scott_P said:

    Keith Vaz MP ‏@Keith_VazMP · 5m
    Delighted to hear that Labour will have an in-out referendum. A giant step forward #onthe roadtodamascus

    LOL,someone better tell keith ;-)

    @DPJHodges: Becoming pretty clear Labour have messed up on this EU announcement. Wanted the headline to be "Ed promises referendum".

    @SkyNews: FINANCIAL TIMES FRONT PAGE: "Miliband rules out early EU poll" #skypapers http://t.co/hYGRTB4Dgc

    @Spectator_CH: Ed Miliband rules out EU referendum http://t.co/oT1nPBhXB1

    @TelePolitics: Ed Miliband will not hold an EU referendum http://t.co/odRxJnfiSS

    @DanHannanMEP: Labour: "We'll do anything for The People except ask their opinion". http://t.co/QLlgzub8b5
    Its ok, the BBC are still on message...
    By reporting his plan accurately apparently.
  • The Guardian have published some more polling here

    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/mar/11/lib-dems-recover-third-place-ukip-guardian-icm-poll

    I would update the thread header, but I'm having some technical issues at the moment.
  • IOSIOS Posts: 1,450
    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.
  • Edin_RokzEdin_Rokz Posts: 516
    kle4 said:

    Further comment on Mr Gove flagship for-profit school from Oftsed who has classed it inadequate and placed it in special measures after it's first inspection

    One of the few things I've been interested in Gove's world of schools, is where is the money coming from for these independent flagship not for profit schools. Seems to be a special fund of some sort that doesn't need Parliamentary approval or oversight.

    Sorry, if there is no profit, why do they exist? (Puhleeze, don't tell me that the gratitude of the capitalist system is to dispense freebies so that the bosses can enter the Gates of Heaven with a clear conscience or similar rubbish)

    Gove seems to be very reticent about this, which is very unusual for him.

    And Gove's Dark Master, the Dreaded Murdoch, has his fingers in many Educational Electronic Pies in the US. Some of the Privatised Schools in the US are using Murdoch's technology have reduced the teacher to pupil ratio and increased the remaining teacher wages because the teachers can have more control over their pupils/students and get better results.

    eg: Homework can be set to done on an iPad (other os's are available), the teacher can find out how long the student has worked, what problems they had, and can award "points" on the work delivered. The teacher can aggregate the work of the class and can decide how to improve understanding of the work to be delivered or to give special attention to one or more of the class to bring the entire class up to the acceptable standard required of them, plus get increased wages for doing so.

    To be honest, I can see the benefits of such a system. I can just about remember my schooling and apart from different ways of saying things, nothing much seems to have changed over the years.

    Now (and then): Teacher enter class room prepared for battle, or not, gives the same lesson as last year, sets the same homework, marks homework, goes to the pub for a pint/gin and tonic or two and complains that the students are the worst they have ever had to deal with.

    Perhaps the time has come for a change.

    To be honest, I would be proud to announce such a change. It would leapfrog the UK in nearly all of the educational leagues.

    Plus explaining to teachers that they had a good chance of doubling their wages and doing less work would get their interest over any left wing politics.

  • BobaFettBobaFett Posts: 2,789
    SeanT said:

    BTW - mods, Vanilla is almost unusable at the mo. On PC, iPad or iPhone. Nightmare.

    It regularly buries the post comment button under the links running down the side, which means instead of getting to geek out with Josias over the minutiae of rail reform I end up with a PB thread from 1988.
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    I see the minister of defence(Hammond)as made the mirrors front page.

    http://www.politicshome.com/uk/article/94385/daily_mirror_wednesday_12th_march_2014.html
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,534

    Sean_F said:

    People might resent being backed into a corner, and vote No, anyway, particularly if the Referendum was at a time of mid-term unpopularity.

