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Will Reform have at least 10 MPs when the next election is called? – politicalbetting.com

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  • StereodogStereodog Posts: 848
    scampi25 said:

    isam said:

    NEW: Wes Streeting says that Labour politicians who used to argue “trans women are women” should have the “humility” to admit they were not right.

    In what some may interpret as implied criticism of Keir Starmer, he tells @BenKentish: "Given some of the rough discourse we’ve had on these issues in recent years, I don’t think we lose anything by having a bit of humility to say, ‘Actually, I wish we’d listened.’"


    https://x.com/pippacrerar/status/1915438046079570295?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    Oh. I wonder who he can mean...
    Politicians who use the Supreme Court verdict to row back on a previous commitment to the concept that trans women are women are beneath contempt. If you supported that position then the honest reaction is to seek a change in the law to reflect what you thought the position was in the first place.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,236

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    Yes, if you understand them.
    I'm not going to descend to the gutter. If I'm wrong show me why I'm wrong with evidence. As Foxy correctly said, according to this poll Labour are losing twice as many supporters to their left (Green and Lib Dems) than they are to their right (Con and Reform). We all know that the real election isn't for at least 3 years and more likely 4 and you might be right that the left side will decide to hold their nose, but it's a very dangerous assumption for the Labour leadership to take, it's the assumption the Tories made in 2024 and it bit them in the arse.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867

    JD Vance visits the Vatican, the Pope dies.

    JD Vance visits India, the whole subcontinent is on the verge of war.

    Remember when we used to think Gordon Broon had the reverse midas-touch?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    Roger said:

    Perhaps a strange thing. On the 6.00 News Trump said he's had some very constructive meetings with the Chinese. The Chinese said they'd had no discussions at all with Trump or the Americans and neither did they have any plans to do so.

    Are most Americans aware that their President is a congenital liar and do they mind?

    Yes, and No.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287
    Nigelb said:

    MaxPB said:

    Can anyone explain to me why Russia would want peace if the US position is that they'll walk away from the whole thing and stop supporting Ukraine if talks fall through. Wouldn't Putin just stall and sabotage peace talks until America walks away. Indeed that's what's happening now.

    Trump is such an absolute tool. We really need to get moving with independent European military support for Ukraine and defending our own borders.

    There's a good article on how we might do that, here:

    How Europe Can Deter Russia
    https://www.foreignaffairs.com/north-america/how-europe-can-deter-russia

    I approve of the argument that stationing large numbers of troops in Ukraine is probably an inefficient way of achieving the objective. While it would have the benefit of symbolism, and actual skin in the game, it wouldn't provide much in the way of military force that Ukraine doesn't already have.

    This is a far more practical idea, though the last bit is critical:

    ..So what should Europe do, not only to deter future Russian threats to Ukraine but also to improve its ability to deter Russian aggression in the continent’s east and southeast? The answer is simple—Europe must organize what military planners call a “mass of maneuver” that can quickly deploy where it is needed. Europe cannot know in advance whether a refreshed Russia would renew attacks on Ukraine, move forward into Belarus, threaten Poland, or snarl at the Baltics. As a result, its officials must consolidate meaningful combat power that can intervene quickly wherever and whenever needed. That means they must stop distributing European military forces over the continent’s east and southeast simply as symbols of their commitment, linked to a U.S. cavalry that may no longer ride to the rescue. Rather, they must conceive of European military formations as scarce, expensive, and potentially lethal combat power, which can be deployed as a concentrated fist with the ability to fight independently, under either a NATO or an EU banner.

    Contrary to what is widely believed, Europeans have most of the military wherewithal needed to create such a force. The question is whether they have the will...
    Not so much a REFORGER, more an EFORGER so to speak
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    edited April 24
    Foxy said:

    Nigelb said:

    Fox News (Beacon/Shaw) poll

    President Trump approval
    Disapprove 55% (+4)
    Approve 44% (-5)

    4/18-4/21 RV

    https://x.com/PollTracker2024/status/1915172332579995743

    DJT fans, please explain.

    Lower than any POTUS at 100 days, even including Trump 2016.
    And yet still inexplicably high.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    I can’t see all the Newcastle seats going Reform. There is a lot of metropolitan liberal elite here.

    I think if Reform look likely to win and Labour has a new leader some of their vote will regroup.

    Burnham probably then Labour's last hope
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350

    viewcode said:

    Trigger warning:

    The HyNet CCS Cluster achieved Final Investment Decision today.

    Congratulations to ENI.

    It does sound rather Skynet. Should I pack canned food and shotguns?
    "I need your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle."
    I know I said that the government isn't taking in enough revenue to fund the spending we seem to collectively want, but that's a bit drastic as a draft of the next Budget speech.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    edited April 24

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    My guess is that Reform will get 1-3 defectors and will win 3-5 byelections in the next four and a half years. Which would - I would note - only be a fifth of the likely number of byelections. And they're likely to win Runcorn, for a start. (Albeit, they have managed to carelessly misplace one of their MPs already. So we shouldn't discount the possibility that someone else ends up departing Reform.)
    Perhaps but still even then not 10
  • scampi25scampi25 Posts: 99
    Stereodog said:

    scampi25 said:

    isam said:

    NEW: Wes Streeting says that Labour politicians who used to argue “trans women are women” should have the “humility” to admit they were not right.

