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  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited July 2015
    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    I think campaigning with Labours gravestone was quite original!
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,175
    HYUFD said:


    On Corbyn, can I just say to the Labour party: Serves. You. Right.

    You wanted to be politically correct and inclusive - and this is what you get.

    Being a leader needs an element of ruthlessness to beat the competition, not someone who is let in because you felt sorry for him.

    Well the Tories can hardly talk, in 2001 Tory MPs put IDS in the final 2 rather than Portillo by 1 vote
    That was then, Miliband was almost now, and Burnham/Cooper/Corbyn really are now.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    SeanT said:

    OchEye said:

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    Just thinking about David Cameron, and looking at a mirror image of EM, I have to agree.
    Oh, Cameron is no intellectual either. But, unlike Ed, he doesn't claim to be. Thank God. Spare us intellectual politicians. Cameron claims to be a pragmatic One Nation Conservative, with a fairly shrewd Chancellor.

    He is also a much better politician, and smarter election campaigner, than Ed Miliband, as it turns out.
    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657
    Finland says no to Greece. Looks ominous for the European project.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657
    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591
    SeanT said:

    This is potentially huge.

    @StefanLeifert 16m16 minutes ago
    Stefan Leifert retweeted Anne Gellinek
    German government sources: Idea of a temporary Grexit was agreed on by Merkel and vice-chancellor Gabriel. #Greece

    Are they really gonna do it? Send Greece to Dignitas? Pull the plug, finally?

    Other reports say five other nations - including Finland and Holland - want Grexit, too. This is epochal. If it happens.

    Mrs Indecisive agreed to that? I suppose on the face of it it makes sense - kicking them out, but not being final about it, in intent at any rate, so a mish mash compromise.

    The deal has to be done tomorrow, this surely has to be last minute positioning to scare yet more concessions out of Greece because they don't trust Tsipras. Surely?
  • perdixperdix Posts: 1,806

    Finland says no to Greece. Looks ominous for the European project.

    The Euro is an unexploded bomb in the world's financial network..

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,533
    edited July 2015
    Ed Miliband being an intellectual...LOL...we were served that BS about Brown too. The one other BS idea that hasn't been burst is that somehow David Miliband is also brilliant.

    Cameron has some brains in there somewhere, but is too bloody lazy to use them most of the time. But he, nor his supporters, have never tried to sell Call Me Dave as some deep thinking genius.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    I think campaigning with Labours gravestone was quite original!
    I shall thank Labour a long time for that one - as I had thought the outcome was clear (incorrectly) and on the basis campaigning doesn't change things as much as people think, that event stood out as an amusing aside in a dull election period, and was the only thing that got people really talking about the election in my office, outside myself and the other boring political farts. Good times.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    SeanT said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit hance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    I always felt that both of the brothers were massively over-rated - not least by themselves and a lefty, guardianista mind-set determined to over-hype them because they went to a north London comprehensive.


    And yes, I don't think David would have been that much better.
    Sometimes parties make mad decisions, eg Home over Butler, Foot over Healey, Hague and IDS over Clarke, Ed Miliband over David, normally because they are in a mood to put ideology above all else
    Generally agree, but one point of order - Ken Clarke as leader, when the party was at its most feverishly eurosceptic, would have split the Tories in two, forever. The Tories made the right call, there.

    It was Clarke himself who was the fool. His devotion to what, as we now see, was a ludicrous cause - the EU, and the euro - cost him the leadership and a chance of leading the nation.
    Europe was always the litmus test, correct, and the danger was that he would have split the party, but he would have made a far more dangerous foe for Blair than the other Tory leaders he had to face, as even Blair himself stated in his diaries
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984
    I guess this is further proof that first past the post screws smaller parties/UNS can be accurate for them, had Carswell not defected to UKIP they would have won zero MPs.

    Add in their lack of incumbents, boundary changes and UKIP having become an extension of Farage's ego, 1 or 2 MPs might be the best they can hope for in 2020, not 102 MPs that some hoped for this election.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    Exactly.