    That is true, but I have little faith in "the people". Miliband has adopted the Liberal Democrats' policy at the time of Lisbon, which was to conflate rejecting an unpopular transfer of powers to the European Union with secession therefrom.
    I doubt if this will ever be legislated, anyway.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    I find that very hard to believe. Labour have a vastly easier task to get a majority than the Tories do, but their polling is really not that bad given how openly divided they are, and the unpopularity of years of (inevitable) austerity.

    The Tories will lose in 2015, and will either lurch right or purch its right in response given how much the right seems to detest Cameron, but really the party should not lose by too much, and that should keep its internal divisions from fracturing too spectacularly, so I cannot see how Cameron has been that disastrous. Disasppointing, divisive and ineffectual, yes, but not disastrous.

  • VerulamiusVerulamius Posts: 1,550
    I tend to use politicalbetting.vanillaforums.com to access the site, as it gets around the vodafone block.
  • BobaFettBobaFett Posts: 2,789
    SeanT said:

    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    Nah. It's not over. Miliband is likely the next PM - but it's far from a done deal.

    Look at how Fear and Doubt is winning the Scottish referendum.

    The next GE should be, for the Tories, a case of using exactly the same recipe vis a vis Miliband and Labour: i.e. make people fearful and doubtful - about a future, spend-and-borrow Labour government putting us right back in the poo, just as the British economy is reviving.

    Happily for Tories, Labour are led by Miliband and Balls, who are enough to make anyone a bit nervous.

    The electoral maths is negative for Cameron, which makes me favour a small Miliband majority. But the game is not finished.
    Agreed. Labour's strategy is to keep cool and hope that, by the summer, the Tories start panicking. But until they hit the panic button it's still in play.
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,320
    Twitter
    Michael Fabricant ‏@Mike_Fabricant 5m
    Labour will give an In/Out EU Referendum BUT ONLY if more powers are transferred to EU from UK and EdM says THAT is unlikely.

    Tom Newton Dunn ‏@tnewtondunn 5m
    Also spot on; RT @JohnRentoul I think EdM can hold that line on an EU referendum as long as Labour is ahead in the polls.

    David Cameron ‏@David_Cameron 40m
    1/2 By his own admission, Ed Miliband says it's unlikely there'll be an in-out referendum on Europe under Labour.

    David Cameron ‏@David_Cameron 40m
    2/2 Only the Conservative Party can guarantee and deliver that in-out referendum.

    Daniel Hannan ‏@DanHannanMEP 6m
    Clegg and Miliband keep saying the EU needs reform. Name a single reform they have successfully pursued.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    BobaFett said:

    SeanT said:

    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    Nah. It's not over. Miliband is likely the next PM - but it's far from a done deal.

    Look at how Fear and Doubt is winning the Scottish referendum.

    The next GE should be, for the Tories, a case of using exactly the same recipe vis a vis Miliband and Labour: i.e. make people fearful and doubtful - about a future, spend-and-borrow Labour government putting us right back in the poo, just as the British economy is reviving.

    Happily for Tories, Labour are led by Miliband and Balls, who are enough to make anyone a bit nervous.

    The electoral maths is negative for Cameron, which makes me favour a small Miliband majority. But the game is not finished.
    Agreed. Labour's strategy is to keep cool and hope that, by the summer, the Tories start panicking. But until they hit the panic button it's still in play.
    The Tories aren't panicking already? Their flailings may have calmed somewhat, but their continual self harming suggests to me they are desperate and unable to focus as a result.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    SeanT said:


    More importantly, there are now tiny signs of a Lib Dem revival.

    For the LDs, 12% from ICM is a bad result.

    http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/voting-intention-2/icm
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    edited March 2014
    kle4 said:

    BobaFett said:

    SeanT said:

    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    Nah. It's not over. Miliband is likely the next PM - but it's far from a done deal.

    Look at how Fear and Doubt is winning the Scottish referendum.

    The next GE should be, for the Tories, a case of using exactly the same recipe vis a vis Miliband and Labour: i.e. make people fearful and doubtful - about a future, spend-and-borrow Labour government putting us right back in the poo, just as the British economy is reviving.

