this sort of explicit coordination with a campaign, coupled with ambiguity about funding sources, means that we're going to label Rasmussen as an intrinsically partisan (R) pollster going forward.
Nasty, attention seeking transphobe. Best ignored.
Those getting all worked up about Sir Keir Starmer accepting a few freebies are going to shit the bed when they finally notice the Oswald Cobblepot figure waddling up to the opposite side of the despatch box in a few weeks’ time. Crooked as a £4 note and nasty with it too. A few suits and a pair of glasses pale in comparison.
As I've mentioned downthread, we know who Lord Alli is, so if Starmer starts spouting his talking points, we can be reasonably sure there's a debt being paid.
Meanwhile Jenrick's leadership campaign has been funded to the tune of 75k by a *completely anonymous* donor who contributed via a shell company based in the British Virgin Islands. So who has bought and paid for him?
Surely he is not being held to Branson?
Just thinking if Jenrick goes on the offensive over donations to Labour, he might find himself in a pickle.
Whoever the lucky winner is has a bit of explaining to do. As will the luckier loser.
CCHQ are charging each of the final four £50000, with the final two having to stump up another £150k for party funds.
Now it's for a respectable reason, not an apparently frivolous one, but it's a lot of wonga to find.
Don't be surprised if one of the finalists drops out to save money, and the members do not get a deciding vote. This will also solve the problem of who responds to the budget, which senior Tories claim to have only just noticed.
Nah, they noticed last month, I even did a thread on it.
How the Tories may deal with two massive elections at the same time and a budget
Rasmussen shows its poll findings to Trump before publication, seems to be the main allegation. Embarrassing if true but not the same as falsifying results.
Rasmussen shows its poll findings to Trump before publication, seems to be the main allegation. Embarrassing if true but not the same as falsifying results.
More than embarrassing, it's illegal. It is in effect a campaign contribution, which given their legal structure, is not permitted.
Someone last thread suggested Duffield could pull a Dick Taverne. I was surprised to discover that Taverne is still alive at 95. He sits as a LibDem peer. He famously retained his seat after being deselected by his local Labour Party for his pro-EEC views. He resigned from Parliament and won the subsequent by-election, and retained his seat at the next general election. That was the Feb 1974 election, but he then narrowly lost the seat in the Oct election.
He joined the SDP when the party was founded. He stood as the SDP candidate in the 1982 Peckham by-election and came a respectable second. He came third in Dulwich in the 1983 general election. In 1996, he was made a LibDem life peer. He last stood for election aged 78 in the 2006 local elections.
Rasmussen shows its poll findings to Trump before publication, seems to be the main allegation. Embarrassing if true but not the same as falsifying results.
On social media, Rasmussen appeared to legitimize many conspiracy theories on the right, such as election fraud and vaccine denialism.
Earlier this year, the polling aggregator 538 dropped Rasmussen Reports from its averages and forecasts, saying that the firm couldn’t meet 538’s standards for objectivity and methodology. This drew a major backlash from right-wing media, especially after Rasmussen published a letter from 538 asking the polling firm questions about its procedures and biases.
Someone last thread suggested Duffield could pull a Dick Taverne. I was surprised to discover that Taverne is still alive at 95. He sits as a LibDem peer. He famously retained his seat after being deselected by his local Labour Party for his pro-EEC views. He resigned from Parliament and won the subsequent by-election, and retained his seat at the next general election. That was the Feb 1974 election, but he then narrowly lost the seat in the Oct election.
He joined the SDP when the party was founded. He stood as the SDP candidate in the 1982 Peckham by-election and came a respectable second. He came third in Dulwich in the 1983 general election. In 1996, he was made a LibDem life peer. He last stood for election aged 78 in the 2006 local elections.
Whilst no party leader ever wants defections from their party, some defections are less upsetting than others.
Rasmussen shows its poll findings to Trump before publication, seems to be the main allegation. Embarrassing if true but not the same as falsifying results.
More than embarrassing, it's illegal. It is in effect a campaign contribution, which given their legal structure, is not permitted.
Yes but it does not mean their polls are wrong. That's the point. They might well be, but this is not evidence of falsification or error.
Rasmussen shows its poll findings to Trump before publication, seems to be the main allegation. Embarrassing if true but not the same as falsifying results.
More than embarrassing, it's illegal. It is in effect a campaign contribution, which given their legal structure, is not permitted.
Yes but it does not mean their polls are wrong. That's the point. They might well be, but this is not evidence of falsification or error.