    Best that I would offer would be a bridging loan for a few months while Greece passes all it says.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,533
    edited July 2015
    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    I think the problem is after the couple of bail out where the German's demanded that any national industry that functions at all has to be privatized (then found lots of them barely function), there is no collateral left.

    Modern Greece has nothing to offer the modern world, besides some olives and some feta, which aint going to pay off billions in bail outs.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469

    Ed Miliband being an intellectual...LOL...we were served that BS about Brown too. The one other BS idea that isn't been burst is that somehow David Miliband is also brilliant.

    Interesting, but Brown is a damn sight more of an intellectual than Cameron, Osborne and the rest of the Tory front bench put together. And after all, isn't Cameron using Blair's autobiography as a bible?
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    edited July 2015
    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    No agreement today, but unfortunately the Eurogroup is going to go on and on until either the French or the Germans surrender.

    Cameron is lucky, it seems that because there is a stalemate in the eurogroup there won't be an extraordinary EU summit tomorrow for Grexit.

    That means that Greece is stuck at the worst possible position, unable to get another bailout of death and unwilling to leave the eurozone.
  • FlightpathlFlightpathl Posts: 1,243
    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    Nana Mouskouri?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    OchEye said:

    SeanT said:

    OchEye said:

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    Just thinking about David Cameron, and looking at a mirror image of EM, I have to agree.
    Oh, Cameron is no intellectual either. But, unlike Ed, he doesn't claim to be. Thank God. Spare us intellectual politicians. Cameron claims to be a pragmatic One Nation Conservative, with a fairly shrewd Chancellor.

    He is also a much better politician, and smarter election campaigner, than Ed Miliband, as it turns out.
    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.
    Cameron got fairly average O levels at Eton, Ed Miliband AABB at A Level and a 2.1, David Miliband BBBD, none are exactly intellectual titans
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    edited July 2015
    felix said:

    HYUFD said:


    On Corbyn, can I just say to the Labour party: Serves. You. Right.

    You wanted to be politically correct and inclusive - and this is what you get.

    Being a leader needs an element of ruthlessness to beat the competition, not someone who is let in because you felt sorry for him.

    Well the Tories can hardly talk, in 2001 Tory MPs put IDS in the final 2 rather than Portillo by 1 vote
    That was then, Miliband was almost now, and Burnham/Cooper/Corbyn really are now.
    True, but it shows all parties are perfectly capable of stupidity when it comes to leadership contests. A Burnham or Cooper victory would also not be in the same league of error as a Corbyn win
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,533
    edited July 2015
    OchEye said:

    Ed Miliband being an intellectual...LOL...we were served that BS about Brown too. The one other BS idea that isn't been burst is that somehow David Miliband is also brilliant.

    Interesting, but Brown is a damn sight more of an intellectual than Cameron, Osborne and the rest of the Tory front bench put together. And after all, isn't Cameron using Blair's autobiography as a bible?
    You might think that, but personally Brown's 10 years to get his PhD in Labour Party History, I wouldn't wipe my arse with. You can tell it was a pile of c##p, as the only academic job he could get after that was teaching at the local technical college.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657
    Speedy said:

    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    No agreement today, but unfortunately the Eurogroup is going to go on and on until either the French or the Germans surrender.

    Cameron is lucky, it seems that because there is a stalemate in the eurogroup there won't be an extraordinary EU summit tomorrow for Grexit.

    That means that Greece is stuck at the worst possible position, unable to get another bailout of death and unwilling to leave the eurozone.
    Is this the weekend that the European Union implodes on a north v south schism resulting in the collapse of the whole project
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Good evening, everyone.

    Mr. NorthWales, I'd be surprised if it were. The can is severely dented but they'll kick it as long as they can.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    Then why did they offer those terms a week or so ago?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657

    Good evening, everyone.

    Mr. NorthWales, I'd be surprised if it were. The can is severely dented but they'll kick it as long as they can.