    Happily for Tories, Labour are led by Miliband and Balls, who are enough to make anyone a bit nervous.

    The electoral maths is negative for Cameron, which makes me favour a small Miliband majority. But the game is not finished.
    Agreed. Labour's strategy is to keep cool and hope that, by the summer, the Tories start panicking. But until they hit the panic button it's still in play.
    The Tories aren't panicking already? Their flailings may have calmed somewhat, but their continual self harming suggests to me they are desperate and unable to focus as a result.
    Last week the Osborne/Boris spat was presented as leadership manoeuvring indicating the Conservatives (including Top Cameroon George!) had given up on 2015 as a lost cause.
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    Just in.

    Has Nick Palmer phoned home?
  • @fitalass
    While Miliband's proposal is superficial, it is hardly worse than Cameron's specious attempt at Wilsonism.
  • john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @fitalass

    'Clegg and Miliband keep saying the EU needs reform. Name a single reform they have successfully pursued.'

    They must have forgotten that we've been told that for at least the past 10 years.
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    kle4 said:

    BobaFett said:

    SeanT said:

    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    Nah. It's not over. Miliband is likely the next PM - but it's far from a done deal.

    Look at how Fear and Doubt is winning the Scottish referendum.

    The next GE should be, for the Tories, a case of using exactly the same recipe vis a vis Miliband and Labour: i.e. make people fearful and doubtful - about a future, spend-and-borrow Labour government putting us right back in the poo, just as the British economy is reviving.

    Happily for Tories, Labour are led by Miliband and Balls, who are enough to make anyone a bit nervous.

    The electoral maths is negative for Cameron, which makes me favour a small Miliband majority. But the game is not finished.
    Agreed. Labour's strategy is to keep cool and hope that, by the summer, the Tories start panicking. But until they hit the panic button it's still in play.
    The Tories aren't panicking already? Their flailings may have calmed somewhat, but their continual self harming suggests to me they are desperate and unable to focus as a result.
    Or this confirmation by miliband that only one party who could win power will offer a referendum might galvanise the tories and focus on keeping in Government.

    Or if they have a bad euro elections and still trailing badly in polls,cameron better watch his back ;-)

  • IOSIOS Posts: 1,450
    SeanT

    The Tories don't have a party left. The fact that they have people like Sean Fear joining UKIP shows how they are a spent force.

    In my opinion a new right wing, working people orientated party. That focused on making sure the labourer from Sheffield got his two weeks abroad every year. That looked at how it could help every bright kid make it to the top regardless of who they are could win a majority in this country.

    But not Dave. Not Dave and his 6 other Etonians writing his manifesto.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    john_zims said:

    @fitalass

    'Clegg and Miliband keep saying the EU needs reform. Name a single reform they have successfully pursued.'

    They must have forgotten that we've been told that for at least the past 10 years.

    And that the key figures in EU officialdom and cheerleading react with barely contained disgust at the suggestion of anything beyond superficial change.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,723
    Key ICM finding:

    "All told, the poll suggests that the number of voters that the Tories might hope to snatch from Labour and the Lib Dems is roughly four times larger than the number of Ukip voters who might embrace David Cameron – which highlights the dangers for him in obsessing about his right flank at the expense of the middle ground."

    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/mar/11/lib-dems-recover-third-place-ukip-guardian-icm-poll
  • SocratesSocrates Posts: 10,322
    A great night to be a eurosceptic. Labour have turned the debate back to members of the European Union, have made it politically impossible for any future government to transfer power to the EU without a referendum, AND come over as duplicitous and weaselling Europhiles.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    This stuff Miliband is saying about the EU referendum is a perfect example of why he's struggling so much: he just can't give a straight, simple answer on anything. "We don't want a referendum but we might have one in certain circumstances if the sun rises to the east on the 10th of the month, and we're in favour of the EU but at the same time we're not".