    In what some may interpret as implied criticism of Keir Starmer, he tells @BenKentish: "Given some of the rough discourse we’ve had on these issues in recent years, I don’t think we lose anything by having a bit of humility to say, ‘Actually, I wish we’d listened.’"


    https://x.com/pippacrerar/status/1915438046079570295?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    Oh. I wonder who he can mean...
    Politicians who use the Supreme Court verdict to row back on a previous commitment to the concept that trans women are women are beneath contempt. If you supported that position then the honest reaction is to seek a change in the law to reflect what you thought the position was in the first place.
    Your logic and morality is spot on. Of course it was also a very stupid position to hold in the first place.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488
    Rachel Reeves going on Newsmax is interesting decision.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    Low-stakes locals, though.

    As for Labour voters going Lib Dem, it depends which voters where. If it's marginally Labour suburbia, it's a problem. If it's the former Blue Wall (mid Cambs, say) or the next layer (East Hampshire, for example), it doesn't really hurt Labour and it's awfully bad news for the Conservatives.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,659
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Freedom of Nuttery?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815
    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    My guess is that Reform will get 1-3 defectors and will win 3-5 byelections in the next four and a half years. Which would - I would note - only be a fifth of the likely number of byelections. And they're likely to win Runcorn, for a start. (Albeit, they have managed to carelessly misplace one of their MPs already. So we shouldn't discount the possibility that someone else ends up departing Reform.)
    Perhaps but still even then not 10
    ... but when added to the four they ha ve already...?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,171
    edited April 24
    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light

    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)
  • CollegeCollege Posts: 98
    edited April 24
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now, the pollster that keeps showing big leads for Reform?

    PS What are FON doing differently from other pollsters?
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    edited April 24
    Cookie said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
    The LDs are trying to hold off from attracting voters anyway. They've had popularity in the past and it hasn't really worked out.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    For the love of god. Trump, when asked about what concessions so far that he has asked of Russia in these "peace" discussions, says that Russia has had to give up on taking the whole country.

    "Pretty big concession"

    He's forgiving of friends.

    He genuinely thinks Ukraine being permitted to keep any territory is a concession, even with no additional guarantees.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,815

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    Yes, if you understand them.
    I'm not going to descend to the gutter.
    As an aside, I do like that expression, since some of us may start out in the gutter so can defend not 'descending' to it.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    College said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now, the pollster that keeps showing big leads for Reform?
    Thanks. I'd not have guessed. (Really)
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350
    edited April 24
    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488

    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
    I seemed to remember we did this previously about Telegraph readership and their move to digital has actually been a quiet success. Now if the quality of what they write is any good is a different matter.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384
    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    My guess is that Reform will get 1-3 defectors and will win 3-5 byelections in the next four and a half years. Which would - I would note - only be a fifth of the likely number of byelections. And they're likely to win Runcorn, for a start. (Albeit, they have managed to carelessly misplace one of their MPs already. So we shouldn't discount the possibility that someone else ends up departing Reform.)
    Perhaps but still even then not 10
    Errr:

    In that scenario Reform would have 10 MPs by the time of the next General Election.

    4 now
    +
    2 defectors
    +
    4 by-elections
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,518
    Leon said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Leon said:

    I tell you. It’s migration migration migration. You can all squeal as much as you like, but this is becoming the overwhelming issue for a lot of people - because so much hinges on it, from crime to public services to the crashing NHS to housing to our tired scary towns to the billions we spunk on asylum hotels


    Labour have no clue how to sort this, and even if they did they wouldn’t do it, because woke. The Tories are absolutely not trusted, because of the Boriswave

    As things stand Farage will be PM next GE. The caveat, of course, is that this is a loooong way away

    I'm coming round to the view that people from wherever are (probably) welcome here but they go to the back of the queue behind our own homeless and ill-housed people. The outcry might stir up some fast building of social housing.
    How can this even be an issue? If you weren’t born in this country, you have less rights to social welfare and social housing. The briefer your time here, the lesser your rights, until you have almost none if you arrived yesterday

    This is basic human logic. We should also apply criminal and other tests - ie if you have a criminal record your rights to social housing are massively reduced. At the moment, AIUI, we do not do this, which is incredible

    The Tories tried to introduce a law that anyone convicted of terror-related offences should not get social housing, Starmer obstructed it as soon as he won power
    A policy of building enough council semis to increase the housing stock in every town and village by 2%, or 5%, but those only for people who could show a family connection stretching back at least fifty ** years in this country might be very popular.