    Will the markets let them
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    edited July 2015
    HYUFD said:



    Just thinking about David Cameron, and looking at a mirror image of EM, I have to agree.
    Oh, Cameron is no intellectual either. But, unlike Ed, he doesn't claim to be. Thank God. Spare us intellectual politicians. Cameron claims to be a pragmatic One Nation Conservative, with a fairly shrewd Chancellor.

    He is also a much better politician, and smarter election campaigner, than Ed Miliband, as it turns out.

    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.

    Cameron got fairly average O levels at Eton, Ed Miliband AABB at A Level and a 2.1, David Miliband BBBD, none are exactly intellectual titans

    Erm! 12 o's,From the age of seven, Cameron was educated at two independent schools: at Heatherdown School in Winkfield (near Ascot) in Berkshire, which counts Prince Andrew and Prince Edward among its alumni. Due to good academic grades, Cameron entered its top academic class almost two years early.[30] At the age of thirteen, he went to Eton College in Berkshire, following his father and elder brother.[31] His early interest was in art. Six weeks before taking his O-Levels he was caught smoking cannabis.[2] He admitted the offence and had not been involved in selling drugs, so he was not expelled, but was fined, prevented from leaving school grounds, and given a "Georgic" (a punishment which involved copying 500 lines of Latin text).[32]

    Cameron passed 12 O-Levels and then studied three A-levels: History of art, History, and Economics with Politics. He obtained three 'A' grades and a '1' grade in the Scholarship Level exam in Economics and Politics.[33] The following autumn he passed the entrance exam for the University of Oxford, where he was offered an exhibition.[34]


    Brasenose College, Oxford
    After leaving Eton in 1984,[35] Cameron started a nine-month gap year. He worked as a researcher for his godfather Tim Rathbone, then Conservative MP for Lewes. In his three months, he attended debates in the House of Commons.[36] Through his father, he was then employed for a further three months in Hong Kong by Jardine Matheson as a 'ship jumper', an administrative post.[37]
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    To reiterate where the Eurogroup is stuck:

    Half the eurogroup (with Germany as leader) wants Greece to leave, France and Juncker are vetoing any Grexit, the Grexit camp is vetoing any bailout, the result is no solution and Greece gets neither more loans nor a Grexit.

    And as Tsipras is a committed european and his Finance Minister a conspiring euro-communist, Greece will never leave by it's own.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    If Greece crashes out of the Eurozone, it will surely have a big effect on Europe's economy. Perhaps it won't be as bad as the financial crisis in 07/08, but even half the effect would be major. It's the biggest default in history after all.

    Looking at the 07/08 crisis, it took about 1-2 years to fully filter through into the real economy. So if Greece crashed out now, our economy would probably be worse hit in early 2017. So we'll have a big economic slowdown, caused by the EU, just before the Brexit referendum.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    edited July 2015
    Mr. Speedy, I thought the new Greek finance chap was a sceptic?

    Will the markets let them? Hmm. If they keep arguing about whether to use the life-raft or the life-boat, the rising water will drown Greece. They'll need to print a new currency simply to stop the economy falling into the sea.

    Edited extra bit: Mr. JEO, that's certainly possible but I do wonder if the political impact will be more significant than the economic one.
  • "In the aftermath of May 7th UKIP was taking some comfort from the 120 second places it had chalked up suggesting that this provided a good platform for next time."

    Nah, the party has had its day in the sun. By 2020, Britain's place in or out of the EU will have been settled once and for all and it will have ceased to have any raison d'être. As a result I expect its share of the vote to slip back to < 5%. Just as likely is the prospect of the party breaking up into two or more meaningless factions.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003

    I guess this is further proof that first past the post screws smaller parties/UNS can be accurate for them, had Carswell not defected to UKIP they would have won zero MPs.

    Add in their lack of incumbents, boundary changes and UKIP having become an extension of Farage's ego, 1 or 2 MPs might be the best they can hope for in 2020, not 102 MPs that some hoped for this election.

    Who knows what EUref will bring, especially given the eurozone chaos this weekend
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
    Presumably they might have trusted them to uphold those terms if they'd accepted them in the first place, rather than hold a referendum on how humiliating and unacceptable they were, they promise 'but no, really we will accept and honour these terms'.