    It's a typical New Labour tactic of trying to square all the circles and not try to offend anyone, but it just looks like insincere waffle. If he just said "sorry, I want to stay in the EU and don't want a referedum", he would probably win a degree of kudos even from people who disagree with him for atleast being straight and honest.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    MikeL said:

    Key ICM finding:

    "All told, the poll suggests that the number of voters that the Tories might hope to snatch from Labour and the Lib Dems is roughly four times larger than the number of Ukip voters who might embrace David Cameron – which highlights the dangers for him in obsessing about his right flank at the expense of the middle ground."

    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/mar/11/lib-dems-recover-third-place-ukip-guardian-icm-poll

    He will ignore it. Half his party are obsessed with the idea that if they lurch right they will be swept to a majority with ease, and while he seems to have resisted doing so too overtly, if he tries to woo anyone from the centre or centre left at the expense of the right, he will be crucified/unable to follow through due to outrage from the right.
  • Some polling by YouGov in the Times.

    Respondents were asked to imagine which of the likely leader contenders would improve their chances of winning the 2020 ballot.

    Increase/Decrease

    BoJo 43/24 - Net +19

    May 30/35 - Net -5

    Osborne 7/56 - Net - 49

    Gove and Hunt increase figures are 5%, no decrease figure given
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    edited March 2014
    Danny565 said:

    This stuff Miliband is saying about the EU referendum is a perfect example of why he's struggling so much: he just can't give a straight, simple answer on anything. "We don't want a referendum but we might have one in certain circumstances if the sun rises to the east on the 10th of the month, and we're in favour of the EU but at the same time we're not".

    It's a typical New Labour tactic of trying to square all the circles and not try to offend anyone, but it just looks like insincere waffle. If he just said "sorry, I want to stay in the EU and don't want a referedum", he would probably win a degree of kudos even from people who disagree with him for atleast being straight and honest.

    'Typical New Labour Tactics' worked though didn't they? Why wouldn't Ed M adopt them.
  • MikeKMikeK Posts: 9,053
    edited March 2014
    SeanT said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    People might resent being backed into a corner, and vote No, anyway, particularly if the Referendum was at a time of mid-term unpopularity.

    That is true, but I have little faith in "the people". Miliband has adopted the Liberal Democrats' policy at the time of Lisbon, which was to conflate rejecting an unpopular transfer of powers to the European Union with secession therefrom.
    I doubt if this will ever be legislated, anyway.
    SeanF - you're a smart and honest Kipper, I'd be interested in yr opinion. Does Miliband's dismissal of an in/out vote make you more likely to vote Tory?

    I believe it should, if you are intellectually honest - and if getting a vote on Europe is so important to you.

    Cameron is now the only leader promising an EU referendum. He may be lying outright (though I don't think he is), he would, I agree, surely campaign for IN after a feeble & fake renegotiation, nonetheless he is the ONLY party leader who will give you what you want. A vote on Europe.

    How can you therefore damage the Tory chances of winning in 2015 by voting UKIP? What do you expect to happen after Miliband wins in 2015? Do you think that the defeated Tories will swing right and be even more sceptic and make an alliance with you? Why? The electoral maths will tell them to be MORE centrist and focus less on Europe.

    I agree with much of your disdain for posho Cameroons etc. I empathise hugely with your position on Europe. But an honest analysis of politics, as it is, should lead you and your fellow Kippers to cast a reluctant Tory vote in 2015.

    By all means vote UKIP in your trillions in May. I will probably do the same just for the hell of it. But if you are logical you have to bite the bullet and give Cameron yr vote at the next General Elex.
    You've back tracked a bit here SeanT. You yourself has said that Cammo could never be trusted to keep his promises re the EU. Kippers still believe that this is still true today, even more so.

    Cammo has turned out to be a cheap liar on anything from Pasties to Floods to the EU Referendums. Kippers believe that you can't trust any of the Lab/Lib/Con parties ever again.

    What I can't understand is why your complete 190º turn in only a few weeks. Who's money are you taking now?
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    Socrates said:

    A great night to be a eurosceptic. Labour have turned the debate back to members of the European Union, have made it politically impossible for any future government to transfer power to the EU without a referendum, AND come over as duplicitous and weaselling Europhiles.