    ** Fifty years would include both the Windrush generation and the Ugandan Asians.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,170

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Don’t think he really cares to be honest
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488
    edited April 24
    The export of video game controllers from the UK to Russia has been banned as they can be repurposed to pilot drones used to launch attacks on Ukraine. The European Union enforced a similar ban on video games and joysticks earlier this year.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crkx14jykn8o

    Absolute total gesturing. You think they buy them from the UK at the moment rather than via the vast selection available for peanuts from China.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,530
    kle4 said:

    For the love of god. Trump, when asked about what concessions so far that he has asked of Russia in these "peace" discussions, says that Russia has had to give up on taking the whole country.

    "Pretty big concession"

    He's forgiving of friends.

    He genuinely thinks Ukraine being permitted to keep any territory is a concession, even with no additional guarantees.
    Does he even listen to a word from the military on the situation?

    Maybe everything is now filtered through Hangoverseth?

    Russia is on the ropes. the war economy cannot continue much longer. At best it is stalemate not a ceasefire in order to stop Vlad taking the rest of the country.

  • (3/5)

    I think Labour is pursuing a very deliberate strategy and within two years I think they will be ahead in the polls.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,479
    Omnium said:

    Cookie said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
    The LDs are trying to hold off from attracting voters anyway. They've had popularity in the past and it hasn't really worked out.
    Much the same for the Conservatives.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now
    And what's their agenda? I feel I may need to know because it's 'now'.

    Is it even a thing?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
    I seemed to remember we did this previously about Telegraph readership and their move to digital has actually been a quiet success. Now if the quality of what they write is any good is a different matter.
    Charles Moore still writes well
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
    Not necessarily. I don't like either (more Rees-Mogg than Boris) and ive voted Tory before.

    I do think more Tory and potential Tory voters like both more than i do, but its lazy to assume everyone who dislikes them could never vote Tory.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Don’t think he really cares to be honest
    He's rich, effectively immune from any criminal sanction even after he leaves office and can bend reality for his supporters on a whim, he need not care about anything.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
    I seemed to remember we did this previously about Telegraph readership and their move to digital has actually been a quiet success. Now if the quality of what they write is any good is a different matter.
    Charles Moore still writes well
    Nonsense. Journalism is lost. Completely gone. Nobody writes well because they have no courage and no support.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867

    (3/5)

    I think Labour is pursuing a very deliberate strategy and within two years I think they will be ahead in the polls.

    It's possible but Labour's fortunes aren't really in their own hands and are tied to what happens in America and with the global economy.

    If Trump crashes America we all go down with him...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Don’t think he really cares to be honest
    Sure he does: hence his deranged posting on Truth Social about it.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now
    And what's their agenda? I feel I may need to know because it's 'now'.

    Is it even a thing?
    It’s short for FAFON. That’s what they’re hoping the electorate will try at the next GE.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240
    Cookie said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
    Voters in Greater Manchester have further choices, including the obvious one of not voting. I think we will see very low turnout there, even compared to most local elections.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Trump has managed to hit Biden's approval numbers within three months of taking office.

    Impressive.

    What a shame there was no Special Election in the New York 21st District.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488
    edited April 24
    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,170
    I am apparently voting in a referendum on a “neighbourhood plan” in May. Having looked at the documents, if I, as a politically engaged lawyer doesn’t understand what I am voting on, how is anyone else?
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,786
    edited April 24
    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,236
    Foxy said:

    Cookie said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
    Voters in Greater Manchester have further choices, including the obvious one of not voting. I think we will see very low turnout there, even compared to most local elections.
    Very low as they aren't having elections this year.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488
    edited April 24

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    'The Reform UK leader said "hundreds of people who applied to be candidates for the county council elections were rejected... often because of repeated use of words beginning with F and C on social media."...

    But Hope Not Hate, an anti-racism campaign group which has clashed with Farage in the past, said the examples it had found undermined his vetting claims.

    On Thursday last week, the group published details of social media posts it had found from 14 different current Reform UK candidates...

    The posts seen by the BBC include:

    A Reform UK candidate saying "one big nuke bomb" should be used to remove Islam from the world

    Another saying Bradford has a large Muslim population and is a "shithole"

    Others promoting the conspiracy theory that Muslims are seeking to "supplant the native population" in the UK'
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
    Not necessarily. I don't like either (more Rees-Mogg than Boris) and ive voted Tory before.

    I do think more Tory and potential Tory voters like both more than i do, but its lazy to assume everyone who dislikes them could never vote Tory.
    If they could it would only be for a Tory like Cameron or Major, such votes mostly voting LD now anyway
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,659
    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Omnium said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Come along HY - there (I would have said an ocean once ) is a veritable paddling pool of Tory MPs that'll suddenly find themselves persuaded by the Reform cause.

    If Reform seem to be there, then they'll all go over.

    I think, increasingly, that Badenoch might not be such a bad star to fight that fight.
    Unless most polls were showing FON levels for Reform they wouldn't
    (What does FON mean?)
    Find Out Now
    And what's their agenda? I feel I may need to know because it's 'now'.