If you catch someone doing one thing dodgy, it is reasonable to be suspicious that maybe other things they do are dodgy. We already know Rasmussen’s figures show a strong pro-Republican house effect. Now we know they’re giving their figures early to the Trump campaign. There is plenty of reason to be suspicious.
In 2016 Trafalgar were the only pollster who had Trump ahead in Michigan and Pennsylvania both of which he won.
The fact Atlas have Harris ahead in North Carolina also suggests they aren't Trump biased by default even if they have Trump doing better in the rustbelt than most other pollsters
In 2016 Trafalgar were the only pollster who had Trump ahead in Michigan and Pennsylvania both of which he won.
The fact Atlas have Harris ahead in North Carolina also suggests they aren't Trump biased by default even if they have Trump doing better in the rustbelt than most other pollsters
Is there any evidence that Trafalgar actually conduct polls? As opposed to being quite good guesses?
This at least means the BSW is willing to work with the CDU, I guess. And an AfD speaker (which would have eventually happened if the other parties hadn't supported an alternative) could have caused a big headache.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is lot grittier than you might expect for the quintessential cathedral city
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Not that weird, its mostly an anti-Tory vote, as we had a ridiculously bad Tory govt implode.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
This at least means the BSW is willing to work with the CDU, I guess. And an AfD speaker (which would have eventually happened if the other parties hadn't supported an alternative) could have caused a big headache.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury has three Universities in a small-medium sized town (pop ~40k), for one thing.
I picked that up when I was doing a comparison with Mansfield and Chesterfield with southern places with high profiles, which are both around 75k and just have University branches.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
Jenrick also says he has a cap on migration policy unlike Badenoch and will withdraw from the ECHR unlike Badenoch so clearly focused on shoring up the right over her. Also says it is natural for him as a conservative to back Republican candidates in November although he has respect for Harris too and as a UK leader would work with either.
Emphasises his working class parents and small town, Midlands values
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week
I have watched the other three on Trevor Phillips (Sky) and frankly they underwhelm and Jenrick is no better
I have little confidence any of them are the answer for the conservative party but then there are 5 years of labour ahead no matter what happens with Starmer and his love for freebies and cronyism
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
He’s not wrong on either. Low wage migrants coming here often bring economically inactive dependents too.
His interview seemed quite assured but he was not really tested.
Apparently he painted over a mural once. It was not mentioned.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
That’s three of the four main forward ammo dumps hit in the last fortnight, will be months of ammunition in each of them, now all cooked off and usuless to the Russians.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
So many unknowns about the US election. Motivation within the core voting blocs, likelihood to vote of age cohorts, presence of ballot issues, variation in opportunity to vote…..
The best indicator for me is the results of recent elections, and they tend to point towards a more motivated Democratic vote.
Hence my belief that Harris/Walz will win what they won last time + NC + Another. A very resounding win.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week
I have watched the other three on Trevor Phillips (Sky) and frankly they underwhelm and Jenrick is no better
I have little confidence any of them are the answer for the conservative party but then there are 5 years of labour ahead no matter what happens with Starmer and his love for freebies and cronyism
Jenrick has run, by far, the most energetic and impactful campaign but (1) I don't like him and detest his ethics and (2) he has some very simple policy answers to complex issues, which won't work.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week
I have watched the other three on Trevor Phillips (Sky) and frankly they underwhelm and Jenrick is no better
I have little confidence any of them are the answer for the conservative party but then there are 5 years of labour ahead no matter what happens with Starmer and his love for freebies and cronyism
Any of them showing much sign of being able to make it five years, rather than nine?
Battered, discredited government beats implausible opposition. See 2005.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
He’s not wrong on either. Low wage migrants coming here often bring economically inactive dependents too.
His interview seemed quite assured but he was not really tested.
Apparently he painted over a mural once. It was not mentioned.
He is not saying anything remotely new. But he has been part of the Tory set up that has failed on these things. Can he describe how he, after all these years, can succeed?
It would end like parking offences on non private land (local authority and other statutory bodies) civil enforcement. So FPN’s rather than magistrates court or SJP for offenders. A few would end up in the courts but far fewer.
So many unknowns about the US election. Motivation within the core voting blocs, likelihood to vote of age cohorts, presence of ballot issues, variation in opportunity to vote…..
The best indicator for me is the results of recent elections, and they tend to point towards a more motivated Democratic vote.
Hence my belief that Harris/Walz will win what they won last time + NC + Another. A very resounding win.