    Not at all. The next transfer of power will simply be explained away as a 'tidying up exercise'. Again. Not a transfer of power at all.

    These are not the droids you're looking for.
  • NinoinozNinoinoz Posts: 1,312
    edited March 2014
    IOS said:


    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    Forgotten John Major? They haven't won a majority since he won in 1992, even against Gordon Brown in 2010.
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    edited March 2014
    IOS said:

    SeanT

    The Tories don't have a party left. The fact that they have people like Sean Fear joining UKIP shows how they are a spent force.

    In my opinion a new right wing, working people orientated party. That focused on making sure the labourer from Sheffield got his two weeks abroad every year. That looked at how it could help every bright kid make it to the top regardless of who they are could win a majority in this country.

    But not Dave. Not Dave and his 6 other Etonians writing his manifesto.

    A Labour lead down to 3-4%, the Tories hitting 35% and over a year to go.

    Cheltenham Hill? What hill?

    Cameron = Golden Miller, Arkle and Best Mate blended.

  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,708
    edited March 2014

    Socrates said:

    A great night to be a eurosceptic. Labour have turned the debate back to members of the European Union, have made it politically impossible for any future government to transfer power to the EU without a referendum, AND come over as duplicitous and weaselling Europhiles.

    Not at all. The next transfer of power will simply be explained away as a 'tidying up exercise'. Again. Not a transfer of power at all.

    These are not the droids you're looking for.
    Or they could just flat-out change their position before 2020 or 2025. These parliamentary "locks" don't actually do anything substantial even if they actually pass them, because if you can pass the treaty legislation you can also pass legislation saying the "lock" doesn't apply to the treaty.

    You don't generally want to believe things politicians say they'll do in the next parliament, but you certainly shouldn't take any notice of things they say they'll do in the one after that.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    edited March 2014
    kle4 said:

    Danny565 said:

    This stuff Miliband is saying about the EU referendum is a perfect example of why he's struggling so much: he just can't give a straight, simple answer on anything. "We don't want a referendum but we might have one in certain circumstances if the sun rises to the east on the 10th of the month, and we're in favour of the EU but at the same time we're not".

    It's a typical New Labour tactic of trying to square all the circles and not try to offend anyone, but it just looks like insincere waffle. If he just said "sorry, I want to stay in the EU and don't want a referedum", he would probably win a degree of kudos even from people who disagree with him for atleast being straight and honest.

    'Typical New Labour Tactics' worked though didn't they? Why wouldn't Ed M adopt them.
    They worked briefly, but people can see through the tactics now. One of the things people hate most about politicians these days is when they can't tell you plainly what they believe, and are just out to get votes rather than acting for what they believe in.

    That's why Nigel Farage is so popular: in any previous era of politics, he wouldn't be considered particularly "charismatic" or a good communicator at all, but he stands out among the current crop of politicians simply because, unlike most of them, he actually gives straightforward answers and policies and always gives you the sense that he genuinely believes what he's saying.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    Danny565 said:

    kle4 said:

    Danny565 said:

    This stuff Miliband is saying about the EU referendum is a perfect example of why he's struggling so much: he just can't give a straight, simple answer on anything. "We don't want a referendum but we might have one in certain circumstances if the sun rises to the east on the 10th of the month, and we're in favour of the EU but at the same time we're not".

    It's a typical New Labour tactic of trying to square all the circles and not try to offend anyone, but it just looks like insincere waffle. If he just said "sorry, I want to stay in the EU and don't want a referedum", he would probably win a degree of kudos even from people who disagree with him for atleast being straight and honest.

    'Typical New Labour Tactics' worked though didn't they? Why wouldn't Ed M adopt them.
    They worked briefly, but people can see through the tactics now. One of the things people hate most about politicians these days is when they can't tell you plainly what they believe, and are just out to get votes rather than acting for what they believe in.