    Is it even a thing?
    Goodwin's agenda.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,454

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Braverman and Patel deserve a mention
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688
    TimS said:

    nico67 said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Wtf is she on. The public by a clear majority support a youth scheme and the next election is 4 years away. We have these schemes with other countries . Labour are turning into Reform lite .
    She’s been captured by the home office blob. Institutionally incapable of looking beyond their narrow remit.
    I'm not convinced that "captured by the blob" works as an explanation as often as people suggest. She's a politician. She's responsible for her choices.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,240
    DM_Andy said:

    Foxy said:

    Cookie said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    The problem with tacking towards the Libs/Greens is that in places like Greater Manchester (outside Manchester itself) and County Durham, there aren't nearly enough of that sort of voter to overcome the Reform vote, and doing so drives up the Reform vote. From where I'm sitting, Labour's strategy, half-arsed though it is, seems the best bet.
    Voters in Greater Manchester have further choices, including the obvious one of not voting. I think we will see very low turnout there, even compared to most local elections.
    Very low as they aren't having elections this year.
    Yes, could be very low!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    rcs1000 said:

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Trump has managed to hit Biden's approval numbers within three months of taking office.

    Impressive.

    What a shame there was no Special Election in the New York 21st District.
    I'm glad but at the same time exasperated. That he'd be a catastrophe on every level was obvious when they voted. Short of him wearing a giant badge saying "Danger. Malevolent Moron" I don't know how it could have been clearer.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
    Its never going to happen. And they wouldn't need to in fairness, if people think things are under control.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    Say 'Hope Not Hate'.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    TimS said:

    nico67 said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Wtf is she on. The public by a clear majority support a youth scheme and the next election is 4 years away. We have these schemes with other countries . Labour are turning into Reform lite .
    She’s been captured by the home office blob. Institutionally incapable of looking beyond their narrow remit.
    I'm not convinced that "captured by the blob" works as an explanation as often as people suggest. She's a politician. She's responsible for her choices.
    Indeed. And whilst institutional inertia may have effect, it can also be alternative options are tougher than people think.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,488
    edited April 24
    kle4 said:

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
    Its never going to happen. And they wouldn't need to in fairness, if people think things are under control.
    TBH, we have all become so desensitized to the massive amount the UK government has been borrowing for 20 years that is all just noise, even as the amount making the interest payments eats up more and more of tax revenue.

    The issue of course will only be solved by having strong growth in the economy, but outside of the US, Western economies have been struggling for many years with trying to find a way to achieve this.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    HYUFD said:

    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
    Not necessarily. I don't like either (more Rees-Mogg than Boris) and ive voted Tory before.

    I do think more Tory and potential Tory voters like both more than i do, but its lazy to assume everyone who dislikes them could never vote Tory.
    If they could it would only be for a Tory like Cameron or Major, such votes mostly voting LD now anyway
    Possibly so. I think there are more votes for them to lean more Reformy, its just not as simple as dismissing more centrist voices as never voting Tory as many used to.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    It won't show up in the locals. They will be used as a protest vote.

    We both know that.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    edited April 24

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    It won't show up in the locals. They will be used as a protest vote.

    We both know that.
    Indeed and Electoral Calculus are forecasting Labour will come 4th winning even fewer council seats than the LDs next week.

    Kemi will get some relief the Tories will still win most councillors despite losses (though if the councils which are postponing elections to become unitaries like Essex and Norfolk had held elections then Reform would have won most seats)
    https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/blogs/ec_lepoll_20250314.html
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    HYUFD said:

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    'The Reform UK leader said "hundreds of people who applied to be candidates for the county council elections were rejected... often because of repeated use of words beginning with F and C on social media."...

    But Hope Not Hate, an anti-racism campaign group which has clashed with Farage in the past, said the examples it had found undermined his vetting claims.

    On Thursday last week, the group published details of social media posts it had found from 14 different current Reform UK candidates...

    The posts seen by the BBC include:

    A Reform UK candidate saying "one big nuke bomb" should be used to remove Islam from the world

    Another saying Bradford has a large Muslim population and is a "shithole"

    Others promoting the conspiracy theory that Muslims are seeking to "supplant the native population" in the UK'
    So....its Reform policy to nuke Bradford? Makes you think, doesn't it?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    Yes, if you understand them.
    I'm not going to descend to the gutter. If I'm wrong show me why I'm wrong with evidence. As Foxy correctly said, according to this poll Labour are losing twice as many supporters to their left (Green and Lib Dems) than they are to their right (Con and Reform). We all know that the real election isn't for at least 3 years and more likely 4 and you might be right that the left side will decide to hold their nose, but it's a very dangerous assumption for the Labour leadership to take, it's the assumption the Tories made in 2024 and it bit them in the arse.
    They were trying to fatten a pig on market day. With shitloads of baggage.

    Labour are trying to create a track record in government that's centre-left economically, centrist socially and "competent" in execution so they are well-placed to win in 4 years time.