    But on balance I think it'll be harder for the reluctant to reject what is apparently a very similar offer purely on the trust issue - enough of them are still reluctant enough to pull the trigger on Grexit that they will get over that and pretend once again this will fix things.
  • FlightpathlFlightpathl Posts: 1,243

    Speedy said:

    SeanT said:

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    They don't believe Greece will deliver on the proposed reforms. Quite understandably. No one trusts Tsipras or Syriza to inflict this austerity on voters.

    They therefore want total control of the Greek Budget AND some kind of collateral.

    Crete?
    No agreement today, but unfortunately the Eurogroup is going to go on and on until either the French or the Germans surrender.

    Cameron is lucky, it seems that because there is a stalemate in the eurogroup there won't be an extraordinary EU summit tomorrow for Grexit.

    That means that Greece is stuck at the worst possible position, unable to get another bailout of death and unwilling to leave the eurozone.
    Is this the weekend that the European Union implodes on a north v south schism resulting in the collapse of the whole project
    Probably not.
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    stjohn said:

    Tejay Van Garderen is a 22 on Betfair for the TdF. He's currently in 3rd place & tomorrow could be in yellow because it's the team time trial and his BMC team are reckoned to be the strongest.

    Mike I've followed you on this. I've backed him each way at 18/1 with Corals. Good luck!

    My advice would be to back the one who takes the best drugs.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    edited July 2015
    Ken Clarkes wife has died


    Thursday night apparently, sorry if it's old news

    https://twitter.com/pa/status/619955166855491584
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    edited July 2015

    OchEye said:

    Ed Miliband being an intellectual...LOL...we were served that BS about Brown too. The one other BS idea that isn't been burst is that somehow David Miliband is also brilliant.

    Interesting, but Brown is a damn sight more of an intellectual than Cameron, Osborne and the rest of the Tory front bench put together. And after all, isn't Cameron using Blair's autobiography as a bible?
    You might think that, but personally Brown's 10 years to get his PhD in Labour Party History, I wouldn't wipe my arse with. You can tell it was a pile of c##p, as the only academic job he could get after that was teaching at the local technical college.
    Only a few leadership contendors have been genuine intellectuals, since the war I would say Macmillan (on a good day), Powell, Wilson, Keith Joseph, Foot, Healey, Jenkins, Hurd, Redwood, Hague and Portillo come into that category and perhaps Balls (who is actually more intellectual than Brown)
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100

    Mr. Speedy, I thought the new Greek finance chap was a sceptic?

    Will the markets let them? Hmm. If they keep arguing about whether to use the life-raft or the life-boat, the rising water will drown Greece. They'll need to print a new currency simply to stop the economy falling into the sea.

    Edited extra bit: Mr. JEO, that's certainly possible but I do wonder if the political impact will be more significant than the economic one.

    If you read down bellow I've uncovered an essay of his which he regards that Greece must absolutely remain in the Eurozone in order to overthrow capitalism in Europe from within, seems the new Greek Finance Minister has misplaced some marbles.

    Oh here it is:
    http://www.workersliberty.org/system/files/milios.pdf

    "Communist Dilemmas on the Greek Euro-Crisis: To Exit or
    Not to Exit?
    Christos Laskos, John Milios and Euclid Tsakalotos"
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited July 2015

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
    It was Syrizia's handling of the original terms that was the final nail in the coffin for trust.

    I think Grexit is pretty well priced into the markets, so the effect will be much less than it was. Unlike the web of CDOs there will be little cross contamination of other markets.

  • FlightpathlFlightpathl Posts: 1,243
    edited July 2015
    OchEye said:

    HYUFD said:



    Just thinking about David Cameron, and looking at a mirror image of EM, I have to agree.
    Oh, Cameron is no intellectual either. But, unlike Ed, he doesn't claim to be. Thank God. Spare us intellectual politicians. Cameron claims to be a pragmatic One Nation Conservative, with a fairly shrewd Chancellor.