On current polls I expect Trump to pick up Arizona and Georgia from the Biden 2020 states and maybe Wisconsin too. The election will come down to PA and NC
@implausibleblog Kemi Badenoch, "People didn't understand what we stood for"
Trevor Philips, "The public knew exactly what you stood for.. Parties under Boris Johnson.. Market chaos under Liz Truss.. Record immigration figures under Rishi Sunak.. The public knew what you were about and that's why they didn't vote for you"
So many unknowns about the US election. Motivation within the core voting blocs, likelihood to vote of age cohorts, presence of ballot issues, variation in opportunity to vote…..
The best indicator for me is the results of recent elections, and they tend to point towards a more motivated Democratic vote.
Hence my belief that Harris/Walz will win what they won last time + NC + Another. A very resounding win.
On current polls I expect Trump to pick up Arizona and Georgia from the Biden 2020 states and maybe Wisconsin too. The election will come down to PA and NC
That’s because you’re taking the polls at face value. I’m not.
Non-payers won't be sent to prison. Which, bluntly, makes sense with the prison capacity situation we currently have.
As for the "abolish the licence fee" thing, most of the alternatives look worse.
Non payers are never imprisoned for non payment of the license fee but for non payment of the fine.
It we be like parking when that was decriminalised.
As for the license fee. The alternatives look fine. The license fee made sense in the days of three or four channels. Now funding the BBC via a license fee does not. The license fee will go. It is when not if.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
@implausibleblog Kemi Badenoch, "People didn't understand what we stood for"
Trevor Philips, "The public knew exactly what you stood for.. Parties under Boris Johnson.. Market chaos under Liz Truss.. Record immigration figures under Rishi Sunak.. The public knew what you were about and that's why they didn't vote for you"
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Once decriminalized, it will provoke a massive and immediate funding crisis at the BBC.
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
He’s not wrong on either. Low wage migrants coming here often bring economically inactive dependents too.
His interview seemed quite assured but he was not really tested.
Apparently he painted over a mural once. It was not mentioned.
He is not saying anything remotely new. But he has been part of the Tory set up that has failed on these things. Can he describe how he, after all these years, can succeed?
I would imagine he’s got some tough words for whoever was the Home Office minister with responsibility for controlling migration under the last government?
It would end like parking offences on non private land (local authority and other statutory bodies) civil enforcement. So FPN’s rather than magistrates court or SJP for offenders. A few would end up in the courts but far fewer.
There are many circumstances in which if I owe money that has not yet been paid all that is incurred is a civil debt, which can only be recovered by an action through the civil courts. No criminal or quasi criminal involvement at all. Ask any small business person. The BBC would be better placed - it has its own mighty legal department - than the local small business to use this system. The local small business has no choice. And he has to keep his customers happy.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Just fund the BBC largely by adverts for Eastenders, Strictly etc and otherwise have some government subsidy for high culture and arts and serious current affairs programmes and major sport spread amongst all broadcasters (whether the latter from a TV licence or tax)
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Great, you pay for it then.
I rarely watch BBC TV and never listen to BBC radio now radio 2 decided it no longer wants to cater to my generation.
I don’t see why I should have to fund it, and more and more people feel the same and are cancelling their license fee.
Good.
It was the only sensible thing Nadine Dorries was suggesting in office.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Even when Labour do something good, they do it for a crap reason. Are crimes only crimes if men do them?
@implausibleblog Kemi Badenoch, "People didn't understand what we stood for"
Trevor Philips, "The public knew exactly what you stood for.. Parties under Boris Johnson.. Market chaos under Liz Truss.. Record immigration figures under Rishi Sunak.. The public knew what you were about and that's why they didn't vote for you"
In a Badenoch leadership, we might hear that a lot. It's not a good look.
Of the four hopeless candidates there is little doubt that Kemi is the one with the potential to generate disruption and be the cause of PB posts and other mayhem. There is a character lurking there with a generalised potential for unpredictability. Not wholly unlike Truss and Boris. They both did fine and the country is very proud of them so she ought to win.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
There are two sides to parking. Parking offences on the grounds of statutory bodies like councils and railways. Enforced by Penalty Charges. This is fine.
The Wild West is Private Parking with its Parking Charge Notices designed to look like the council Penalty Charges enforced by private companies who send scary letters out to people extorting money from them. These would operate on supermarkets, shopping centres, hotels and other private land.
So many unknowns about the US election. Motivation within the core voting blocs, likelihood to vote of age cohorts, presence of ballot issues, variation in opportunity to vote…..