    No, I'm not convinced yet either, but it's the right electoral strategy.
    It could still go horribly wrong for Labour, and the media, PB.com and X despise the ground they walk on. I am not convinced Farage doesn't get spanked for his Trump adjacency when Trump crashes Planet Earth. If the Tories go one nation they have a decent hope. If they go Jenrick they have the same problems as Farage, but RefCon probably still cuts the mustard.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    I found the real story there to be 'why did the BBC need "Hope Not Hate" to bring it to their attention?'.

    Are they short of 'senior' political journalists, suddenly? Or are they all to busy retweeting each other about Trump.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,171
    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
    I seemed to remember we did this previously about Telegraph readership and their move to digital has actually been a quiet success. Now if the quality of what they write is any good is a different matter.
    Charles Moore still writes well
    Did Leon use to write for the Telegraph before the Gazette waved their chequebook?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
    And then Johnson spaffed all that goodwill up the wall. Both are parodies of ghosts of Conservative Parties past.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    Yes, if you understand them.
    I'm not going to descend to the gutter. If I'm wrong show me why I'm wrong with evidence. As Foxy correctly said, according to this poll Labour are losing twice as many supporters to their left (Green and Lib Dems) than they are to their right (Con and Reform). We all know that the real election isn't for at least 3 years and more likely 4 and you might be right that the left side will decide to hold their nose, but it's a very dangerous assumption for the Labour leadership to take, it's the assumption the Tories made in 2024 and it bit them in the arse.
    They were trying to fatten a pig on market day. With shitloads of baggage.

    Labour are trying to create a track record in government that's centre-left economically, centrist socially and "competent" in execution so they are well-placed to win in 4 years time.

    No, I'm not convinced yet either, but it's the right electoral strategy.
    It could still go horribly wrong for Labour, and the media, PB.com and X despise the ground they walk on. I am not convinced Farage doesn't get spanked for his Trump adjacency when Trump crashes Planet Earth. If the Tories go one nation they have a decent hope. If they go Jenrick they have the same problems as Farage, but RefCon probably still cuts the mustard.
    Basically the winner of 2029 general election is unknowable at this point.

    It's a case of having to wait and see how things develop...
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,171

    kle4 said:

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
    Its never going to happen. And they wouldn't need to in fairness, if people think things are under control.
    TBH, we have all become so desensitized to the massive amount the UK government has been borrowing for 20 years that is all just noise, even as the amount making the interest payments eats up more and more of tax revenue.

    The issue of course will only be solved by having strong growth in the economy, but outside of the US, Western economies have been struggling for many years with trying to find a way to achieve this.
    America's success was based on investment, innovation and shale gas, and not austerity. Our stagnation, pretty much the opposite although I don't suppose we should blame George Osborne for millions of years of geology.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    edited April 24

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Johnson won the biggest Conservative majority since Thatcher and Mogg backed him to the end.

    The people who despise Mogg and Johnson are voters like you who would mostly never vote Conservative anyway
    And then Johnson spaffed all that goodwill up the wall. Both are parodies of ghosts of Conservative Parties past.
    They are very much Conservative future for at least the next decade, if Kemi loses the next general election and assuming Farage isn't PM with Kemi his deputy then Jenrick and the Rees Mogg wing of the party will almost certainly take over the party leadership. Indeed Boris was a relative liberal compared to them or even Kemi
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,564
    edited April 24

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    It won't show up in the locals. They will be used as a protest vote.

    We both know that.
    Labour are defending so few potential losses and challenging in so many possible gains, both from the poor prior position of 2021, that the protest will barely register. -100 would be a horrible night for Labour, -250 a relief for the Tories.

    I don't quite see with the rate of Reform gains in council by elections (about 10% of candidates in 2025), where the better part of 500 Reform gains will come about. I reckon 2-300 will be closer to the mark. Which suggests Labour may be close to Reform in seat count, whilst Tories may overperform predictions at least Vs Reform.

    Of course, Runcorn could well take the media attention and that is tctc if Reform overperform proportional swing with some tactical Tory votes.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566
    Pro_Rata said:

    Foxy said:

    Foxy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    But Labour are losing twice as many voters to LDs and Greens than they are to Reform. They hope that the Reform switchers will be put off while the LD and Green switchers will return.

    I don't think that the case. Their Reform-lite policies are not winning back voters but are accelerating the losses to the left. I expect this is exactly what we will see in the elections in May.

    There is a point where a highly efficient vote such as Labour 24 becomes highly inefficient like the SDP in 1983, or Reform in 2024. We may well have passed that threshold and be looking at a Labour melt down.

    I suspect you actually think the same and are cheerleeding Labour's suicide with no intention of voting for them.
    I have no intention of voting for Labour, no - my April's fool was a joke - but I genuinely think they are following the right electoral strategy for them. We've seen time and time again a clothes peg on your nose approach come election time drives votes to them when the alternative is letting in the Tories or Reform into office.

    Btw, you need to get over your contrarian need to reflexively disagree with or attempt to refute everything I say on the basis that if I said it, it must be false or I'm up to something and you must challenge it.

    I usually call it as I see it.
    Well, we will see shortly in the May elections if Labour's Reform-lite policy works and whether LD and Green voters "hold their noses".