    He is also a much better politician, and smarter election campaigner, than Ed Miliband, as it turns out.
    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.

    Cameron got fairly average O levels at Eton, Ed Miliband AABB at A Level and a 2.1, David Miliband BBBD, none are exactly intellectual titans

    From ocheye --
    Erm! 12 o's,From the age of seven, Cameron was educated at two independent schools: at Heatherdown School in Winkfield (near Ascot) in Berkshire, which counts Prince Andrew and Prince Edward among its alumni. Due to good academic grades, Cameron entered its top academic class almost two years early.[30] At the age of thirteen, he went to Eton College in Berkshire, following his father and elder brother.[31] His early interest was in art. Six weeks before taking his O-Levels he was caught smoking cannabis.[2] He admitted the offence and had not been involved in selling drugs, so he was not expelled, but was fined, prevented from leaving school grounds, and given a "Georgic" (a punishment which involved copying 500 lines of Latin text).[32]
    Cameron passed 12 O-Levels and then studied three A-levels: History of art, History, and Economics with Politics. He obtained three 'A' grades and a '1' grade in the Scholarship Level exam in Economics and Politics.[33] The following autumn he passed the entrance exam for the University of Oxford, where he was offered an exhibition.[34]
    Brasenose College, Oxford
    After leaving Eton in 1984,[35] Cameron started a nine-month gap year. He worked as a researcher for his godfather Tim Rathbone, then Conservative MP for Lewes. In his three months, he attended debates in the House of Commons.[36] Through his father, he was then employed for a further three months in Hong Kong by Jardine Matheson as a 'ship jumper', an administrative post.[37]

    From Flightpath --
    You really are a desperate so and so aren't you? [38]
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    I found the German Grexit plan:
    http://www.sven-giegold.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/grexit_bundesregierung_non_paper_10_juli_2015.pdf

    "Comments on the latest Greek proposals
    On 9 July 2015 Greece has submitted a list of proposals. These proposals are based on and even fall
    behind the latest aide memoire that was drafted by the Troika to conclude the review under EFSF.
    However Greece was not able to conclude the review.
    These proposals lack a number of paramount important reform areas to modernize the country, to
    foster long term economic growth and sustainable development. Among these, labour market
    reform, reform of public sector, privatisations, banking sector, structural reforms are not sufficient.
    This is why these proposals can not build the basis for a completely new, three year ESM program, as
    requested by Greece. We need a better, a sustainable solution, keeping the IMF on board. There are
    2 avenues now: " blah blah blah.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited July 2015
    Grexit would be the best outcome for everyone including Greece, but I just can't believe Merkel will have the balls to do it.

    Congratulations to the Finns for standing up for what they believe in.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. Speedy, at least they're consistent, given the last one was crackers as well.

    Mr. Isam, was mentioned earlier, but it's common for things to be mentioned a few times. Sad news indeed.
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,320
    edited July 2015
    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984
    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    or

    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    or

    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    We haven't had a Scottish thread for a while...
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
    It was Syrizia's handling of the original terms that was the final nail in the coffin for trust.

    I think Grexit is pretty well priced into the markets, so the effect will be much less than it was. Unlike the web of CDOs there will be little cross contamination of other markets.

    I've never believed for one minute that Grexit would happe, if it does it will be because of political pressure at home, ie getting voted out In Germany or Finland, rather than the EU forcing them out.

    However if it does happen then it will be seen as the first domino to fall, the rest will soon follow. We may not even need a referendum
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    or

    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    We haven't had a Scottish thread for a while...
    Corbyn?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    I agree. The choice is Kendall or treading water at best.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. England, I fear you overestimate the potential for a domino effect. If Greece leaves, the others will cling more desperately to one another. That's my suspicion, anyway. Reason has rarely had much weight when it comes to the EU and economic matters.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
    It was Syrizia's handling of the original terms that was the final nail in the coffin for trust.

    I think Grexit is pretty well priced into the markets, so the effect will be much less than it was. Unlike the web of CDOs there will be little cross contamination of other markets.