The best indicator for me is the results of recent elections, and they tend to point towards a more motivated Democratic vote.
Hence my belief that Harris/Walz will win what they won last time + NC + Another. A very resounding win.
Yes, recent polling versus actual results have shown the Democrats to do far better. Plus, abortion referenda show the polling to be way off the actual right-to-choose votes.
Plus, there are some truly divisive Republican Senators seeking re-election/standing as candidates in Florida, Arizona, Ohio and Texas. I am expecting some serious down-ballot harm from their standing. And up-ballot benefits to Harris.
Jenrick on Kuenssberg now ahead of the Tory conference this week, already saying too many low wage immigrants coming to the UK. While also saying he wants to help those on welfare into the 'dignity and security of work'
He’s not wrong on either. Low wage migrants coming here often bring economically inactive dependents too.
His interview seemed quite assured but he was not really tested.
Apparently he painted over a mural once. It was not mentioned.
He is not saying anything remotely new. But he has been part of the Tory set up that has failed on these things. Can he describe how he, after all these years, can succeed?
You’re right and this really was skirted around. As I said he was not really tested. She should have gone more on this.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
That’s three of the four main forward ammo dumps hit in the last fortnight, will be months of ammunition in each of them, now all cooked off and usuless to the Russians.
It would end like parking offences on non private land (local authority and other statutory bodies) civil enforcement. So FPN’s rather than magistrates court or SJP for offenders. A few would end up in the courts but far fewer.
There are many circumstances in which if I owe money that has not yet been paid all that is incurred is a civil debt, which can only be recovered by an action through the civil courts. No criminal or quasi criminal involvement at all. Ask any small business person. The BBC would be better placed - it has its own mighty legal department - than the local small business to use this system. The local small business has no choice. And he has to keep his customers happy.
Even when they do they don’t always get paid.
I follow a Facebook group for tradesmen about nightmare customers. The sort of person who wants someone to come and paint a three bed house for 500 quid.
A fascinating thread, illustrating your point, is for tradesmen working for letting agents, and many won’t again, and how they either never get their money or are made to wait. In one case 300 days. Often sole traders who need the money to live.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Even when Labour do something good, they do it for a crap reason. Are crimes only crimes if men do them?
True, but it does make it harder for the BBC to oppose it if it’s dressed up as a ‘progressive’ measure.
Boris has done a book in which he compares himself to King Canute, also spelt Cnut.
Boris Johnson is well known for his expertise in forensic viral genetics.
That and trying to upstage the Tory party Conference.
The funny thing is, re the Telegraph headline, that lockdowns were sold as protecting the NHS, not as eliminating Covid. I can only imagine it is a clever ploy to make us buy the book in order to see if Boris really has misunderstood his own policy.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Just fund the BBC largely by adverts for Eastenders, Strictly etc and otherwise have some government subsidy for high culture and arts and serious current affairs programmes and major sport spread amongst all broadcasters (whether the latter from a TV licence or tax)
If a concerted push was made on the rights for various programs, turn the license fee into encryption. Sell worldwide.
No, the partial and chopped down existing versions of this are not enough.
I reckon that enough money could be made selling BBC full content, around the world, to more than fund it.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
They did in some Remain Home counties seats the Tories lost to the LDs and seats like Kensington and Chelsea and Fulham the Tories lost to Labour which only stayed Tory in 2019 to keep Corbyn out but abandoned the Tories as soon as Starmer replaced Corbyn
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
weren't you also hearing loud and clear that the tories were gonna hold the seat you were working in?
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Last year the average Brit watched about 46 minutes of BBC content a day (inc catchup), down from about 70 minutes in 2016. Once that gets below below a certain level - perhaps 20 or 10 minutes a day - forced funding of the BBC as we know it really does look unviable.
If she had such massive issues with Starmer and his leadership, his stance on trans rights, why on Earth did she stand under the Labour banner months ago for re-election?
She should do the honourable thing and have a by-election immediately.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Just fund the BBC largely by adverts for Eastenders, Strictly etc and otherwise have some government subsidy for high culture and arts and serious current affairs programmes and major sport spread amongst all broadcasters (whether the latter from a TV licence or tax)
If a concerted push was made on the rights for various programs, turn the license fee into encryption. Sell worldwide.
No, the partial and chopped down existing versions of this are not enough.
I reckon that enough money could be made selling BBC full content, around the world, to more than fund it.
Which would give real independence for the BBC.