    That's why Nigel Farage is so popular: in any previous era of politics, he wouldn't be considered particularly "charismatic" or a good communicator at all, but he stands out among the current crop of politicians simply because, unlike most of them, he actually gives straightforward answers and policies and always gives you the sense that he genuinely believes what he's saying.
    I agree that that is why Farage is pretty popular...but come 2015 people will still vote Labour in comfortably, so while people may express frustration that most of our political classes are bland, deliberately obfuscating political tacticians with little natural charisma, they apparently keep voting for them. We'll get what we deserve.

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,410

    Sun Politics ‏@Sun_Politics 7s

    YouGov/Sun poll tonight - Labour lead down to four points: CON 34%, LAB 38%, LD 10%, UKIP 12%

    Can I just have one bloody 36-36 outlier !
  • SocratesSocrates Posts: 10,322
    @SeanT

    I don't think the Tories to swing hard right after Cameron loses, but I think they will put a genuinely more eurosceptic guy in. All that voting for Cameron would do at this point would reduce UKIP's vote share, while, at best getting the Tories to a position where they can't make a deal with the Lib Dems and we get a Lib-Lab coalition despite the fact the Tories are the largest party.
  • compouter2compouter2 Posts: 2,371
    Pulpstar said:

    Sun Politics ‏@Sun_Politics 7s

    YouGov/Sun poll tonight - Labour lead down to four points: CON 34%, LAB 38%, LD 10%, UKIP 12%

    Can I just have one bloody 36-36 outlier !
    You think it is bad for you?

    http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3095/2443730019_5e4ac5b8ba_z.jpg
  • TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    When I posted about it could galvanise the tories ,it's working already ;-)



    Nadine Dorries MP ‏@NadineDorriesMP · 29 secs
    Today, Ed Milliband lost Labour a shed load of votes - no wonder John Mann MP is so mad!

  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    IOS said:

    SeanT

    The Tories don't have a party left. The fact that they have people like Sean Fear joining UKIP shows how they are a spent force.

    In my opinion a new right wing, working people orientated party. That focused on making sure the labourer from Sheffield got his two weeks abroad every year. That looked at how it could help every bright kid make it to the top regardless of who they are could win a majority in this country.

    But not Dave. Not Dave and his 6 other Etonians writing his manifesto.

    Inverted snobbery is a horrible trait.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,534
    SeanT said:

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    People might resent being backed into a corner, and vote No, anyway, particularly if the Referendum was at a time of mid-term unpopularity.

    That is true, but I have little faith in "the people". Miliband has adopted the Liberal Democrats' policy at the time of Lisbon, which was to conflate rejecting an unpopular transfer of powers to the European Union with secession therefrom.
    I doubt if this will ever be legislated, anyway.
    SeanF - you're a smart and honest Kipper, I'd be interested in yr opinion. Does Miliband's dismissal of an in/out vote make you more likely to vote Tory?

    I believe it should, if you are intellectually honest - and if getting a vote on Europe is so important to you.

    Cameron is now the only leader promising an EU referendum. He may be lying outright (though I don't think he is), he would, I agree, surely campaign for IN after a feeble & fake renegotiation, nonetheless he is the ONLY party leader who will give you what you want. A vote on Europe.

    How can you therefore damage the Tory chances of winning in 2015 by voting UKIP? What do you expect to happen after Miliband wins in 2015? Do you think that the defeated Tories will swing right and be even more sceptic and make an alliance with you? Why? The electoral maths will tell them to be MORE centrist and focus less on Europe.

    I agree with much of your disdain for posho Cameroons etc. I empathise hugely with your position on Europe. But an honest analysis of politics, as it is, should lead you and your fellow Kippers to cast a reluctant Tory vote in 2015.

    By all means vote UKIP in your trillions in May. I will probably do the same just for the hell of it. But if you are logical you have to bite the bullet and give Cameron yr vote at the next General Elex.
    It makes no difference. I've already said that UKIP won't feature in Luton South, in 2015, and I'd marginally prefer Cameron to Milliband.