    I don't think they will. It will be e very bad night for Labour, and very bad for the Tories too.
    It won't show up in the locals. They will be used as a protest vote.

    We both know that.
    Labour are defending so few potential losses and challenging in so many possible gains, both from the poor prior position of 2021, that the protest will barely register. -100 would be a horrible night for Labour, -250 a relief for the Tories.

    I don't quite see with the rate of Reform gains in council by elections (about 10% of candidates in 2025), where the better part of 500 Reform gains will come about. I reckon 2-300 will be closer to the mark. Which suggests Labour may be close to Reform in seat count,
    Its all tipping point theory. The gap between 200 Reform gains and 500 could be only a few percent of national equivalent vote.

    I think they'll not reach the sky high expectations but better thsn UKIP in 2013.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    isam said:

    Is John Rentoul a constant Keir critic now, or is he still considered a sensible centrist voice?

    Uh oh. £2bn on carbon capture and storage? 1/2

    https://x.com/johnrentoul/status/1915427124653044019?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    Rob Marris, Labour former MP for Wolverhampton SW, was in Commons Confidential newsletter yesterday 2/2




    https://x.com/johnrentoul/status/1915427651604369884?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    If it were only £2bn I wouldn't care.
    But it's going to be £20bn on our energy bills via another surcharge.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,629
    edited April 24
    I'm mildly amused that one of the hole-digging Reform candidates is called Howard Rimmer. He might get head hunted by Trump for his mushroom farm. A natural complement for "Howard Nutlick".

    Is another one an AI cat?

    Quote:
  • glwglw Posts: 10,366
    kle4 said:

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
    Its never going to happen. And they wouldn't need to in fairness, if people think things are under control.
    It's a laudable amibition, but there is little evidence that Labour has either a plan or the necessary nerve to deliver such growth. You only have to look at how the OBR's latest forecast has already been shredded by events and the apparent lack of Trump-proofing of the economy. Next up, the US pulls the plug on Ukraine and Europe will need to find a hell of a lot of money very quickly to build weapons at a rate not seen since WW II.

    No government would find the circumstances we are in anything other than difficult, but by God Labour are disappointingly inept. I didn't vote for them but I want them to do well, as we are all in deep trouble if they fail.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    edited April 24

    isam said:

    Is John Rentoul a constant Keir critic now, or is he still considered a sensible centrist voice?

    Uh oh. £2bn on carbon capture and storage? 1/2

    https://x.com/johnrentoul/status/1915427124653044019?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    Rob Marris, Labour former MP for Wolverhampton SW, was in Commons Confidential newsletter yesterday 2/2




    https://x.com/johnrentoul/status/1915427651604369884?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    "CCS does not work" is total bullshit.
    *doesn't work economically*

    Plus the 'storage' bit is completely unproven other than at small scale.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    "Gentlemen! You can't discuss polls in here! This is PB.com!"
    This is a cheese & rail gauge forum for cheese & rail gauge people.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,659

    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I don't see why they shouldn't have the power to do so. It's just that in many cases doing so might not be what's best for the area.
    It's not even Michael Gove's biggest blunder.

    But those thousands of people form a pretty circular Venn diagram with what's left of the Telegraph's readership, and they really don't like paying tax.
    I seemed to remember we did this previously about Telegraph readership and their move to digital has actually been a quiet success. Now if the quality of what they write is any good is a different matter.
    Charles Moore still writes well
    Did Leon use to write for the Telegraph before the Gazette waved their chequebook?
    :innocent:


  • trukattrukat Posts: 50
    Roger said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Unless there is a rush of by elections in redwall seats like Runcorn I can't see Reform getting 10 MPs.

    Even the potential Somerset NE Hainham by elections looks more likely to go to Rees Mogg than Reform (albeit ideologically he is close to Farage anyway)

    Is Mogg even standing in Hanham? That would be brave. I suspect the Labour collapse might go Green.
    Of course he would if there is a by election and would comfortably win I suspect, Farage might not even put up a candidate as Mogg is basically Reform anyway
    Other than Johnson what other Conservative politician embodies everything everyone despises about the Tories?
    Braverman and Patel deserve a mention
    From my right-wing perspective, I despise the Tories for:

    A sudden belief in the magic money tree.
    Mass migration lies.
    Rules for thee but not for me (party gate)
    Trying to change the rules to get your mate off (Owen Patterson)

    So, it's hard to look past Boris to be honest. Truss is the one that puzzles me most though. How do you believe you are some kind of economic genius and not understand the simple concept that you need to retain the confidence of the people you are borrowing money from? Clever people can be so stupid.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764

    kle4 said:

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    "In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus,"

    They are going to turn around a £150bn a year deficit in a 4 years with no austerity, all prediction of little growth for years to come and Orange Man like a bull in a china shop when it comes to effecting world trade...Brave prediction.
    Its never going to happen. And they wouldn't need to in fairness, if people think things are under control.
    TBH, we have all become so desensitized to the massive amount the UK government has been borrowing for 20 years that is all just noise, even as the amount making the interest payments eats up more and more of tax revenue.