The BBC already sells its programmes worldwide, either as the finished article or as licensed formats. Some are already co-productions with foreign broadcasters, such as Dr Who. However, some of the rights to what we think of as BBC programmes are held by independent production companies. Conversely, the BBC pays for formats too, such as The Apprentice, once the major income source for its executive producer, one DJ Trump.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Last year the average Brit watched about 46 minutes of BBC content a day (inc catchup), down from about 70 minutes in 2016. Once that gets below below a certain level - perhaps 20 or 10 minutes a day - forced funding of it really does look unviable.
Many countries have television licences. They are not unique to Britain or the BBC.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Once decriminalized, it will provoke a massive and immediate funding crisis at the BBC.
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
Will it though? Are you or I going to stop paying our licence fee because it’s now a civil offence, any more than we just park randomly on double yellow lines?
I assume non payment will rise a bit, but I’m not convinced there are hordes of budding licence fee refuseniks who were just waiting for this moment.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
weren't you also hearing loud and clear that the tories were gonna hold the seat you were working in?
I don't think he claimed that this time, indeed kept pretty quiet about his canvassing.
Non-payers won't be sent to prison. Which, bluntly, makes sense with the prison capacity situation we currently have.
As for the "abolish the licence fee" thing, most of the alternatives look worse.
Worse in what way? I don't watch live broadcast TV, so don't pay a licence fee. The only way it could be worse for me is if it was added to tax in some way.
If she had such massive issues with Starmer and his leadership, his stance on trans rights, why on Earth did she stand under the Labour banner months ago for re-election?
She should do the honourable thing and have a by-election immediately.
North Carolina is the fulcrum of the flooding. Pretty devastating. I hope Biden’s administration has some good federal support on the way.
As Michael Moore showed, Americans often do not recognise Federal assistance as such. Those soldiers and Army engineers fixing stuff? Nothing to do with the government!
Both Jenrick and Badenoch quite good on Laura. Jenrick quite shouty as if he is speaking at a rally. Badenoch sounded more argumentative. Wonder if she is going down a cultural alley but might go down well with the party faithful. Who knows?
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Once decriminalized, it will provoke a massive and immediate funding crisis at the BBC.
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
Just fund it from taxation. Would save a few million in license fee admin and enforcement. And would be a progressive move.
You could then have your debate about its purpose. But separate the two arguments, one of which seems deliberately designed to make the national broadcaster unpopular.
North Carolina is the fulcrum of the flooding. Pretty devastating. I hope Biden’s administration has some good federal support on the way.
As Michael Moore showed, Americans often do not recognise Federal assistance as such. Those soldiers and Army engineers fixing stuff? Nothing to do with the government!
If there’s no federal assistance though, I imagine they might be quite quick to blame the government.
When you are a public service broadcaster, then being funded by the public is not such a bad idea. A bit like that way we fund schools and hospitals, extorting all that cash out of the people who never use them.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
Last year the average Brit watched about 46 minutes of BBC content a day (inc catchup), down from about 70 minutes in 2016. Once that gets below below a certain level - perhaps 20 or 10 minutes a day - forced funding of it really does look unviable.
Many countries have television licences. They are not unique to Britain or the BBC.
If few end up watching it then it’s just overpaid make-work for people who couldn’t hack it in the regular market.
"It’s also notable how deep the negativity is. A majority of pretty much every key social and political group has a negative opinion of the Tories, including 55% of over 65s and 56% of Leave voters, who would have been viewed as dependable Conservative voters just a few years ago. The sole exception are Conservative voters themselves, but even then, one in six (17%) have an unfavourable view of a party they voted for just three months ago.
Returning to power will require changing the minds of some of those who voted for other parties, only a small minority of whom are amenable to the Conservatives at the moment. Only a quarter of Reform UK voters (26%), one in nine Lib Dems (11%) and just 4% of Labour voters currently say they see the Tories positively."
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
So the question for all of us in this parliament is whether we'll be let out of prism early or not...
It would end like parking offences on non private land (local authority and other statutory bodies) civil enforcement. So FPN’s rather than magistrates court or SJP for offenders. A few would end up in the courts but far fewer.
There are many circumstances in which if I owe money that has not yet been paid all that is incurred is a civil debt, which can only be recovered by an action through the civil courts. No criminal or quasi criminal involvement at all. Ask any small business person. The BBC would be better placed - it has its own mighty legal department - than the local small business to use this system. The local small business has no choice. And he has to keep his customers happy.