    I've never believed for one minute that Grexit would happe, if it does it will be because of political pressure at home, ie getting voted out In Germany or Finland, rather than the EU forcing them out.

    However if it does happen then it will be seen as the first domino to fall, the rest will soon follow. We may not even need a referendum
    If agreement cannot be agreed by early this week it is Grexit by default. No one needs pull the trapdoor. There will be speculation against other countries but I think it most likely that the other Southern Euro countries will embrace the Euro more tightly so as to avoid the same fate as Greece.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    or

    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    We haven't had a Scottish thread for a while...
    I've lost my mojo on writing Scottish threads.

    The last thread I wrote on North Britain, and not a single Nat called me a fanny turnip.

    I must be doing something wrong.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,161

    what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    "That green-blooded son-of-a-b****! It's his revenge for all those arguments he lost!"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    edited July 2015



    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.

    Cameron got fairly average O levels at Eton, Ed Miliband AABB at A Level and a 2.1, David Miliband BBBD, none are exactly intellectual titans

    Erm! 12 o's,From the age of seven, Cameron was educated at two independent schools: at Heatherdown School in Winkfield (near Ascot) in Berkshire, which counts Prince Andrew and Prince Edward among its alumni. Due to good academic grades, Cameron entered its top academic class almost two years early.[30] At the age of thirteen, he went to Eton College in Berkshire, following his father and elder brother.[31] His early interest was in art. Six weeks before taking his O-Levels he was caught smoking cannabis.[2] He admitted the offence and had not been involved in selling drugs, so he was not expelled, but was fined, prevented from leaving school grounds, and given a "Georgic" (a punishment which involved copying 500 lines of Latin text).[32]

    Cameron passed 12 O-Levels and then studied three A-levels: History of art, History, and Economics with Politics. He obtained three 'A' grades and a '1' grade in the Scholarship Level exam in Economics and Politics.[33] The following autumn he passed the entrance exam for the University of Oxford, where he was offered an exhibition.[34]


    Brasenose College, Oxford
    After leaving Eton in 1984,[35] Cameron started a nine-month gap year. He worked as a researcher for his godfather Tim Rathbone, then Conservative MP for Lewes. In his three months, he attended debates in the House of Commons.[36] Through his father, he was then employed for a further three months in Hong Kong by Jardine Matheson as a 'ship jumper', an administrative post.[37]

    "School friends say Mr Cameron was never seen as a great academic - or noted for his interest in politics, beyond the "mainstream Conservative" views held by most of his classmates.
    He has described his 12 O-levels as "not very good", but he gained three As at A-level, in history, history of art and economics with politics."
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8661964.stm
  • FlightpathlFlightpathl Posts: 1,243
    edited July 2015

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,320
    edited July 2015
    Twitter
    Andrew Neil ‏@afneil 7m7 minutes ago
    Germans floating idea of temporary Grexit. But temporary probably = permanent.

    adam seven ‏@a7_FIN_SWE 1h1 hour ago
    Finnish media reports that Germany, Holland, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovakia and Slovenia want "temporary" #Grexit
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    edited July 2015



    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on

    1) AV

    or

    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    I think Varoufakis has demonstrated that game theory works better as an academic exercise than a diplomatic tool.

    Anyone who plays Germany at anything knows that they play to win.

    Incidentally Syrizia is one of the most intellectual governments around, loads of academics. Just demonstrates that intellect does not always work!
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    AndyJS said:
    This is all a lesson in why one currency with a dozen or so national political systems can not work.
  • TCPoliticalBettingTCPoliticalBetting Posts: 10,819
    edited July 2015

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    fitalass said:

    Twitter
    Andrew Neil ‏@afneil 7m7 minutes ago
    Germans floating idea of temporary Grexit. But temporary probably = permanent.

    adam seven ‏@a7_FIN_SWE 1h1 hour ago
    Finnish media reports that Germany, Holland, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovakia and Slovenia want "temporary" #Grexit

    Sounds like it's all over.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Miss Fitalass, quite.