    The issue of course will only be solved by having strong growth in the economy, but outside of the US, Western economies have been struggling for many years with trying to find a way to achieve this.
    I went to a very interesting economics presentation today.

    Total Managed Expenditure in the UK is 45% of GDP.

    Since 1997 (when the statistics started so not a pop at Blair) UK government productivity has declined by 4%

    That is a massive drag on the economy

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    GIN1138 said:

    JD Vance visits the Vatican, the Pope dies.

    JD Vance visits India, the whole subcontinent is on the verge of war.

    Remember when we used to think Gordon Broon had the reverse midas-touch?
    Regarding Gordo, I think I have solved a minor mystery.

    The strange gulping thing is possibly a result of vocal coaching.

    I've been taking a few singing lessons .. and the technique for taking a breath is ideally with an open throat as though you were vocalising 'o'.
    He's just not very good at it.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764
    DavidL said:

    HYUFD said:

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    'The Reform UK leader said "hundreds of people who applied to be candidates for the county council elections were rejected... often because of repeated use of words beginning with F and C on social media."...

    But Hope Not Hate, an anti-racism campaign group which has clashed with Farage in the past, said the examples it had found undermined his vetting claims.

    On Thursday last week, the group published details of social media posts it had found from 14 different current Reform UK candidates...

    The posts seen by the BBC include:

    A Reform UK candidate saying "one big nuke bomb" should be used to remove Islam from the world

    Another saying Bradford has a large Muslim population and is a "shithole"

    Others promoting the conspiracy theory that Muslims are seeking to "supplant the native population" in the UK'
    So....its Reform policy to nuke Bradford?
    Makes you think, doesn't it?
    You might want to pull on that thread a bit
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,079

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Don’t think he really cares to be honest
    He cares. Here is his response this afternoon to the latest Fox News sponsored poll>

  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644

    DavidL said:

    HYUFD said:

    Reform UK criticised for candidates' offensive posts

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz798wrd81jo

    In other news, the new pope with be Catholic.

    'The Reform UK leader said "hundreds of people who applied to be candidates for the county council elections were rejected... often because of repeated use of words beginning with F and C on social media."...

    But Hope Not Hate, an anti-racism campaign group which has clashed with Farage in the past, said the examples it had found undermined his vetting claims.

    On Thursday last week, the group published details of social media posts it had found from 14 different current Reform UK candidates...

    The posts seen by the BBC include:

    A Reform UK candidate saying "one big nuke bomb" should be used to remove Islam from the world

    Another saying Bradford has a large Muslim population and is a "shithole"

    Others promoting the conspiracy theory that Muslims are seeking to "supplant the native population" in the UK'
    So....its Reform policy to nuke Bradford?
    Makes you think, doesn't it?
    You might want to pull on that thread a bit
    Which reminds me - for some reason they are making a TV series of 'Threads'.

    https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/threads-film-tv-reboot-confirmed-adolescence-newsupdate/

    "As Netflix hit Adolescence continues to make waves and potentially inspire policy, the team behind it has turned its attention to a new impactful project – a Threads reboot.

    Warp Films has confirmed it will be turning the BBC's pivotal TV film into a series. For those unfamiliar, Threads aired on BBC Two in 1984 and depicted the devastating effects of a fictional nuclear apocalypse.

    Mark Herbert, founder and chief exec of Warp, said: “Threads was, and remains, an unflinchingly honest drama that imagines the devastating effects of nuclear conflict on ordinary people. This story aligns perfectly with our ethos of telling powerful, grounded narratives that deeply connect with audiences."

    Warp have a decent track record - but I'm still puzzled as to why 'reboot' Threads. A TV version of something like 'The Kraken Wakes' seems much more interesting.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867
    Nigelb said:

    GIN1138 said:

    JD Vance visits the Vatican, the Pope dies.

    JD Vance visits India, the whole subcontinent is on the verge of war.

    Remember when we used to think Gordon Broon had the reverse midas-touch?
    Regarding Gordo, I think I have solved a minor mystery.

    The strange gulping thing is possibly a result of vocal coaching.

    I've been taking a few singing lessons .. and the technique for taking a breath is ideally with an open throat as though you were vocalising 'o'.
    He's just not very good at it.
    Oooo.. will we be seeing you auditioning for the next season of The Voice?

    And that does make sense. Didn't he have a stutter when he was younger as well?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,629
    On a slightly more serious note, the dodgy Reform candidates to have hit the media seem to be from Doncaster, County Durham, vaguely Yorkshire-NE type of area. as far as I can see.

    That makes me wonder if there are batches from other regions on the way.

    If it's only 10 or so, I'd say the party can ride that out.

    But if there are suddenly 50-100, that will be more interesting, and more of a challenge for the credibility of the Best of Breed vetting process.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287

    (5/5)

    Reform is going to crash and burn, mark my words. They will have an increasing number of liabilities especially after May.

    In 2029 Labour will have put the budget into a surplus, will do a tax cut and ask "what would Reform and the Tories cut instead?".