Even when they do they don’t always get paid.
I follow a Facebook group for tradesmen about nightmare customers. The sort of person who wants someone to come and paint a three bed house for 500 quid.
A fascinating thread, illustrating your point, is for tradesmen working for letting agents, and many won’t again, and how they either never get their money or are made to wait. In one case 300 days. Often sole traders who need the money to live.
A construction contract (which a contract such as this with a letting agent as a contractor would likely be) has an implied statutory right to adjudicate with a decision in 28 days which the courts readily and quickly enforce.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Once decriminalized, it will provoke a massive and immediate funding crisis at the BBC.
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
Will it though? Are you or I going to stop paying our licence fee because it’s now a civil offence, any more than we just park randomly on double yellow lines?
I assume non payment will rise a bit, but I’m not convinced there are hordes of budding licence fee refuseniks who were just waiting for this moment.
I am delighted to let PB know that the dawn raid on my flat by TV Licensing SEAL team twat did not happen last week, despite six letters warning us about it.
We're moving again in January; Tora Bora (as we now call it) just doesn't feel safe anymore.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
weren't you also hearing loud and clear that the tories were gonna hold the seat you were working in?
If she had such massive issues with Starmer and his leadership, his stance on trans rights, why on Earth did she stand under the Labour banner months ago for re-election?
She should do the honourable thing and have a by-election immediately.
She probably should call a by-election if she wants to damage Starmer. She would probably win - she’s reasonably well known and popular notwithstanding her interesting views on trans.
She’s the local MP for my vineyard and a number of others so at a stroke Labour’s vineyard count goes down catastrophically. Most British viticulture is in the hands of Lib Dems. It’s the first vineyard gains for independent.
From a quick eyeball Labour is losing mine plus Simpsons, Heppington, Chartham, Barnsole, Gorsley, and Tadpole, and several hundred hectares of Nyetimber vineyards plus a vast new planting on the Chartham downs that’s as yet unmarked.
Finally something positive from the new government.
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
Once decriminalized, it will provoke a massive and immediate funding crisis at the BBC.
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
It will be your credit rating going west for non-payment rather than a Court Appearance.
Looking at Rosie Duffield's constituency, there is an odd thing about Kent cathedral city seats (Canterbury and Rochester). The LDs are nowhere in either seat (8% and 4.4% respectively). Go along the road to Chichester and, following a 31 point swing the LDs got 49% ofthe vote.
Canterbury is full of Corbyn voting students, Rochester was 64% Leave but Chichester just 50.9% Leave. That explains why the left vote goes Labour not LD in the former and the LDs do much better in Chichester than Rochester
Hilarious that years on you still see everything through the prism of a leave/remain snapshot. Which was itself just a function of demographics.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
The last GE was very much still through a leave/remain prism.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
The last election was almost entirely an anti-Tory prism.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
weren't you also hearing loud and clear that the tories were gonna hold the seat you were working in?
I don't think he claimed that this time, indeed kept pretty quiet about his canvassing.
If she had such massive issues with Starmer and his leadership, his stance on trans rights, why on Earth did she stand under the Labour banner months ago for re-election?
She should do the honourable thing and have a by-election immediately.
She probably should call a by-election if she wants to damage Starmer. She would probably win - she’s reasonably well known and popular notwithstanding her interesting views on trans.
She’s the local MP for my vineyard and a number of others so at a stroke Labour’s vineyard count goes down catastrophically. Most British viticulture is in the hands of Lib Dems. It’s the first vineyard gains for independent.
From a quick eyeball Labour is losing mine plus Simpsons, Heppington, Chartham, Barnsole, Gorsley, and Tadpole, and several hundred hectares of Nyetimber vineyards plus a vast new planting on the Chartham downs that’s as yet unmarked.
Comments
Unlike City and Arsenal.
No. Shit. Sherlock.
How the Tories may deal with two massive elections at the same time and a budget
https://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2024/08/15/how-the-tories-may-deal-with-two-massive-elections-at-the-same-time-and-a-budget/
It is in effect a campaign contribution, which given their legal structure, is not permitted.
Someone last thread suggested Duffield could pull a Dick Taverne. I was surprised to discover that Taverne is still alive at 95. He sits as a LibDem peer. He famously retained his seat after being deselected by his local Labour Party for his pro-EEC views. He resigned from Parliament and won the subsequent by-election, and retained his seat at the next general election. That was the Feb 1974 election, but he then narrowly lost the seat in the Oct election.