    On Cameron being lucky: as attributes go, luck may be the single most important (if you believe people are just lucky or unlucky). Consider Heraclius. Did everything right to save Byzantium from Flavius Phocas and reconquer vast swathes of land from Chosroes, then he fell ill and Islam rose just in time to snatch it all from two exhausted empires.

    Alexander and Caesar were both notably lucky too (Hannibal the reverse).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
  • oxfordsimonoxfordsimon Posts: 5,844
    HYUFD said:

    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
    Burnham and Cooper aren't anywhere close to Attlee, Churchill or Thatcher. And I am not sure anyone would want to be likened to Heath.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984

    HYUFD said:

    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she p

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
    Burnham and Cooper aren't anywhere close to Attlee, Churchill or Thatcher. And I am not sure anyone would want to be likened to Heath.
    A few Kippers and Tories kept on telling us during the last parliament, that Cameron was just like Heath.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591
    I confess I had not considered the impact the Finns and the like could have. I had assumed at the end of the day the German government had enough political capital to sell a further deal even at the cost of a hit from the public, and that would be that, particularly in light of comments from NickPalmer and others the other day about the state of the German opposition (that is, not spectacular). That other governments around the EU might well fall if a bailout is given had not occurred to me.
  • oxfordsimonoxfordsimon Posts: 5,844

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Farron will keep the LDs in their sandal-wearing comfort zone. He is not a leader for the future.
  • Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Lamb and Farron
    Two bald men fighting over a comb. Pointless.

  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    Mr. kle4, it's almost as if the eurozone is an unworkable mess.

    Mr. Simon, if Labour do elect someone who is a bit rubbish (excepting Corbyn, not sure anyone could quite rival Miliband's rubbishness) there's an opportunity for a rapid revival for the Lib Dems. But if they don't do it in 2020, then it'll become a lot more difficult. Memories of them having serious clout and being a major party will fade.

    Still, a bad Labour leader would help, as would a receding SNP tide (likely but even so, Scotland's tricky for them), and UKIP buggering up campaigning (a near certainty).
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591
    edited July 2015

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Lamb and Farron
    Two bald men fighting over a comb. Pointless.

    Depending on the Labour contest someone might be throwing them a toupee to comb too. Something to give some comfort until hair regrowth technology is invented at least.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003
    edited July 2015

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.


    "Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson

    Burnham and Cooper aren't anywhere close to Attlee, Churchill or Thatcher. And I am not sure anyone would want to be likened to Heath."


    Heath did actually win the 1970 election and no-one can be sure what a leader is like until they get the job, Thatcher was mocked as 'Hilda' by Tory grandees in the early days of her leadership
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003

    HYUFD said:

    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she p

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
    Burnham and Cooper aren't anywhere close to Attlee, Churchill or Thatcher. And I am not sure anyone would want to be likened to Heath.
    A few Kippers and Tories kept on telling us during the last parliament, that Cameron was just like Heath.
    Well Cameron has won most votes in 1 hung parliament and 1 majority as Heath did so they are not as completely different in electoral terms as you may think, even if Heath did lose 2 elections as well
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657
    Its now Italy v Germany - who could have predicted the European Union could unravel so quickly. It looks like civil war - compelling
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Farron will keep the LDs in their sandal-wearing comfort zone. He is not a leader for the future.
    At this weeks hustings both went down well with the audience, but I think Lamb was the better argued candidate, though Farron ahead on rhetoric.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656

    HYUFD said:

    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she p

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Hmm. Not convinced, although I win if she does. Cooper would be decent opposition leader and UK might be ready for change anyway after 5 years of Osbornomics (the ticking electoral timebomb that is cutting tax credits will explode at some point).