    Labour has a high chance of being re-elected.

    And with that, fin.

    Fin

    Fin

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    kle4 said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    DM_Andy said:

    Roger said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Roger said:

    Taking it in turns to crash the economy is only fair.


    The level of dislocation in our political class is bizarre.
    I suggested the Tories chose PR. They didn’t.
    Now I’m suggesting it to Labour.

    Bet they don’t

    They won't now that they know the voters are quite capable of doing their own PR. It's a simple 'who would you like least and how do I stop them'. it worked last time.

    I had a damascene conversion at 1.20 today and realised that I don't really like Labour and am now a Lib Dem. I'd still vote Labour to stop Farage's mob but fortunately so would most sane voters. Sometimes Labour can be really dislikable and today was one of those days..
    What's happened today, Rog? :open_mouth:
    I heard Yvette Cooper being interviewed and in content it could have been Kemi. She didn't even want to allow under 30's simple access to the EU for a short time even though the EU were willing. I found it extraordinary and embarrassing
    Maybe she is running scared of Reform in her constituency
    Labour have a choice: triangulate, or do what they believe and be out of office in 4 years.

    I think they spent the first 6 months doing the latter, and then realised they were on a hiding to nothing, so pivoted.
    But triangulating also means being out of office in 2029. The relative vote shares of Reform/Conservative and Lab/LD/Green are reasonably stable but while Reform are potentially moving ahead of the Tories, Labour are leaking support to the Lib Dems and the Greens.

    I know I'm not in the market for whatever Starmer's offering but why would someone who wants Reform policies accept Labour's watered down version instead?
    Well, precisely. You're not in the market for it and you struggle to understand anyone else who would be.

    It will help Labour hang onto its key marginals, without sacrificing many safe seats, so it's the optimum political strategy for it retaining office.

    By election time it will be: do you want us or the Tories/Reform? And they will point to some red meat, like VAT on school fees, to rally the base.
    It's not working as you suggest though. According to Find Out Now, if there was an election today, Labour would get 2% of the Tory GE24 voters and 0% of the Reform vote. Throwing away a load of support on the assumption you can win them back in the election campaign is a brave strategy.

    There's isn't an election today. And if there was voter behaviour would be different.


    This isn't difficult. What this boils down to is you don't like what Labour are doing.
    This is politicalbetting.com, aren't we allowed to talk about polls?
    Yes, if you understand them.
    I'm not going to descend to the gutter.
    As an aside, I do like that expression, since some of us may start out in the gutter so can defend not 'descending' to it.
    But some of us are looking up at the stars.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    rcs1000 said:

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Trump has managed to hit Biden's approval numbers within three months of taking office.

    Impressive.

    What a shame there was no Special Election in the New York 21st District.
    Trump has managed to be more unpopular at this stage of his presidency than any postwar president.

    Runner up is Trump 45.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @carlquintanilla.bsky.social‬

    Trump, asked about China’s denial of trade talks:

    “Well, they had a meeting this morning.”

    Reporter: “Who's they?”

    Trump: “I can't tell you. It doesn't matter who ‘they’ is.”

    https://bsky.app/profile/carlquintanilla.bsky.social/post/3lnle7dtpxk2a
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,928

    The export of video game controllers from the UK to Russia has been banned as they can be repurposed to pilot drones used to launch attacks on Ukraine. The European Union enforced a similar ban on video games and joysticks earlier this year.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crkx14jykn8o

    Absolute total gesturing. You think they buy them from the UK at the moment rather than via the vast selection available for peanuts from China.

    We must have some old Kempston joysticks sitting around from the ZX Spectrum era, we should send them and see how good their drone pilots really are.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,629
    edited April 24

    The Tories’ biggest blunder is only now coming to light
    Michael Gove must apologise for giving councils free rein to extort property owners
    ...
    Thousands of people across Britain have been shocked to receive demands for double council tax on second properties under powers granted by Mr Gove that took effect in April.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/counting-cost-michael-gove-dreadful-mistake/ (£££)

    I think the Telegraph is over-reaching a little here.

    The claimed total of "chargeable properties" is 280k, which is about 1% of Housing Stock.

    As the article puts it:

    Dozens of readers have been in touch to complain of exorbitant bills being issued on inherited family homes or properties that are used every week for work.

    Dozens? It's the end of the world.

    Then they spiral off into "but but but empty homes", when the UK is actually very good at keeping these down.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    Nigelb said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Ed Krassenstein

    @EdKrassen
    Three new polls were just released and Trump's numbers are absolutely HORRIFIC!

    https://x.com/EdKrassen/status/1915394043611062515


    There's a whole load of 55-59% disapprovals in there from three different pollsters.

    Trump has managed to hit Biden's approval numbers within three months of taking office.

    Impressive.

    What a shame there was no Special Election in the New York 21st District.
    Trump has managed to be more unpopular at this stage of his presidency than any postwar president.

    Runner up is Trump 45.
    Fentanyl is still clearly getting through to the US though if 33% approve of his record on inflation.
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