He joined the SDP when the party was founded. He stood as the SDP candidate in the 1982 Peckham by-election and came a respectable second. He came third in Dulwich in the 1983 general election. In 1996, he was made a LibDem life peer. He last stood for election aged 78 in the 2006 local elections.
Presidential Polling Leads:
Nevada: Harris +3
North Carolina: Harris +2
Georgia: Trump +1
Arizona: Trump +1
Wisconsin: Trump +2
Pennsylvania: Trump +3
Michigan: Trump +3
- AtlasIntel -
https://x.com/USA_Polling/status/1840194530097647836
Earlier this year, the polling aggregator 538 dropped Rasmussen Reports from its averages and forecasts, saying that the firm couldn’t meet 538’s standards for objectivity and methodology. This drew a major backlash from right-wing media, especially after Rasmussen published a letter from 538 asking the polling firm questions about its procedures and biases.
"White House Watch - Rasmussen Reports®" https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/elections/election_2020/white_house_watch_nov02
Mr. HYUFD, but was Rasmussen deemed objective/neutral back in 2020?
The fact Atlas have Harris ahead in North Carolina also suggests they aren't Trump biased by default even if they have Trump doing better in the rustbelt than most other pollsters
https://www.natesilver.net/p/polling-averages-shouldnt-be-political
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-thuringia-lawmakers-pick-cdu-speaker-rejecting-afd/a-70352586
Are they a) reading pb.com and b) consequently trolling somebody here?
https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/elections/election_2020/pennsylvania_biden_49_trump_45
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_United_States_presidential_election_in_Pennsylvania#:~:text=Pennsylvania had 20 electoral votes in the Electoral College.&text=Although Trump had won the,a similarly narrow 1.17% margin.
I picked that up when I was doing a comparison with Mansfield and Chesterfield with southern places with high profiles, which are both around 75k and just have University branches.
Apparently doing it for ‘women’
Next step abolish the license fee and let the BBC raise its own funds rather than extorting it from the public.
https://x.com/paullewismoney/status/1840265644652003486?s=61
Emphasises his working class parents and small town, Midlands values
I have little confidence any of them are the answer for the conservative party but then there are 5 years of labour ahead no matter what happens with Starmer and his love for freebies and cronyism
His interview seemed quite assured but he was not really tested.
Apparently he painted over a mural once. It was not mentioned.
Just go direct to the demographics. They are more up to date.
https://x.com/osinttechnical/status/1840245821561856230
That’s three of the four main forward ammo dumps hit in the last fortnight, will be months of ammunition in each of them, now all cooked off and usuless to the Russians.
Your last sentence is spot on
Yes the prosecutions for licence fee evasion are disproportionally single mothers, who end up with a criminal record that has to be disclosed to potential employers.
However, let’s see what they replace it with, we don’t want the parking enforcement crowd to be set after people for TV licences either.
As for the "abolish the licence fee" thing, most of the alternatives look worse.
So many unknowns about the US election. Motivation within the core voting blocs, likelihood to vote of age cohorts, presence of ballot issues, variation in opportunity to vote…..
The best indicator for me is the results of recent elections, and they tend to point towards a more motivated Democratic vote.
Hence my belief that Harris/Walz will win what they won last time + NC + Another. A very resounding win.
There are reasons why the taxpayer isn't on the line for BBC funding - some good, some less so - and so some other way of 'extorting' the public has been found.
Once you are a subscription model, you are owned politically by those who choose to subscribe. (Nothing wrong with that - Speccie, NS, Economist all use that model). But that isn't right for 'public service broadcasting.
I almost never watch telly but have a licence, but BBC Radio/Sounds (R4, R3, World Service, R5, News) is worth way more than I pay.
He'll still probably win though.
Battered, discredited government beats implausible opposition. See 2005.
Kemi Badenoch, "People didn't understand what we stood for"
Trevor Philips, "The public knew exactly what you stood for.. Parties under Boris Johnson.. Market chaos under Liz Truss.. Record immigration figures under Rishi Sunak.. The public knew what you were about and that's why they didn't vote for you"
Kemi Badenoch, "I disagree"
https://x.com/implausibleblog/status/1840298871685087591
It we be like parking when that was decriminalised.
As for the license fee. The alternatives look fine. The license fee made sense in the days of three or four channels. Now funding the BBC via a license fee does not. The license fee will go. It is when not if.
47% of Remainers voted Labour but just 19% of Leavers voted Labour.
37% of Leavers voted Tory but just 16% of Remainers.