    As to the wider issue, UKIP must do what the SNP have done. Maximise support, membership, and electoral representation, in order to optimise their chances of securing EU withdrawal.

    Had another party offered a referendum on Scottish independence 10 years ago, the SNP would have dismissed any suggestion they should disband and transfer their support to that party. So it is with UKIP.
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    I think you may be being a little arrogant here.

    38% a year out is a long way from job done! and only a blinkered Labour supporter would seriously believe a Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    I have never voted Tory in all my life but I would now consider it if it made any difference in my constituency, I regard Miliband as so dangerous he must be kept out at all costs.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    edited March 2014

    IOS said:

    Sean

    I think you are clutching at straws. 38% with ICM is job done. Any Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    The Tories need to get this parliament over with and regroup after David Cameron's disastrous tenure as leader. Never has a British leader done so much to destroy one party.

    I think you may be being a little arrogant here.

    38% a year out is a long way from job done! and only a blinkered Labour supporter would seriously believe a Lib Dem revival will hit the Tories harder.

    Wouldn't it though? The majority of LD seats in England at least have Con in second place I had thought, in which case a LD revival would increase the liklihood that the Tories do not manage to win enough seats to remain largest party by depriving them of a lot of what had looked like easy pickings from the LDs.

    As I have never voted Labour before, if I am wrong about the LDs hitting the Tories harder, it is as least proof not only blinkered Labour supporters believe so.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,534
    Socrates said:

    @SeanT

    I don't think the Tories to swing hard right after Cameron loses, but I think they will put a genuinely more eurosceptic guy in. All that voting for Cameron would do at this point would reduce UKIP's vote share, while, at best getting the Tories to a position where they can't make a deal with the Lib Dems and we get a Lib-Lab coalition despite the fact the Tories are the largest party.

    I tend to think the Tories will still be the largest party after the next election, but nothing would induce the Lib Dems to let an EU referendum bill to pass.



  • IOSIOS Posts: 1,450
    SeanT

    There is your answer from SeanF. It does not matter. The fact that Cameron has failed to take sean with him shows just how poor he is as a leader.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,534
    IOS said:

    SeanT

    There is your answer from SeanF. It does not matter. The fact that Cameron has failed to take sean with him shows just how poor he is as a leader.

    As I said, in a seat like Luton South, where it's a binary choice between Conservative and Labour, I'd vote Conservative.

    But, in the 500 or so seats that are safe, why should a UKIP supporter vote tactically?
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    IOS said:

    SeanT

    There is your answer from SeanF. It does not matter. The fact that Cameron has failed to take sean with him shows just how poor he is as a leader.

    And the alternatives are good, is that what you are seriously suggesting?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,578
    IOS said:

    SeanT

    There is your answer from SeanF. It does not matter. The fact that Cameron has failed to take sean with him shows just how poor he is as a leader.

    Yes, and yet still at 35 in today's poll. He's a bad leader, and the Tories are divided as all hell, but they retain significant base support and suggesting they are all but gone as a party is as preposterous as UKIPers who claim Lib/Lab/Con are no longer relevant despite together capturing 80% or so in the polls.

    Night all
  • IOSIOS Posts: 1,450
    SeanF

    The fact you aren't actively working for the Tories is a loss to them. Considering their ground game people who "get it" going to an opposing party is a double blow.

    Blair may have been a poor PM in many ways. But he still delivered another 2 big wins after his first election. Cameron cannot do that - because he is a poor leader.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    "Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search crowdsourced by U.S. firm

    Internet users can search for the missing plane in satellite images of ocean"

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370-search-crowdsourced-by-u-s-firm-1.2568677?cmp=rss
  • compouter2compouter2 Posts: 2,371
    IOS said:

    SeanF

    The fact you aren't actively working for the Tories is a loss to them. Considering their ground game people who "get it" going to an opposing party is a double blow.