17% of Remainers voted LD but just 7% of Leavers.
28% of Leavers voted Reform but just 3% of Remainers.
https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/49978-how-britain-voted-in-the-2024-general-election
Unless Tugendhat becomes Tory leader (who could pick up some Remainers from the LDs and Labour even if he loses a few more Leavers to Reform) I doubt that changes much
Journos better start asking Starmer what his position is on bailing out the BBC.
I rarely watch BBC TV and never listen to BBC radio now radio 2 decided it no longer wants to cater to my generation.
I don’t see why I should have to fund it, and more and more people feel the same and are cancelling their license fee.
Good.
It was the only sensible thing Nadine Dorries was suggesting in office.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13901757/Boris-johnson-covid-chinese-lab-memoir-wuhan-botched-experiment.html
Boris Johnson: I am no longer sure ‘medieval’ lockdowns beat Covid
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/09/28/boris-johnson-medieval-lockdowns-covid/ (£££)
Boris has done a book in which he compares himself to King Canute, also spelt Cnut.
Thanks for sharing.
The Wild West is Private Parking with its Parking Charge Notices designed to look like the council Penalty Charges enforced by private companies who send scary letters out to people extorting money from them. These would operate on supermarkets, shopping centres, hotels and other private land.
Plus, there are some truly divisive Republican Senators seeking re-election/standing as candidates in Florida, Arizona, Ohio and Texas. I am expecting some serious down-ballot harm from their standing. And up-ballot benefits to Harris.
That and trying to upstage the Tory party Conference.
The votes the Government lost due to Brexit had already been lost in 2017/2019.
I didn't hear one voter on the doorstep changing their vote due to Brexit.
I follow a Facebook group for tradesmen about nightmare customers. The sort of person who wants someone to come and paint a three bed house for 500 quid.
A fascinating thread, illustrating your point, is for tradesmen working for letting agents, and many won’t again, and how they either never get their money or are made to wait. In one case 300 days. Often sole traders who need the money to live.
What beat covid was herd immunity from everyone catching it, preferably after being vaccinated first.
Lockdowns were a way of buying time for vaccines to be developed and produced.
No, the partial and chopped down existing versions of this are not enough.
I reckon that enough money could be made selling BBC full content, around the world, to more than fund it.
Which would give real independence for the BBC.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/live-blog/rcna173120
North Carolina is the fulcrum of the flooding. Pretty devastating. I hope Biden’s administration has some good federal support on the way.
If she had such massive issues with Starmer and his leadership, his stance on trans rights, why on Earth did she stand under the Labour banner months ago for re-election?
She should do the honourable thing and have a by-election immediately.
I assume non payment will rise a bit, but I’m not convinced there are hordes of budding licence fee refuseniks who were just waiting for this moment.
You could then have your debate about its purpose. But separate the two arguments, one of which seems deliberately designed to make the national broadcaster unpopular.
Roseanne Barr: They eat babies. It’s true.
Tucker Carlson: so it's not just the dogs and cats?
Barr: Everybody thinks I’m crazy. I’m not crazy. They love the taste of human flesh & they drink human blood
Tucker: I think you have some authority on this
https://x.com/RpsAgainstTrump/status/1840035865852100959
https://bsky.app/profile/yougov.bsky.social/post/3l5bqtmnfza2y
"It’s also notable how deep the negativity is. A majority of pretty much every key social and political group has a negative opinion of the Tories, including 55% of over 65s and 56% of Leave voters, who would have been viewed as dependable Conservative voters just a few years ago. The sole exception are Conservative voters themselves, but even then, one in six (17%) have an unfavourable view of a party they voted for just three months ago.
Returning to power will require changing the minds of some of those who voted for other parties, only a small minority of whom are amenable to the Conservatives at the moment. Only a quarter of Reform UK voters (26%), one in nine Lib Dems (11%) and just 4% of Labour voters currently say they see the Tories positively."
We're moving again in January; Tora Bora (as we now call it) just doesn't feel safe anymore.
She’s the local MP for my vineyard and a number of others so at a stroke Labour’s vineyard count goes down catastrophically. Most British viticulture is in the hands of Lib Dems. It’s the first vineyard gains for independent.
From a quick eyeball Labour is losing mine plus Simpsons, Heppington, Chartham, Barnsole, Gorsley, and Tadpole, and several hundred hectares of Nyetimber vineyards plus a vast new planting on the Chartham downs that’s as yet unmarked.
Which is more painful?