    Blair may have been a poor PM in many ways. But he still delivered another 2 big wins after his first election. Cameron cannot do that - because he is a poor leader.

    I prefer to call him a "special" leader. Only a "special" leader could cut his membership in half in his tenure.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2424282/Tories-admit-HALF-members-quit-party-David-Cameron-leader-2005.html

    No wonder he has to pay for people to "Like" him on Facebook ;-)
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    To be fair IOS, we do not yet know how Cameron will do in the next election yet. He gained more than 100 seats last election and formed a government.

    It does not look likely that he will do so again, but it is not yet certain that he will not!
    IOS said:

    SeanF

    The fact you aren't actively working for the Tories is a loss to them. Considering their ground game people who "get it" going to an opposing party is a double blow.

    Blair may have been a poor PM in many ways. But he still delivered another 2 big wins after his first election. Cameron cannot do that - because he is a poor leader.

  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    AndyJS said:

    "Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search crowdsourced by U.S. firm

    Internet users can search for the missing plane in satellite images of ocean"

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370-search-crowdsourced-by-u-s-firm-1.2568677?cmp=rss

    Andy

    This Tomnod crowdsourced satellite pic is causing a big twitter flutter at present:

    http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1103537

    Is it MH370 or a ship?
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    I fear Nick Palmer's Russian hosts have poured him into bed.
  • compouter2compouter2 Posts: 2,371
    AveryLP said:

    AndyJS said:

    "Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search crowdsourced by U.S. firm

    Internet users can search for the missing plane in satellite images of ocean"

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370-search-crowdsourced-by-u-s-firm-1.2568677?cmp=rss

    Andy

    This Tomnod crowdsourced satellite pic is causing a big twitter flutter at present:

    http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1103537

    Is it MH370 or a ship?
    To my untrained eye that quite clearly looks like a ship.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Congrats to SeanT on reaching 2,000 Twitter followers. And the book deal.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    AveryLP said:

    AndyJS said:

    "Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search crowdsourced by U.S. firm

    Internet users can search for the missing plane in satellite images of ocean"

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370-search-crowdsourced-by-u-s-firm-1.2568677?cmp=rss

    Andy

    This Tomnod crowdsourced satellite pic is causing a big twitter flutter at present:

    http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1103537

    Is it MH370 or a ship?
    To my untrained eye that quite clearly looks like a ship.
    Agree, it's probably a ship.

    I must say, the mood of the Malaysian authorities won't be improved much if internet users discover the location of the plane before they do.
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815

    AveryLP said:

    AndyJS said:

    "Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search crowdsourced by U.S. firm

    Internet users can search for the missing plane in satellite images of ocean"

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370-search-crowdsourced-by-u-s-firm-1.2568677?cmp=rss

    Andy

    This Tomnod crowdsourced satellite pic is causing a big twitter flutter at present:

    http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1103537

    Is it MH370 or a ship?
    To my untrained eye that quite clearly looks like a ship.
    'pouter

    We have found something on which we can agree!

    But enough there to warrant an expert opinion.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited March 2014
    International airline pilot Karlene Petitt gives her theory on MH370:

    "My Theory:

    I think the flight deck was compromised. The terrorists turned the transponder off. They told the captain to fly the plane toward a different city. Hong Kong comes to mind, but they could have turned back to Singapore, or head anywhere in range with one mission in mind: Create another 911 event.

    I believe that captain initially followed their directions and when he realized what was about to happen, he put the plane into the ocean to save thousands of lives on the ground. If I were in that seat and they decided they didn't need me anymore, I would click off the autopilot and push the nose over in descent during my final breath.

    The reason we cannot find this plane is we are looking in the wrong place.

    The search crew should draw a line from the point of disappearance, incorporating the turning radius of the plane, to all major cities that could have been a target. Then they need to take the trajectory with the speed and altitude and look in those locations with a 30 mile width."


    http://karlenepetitt.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/mh-370-time-to-speculate.html?m=1

    https://mobile.twitter.com/KarlenePetitt
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