    Agree about Burnham, although it could be argued that Lab have had quite enough of the intellect bit for a while.
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
    Burnham and Cooper aren't anywhere close to Attlee, Churchill or Thatcher. And I am not sure anyone would want to be likened to Heath.
    A few Kippers and Tories kept on telling us during the last parliament, that Cameron was just like Heath.
    To be fair to those making that comparison, Cameron's best seat total has been exactly the same as Heath.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,309
    Does the Greek President have the theoretical power to appoint a technocratic government if that is the only way that a Grexit can be avoided?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984
    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    I confess I had not considered the impact the Finns and the like could have. I had assumed at the end of the day the German government had enough political capital to sell a further deal even at the cost of a hit from the public, and that would be that, particularly in light of comments from NickPalmer and others the other day about the state of the German opposition (that is, not spectacular). That other governments around the EU might well fall if a bailout is given had not occurred to me.

    The crucial points right now are that

    1. France and Germany are not just singing different verses, they are in different choirs

    2. It takes just one EZ nation to veto a new Greek bailout. At the moment there are at least six so minded

    3. Time is genuinely running out
    Point 2 is wrong (i think)

    https://twitter.com/EdConwaySky/status/619970104860741633
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Lamb and Farron
    Two bald men fighting over a comb. Pointless.

    LDs outnumber Kippers in Parliament, and in local government. There is a strange unity and lack of infighting in the party, a major contrast with the kippers and Labour where defeat seems to have driven internal feuds out of control.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,973
    edited July 2015
    Mr. Eagles, ah, the joys of qualified majority voting.

    But would that take money from countries who voted against it? And what percentage do the six make up (I'd guess it's well over 15%)?
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106
    edited July 2015
    .
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984

    Mr. Eagles, ah, the joys of qualified majority voting.

    But would that take money from countries who voted against it? And what percentage do the six make up (I'd guess it's well over 15%)?

    If the Germans veto it, then should do it.

    Yes QMV is a bit rubbish, they should conduct the vote under the greatest voting system ever created, AV.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    How much money is left in the ESM anyway?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,591

    Does the Greek President have the theoretical power to appoint a technocratic government if that is the only way that a Grexit can be avoided?

    If he does, I wonder if the outrage at the EU forcing out another elected government would be lessened somewhat given that government appears, apparently, to have signed itself up to measures on which the public just told them not to accept, by and large. Not that would mitigate them being forced out by external forces, if they renege on what they say the people can punish them of course, but I do I do wonder.

    Although isn't a new Grand Coalition type government supposed to be unveiled in Athens on Monday? An attempt to reassure the EU not just Syrizia will be responsible for seeing reforms are actually achieved?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,969
    It takes a heart of stone not to laugh yerself silly at the ClusterfEUck.....
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,993


    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.

    Having this site's foremost Liberal Democrat-hater venting his spleen at the party once again is going to drove traffic away in droves - rather like the usual coterie of Conservatives wittering on about how terrible all the Labour leadership contenders are and how any of them becoming leader is going to ensure another Conservative victory in 2020.

    As a non-Conservative, my view on the Labour leadership election, apart from its length which seems excessive, is that the Labour Party isn't short of strong contenders. I do think the focus needs to be on establishing how to speak to England beyond the cities - in my part of the world, Labour got a 5% swing from the Conservatives.

    Parties coming off long periods of power tend to struggle initially in opposition - it took the Conservatives eight years and three defeats to begin to understand the problem. Labour need to urgently move on from the anachronistic Blair-Brown years and those redundant arguments and start setting the agenda for the 2020s.

    The Government can talk to the present but it's up to the Opposition to talk to the future and envisage the kind of State and society the 2020s will demand. That's not easy but in Opposition you have time to do it but it means a blank sheet of paper and the willingness to re-define and rethink key ideas, ideals and philosophies and that means listening to people outside the tent because they are often the most interesting and relevant.


  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,657
    Someone suggested the full EU meeting tomorrow will be cancelled due to the impasse but others say it will be put before the 28 leaders tomorrow. Who is right
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    HYUFD said:

    OchEye said:

    SeanT said:

    OchEye said:

    SeanT said:

    felix said:

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    Ed had intellect???? I know he had intellectual self-confidence but intellect? Really?
    Ed Miliband is not an intellectual. I cannot pinpoint a significant new idea for which he can claim ownership. Not one. Not a sausage. He just serves up warmed-over socialism, the ideological leftovers of the Seventies, covered in a sauce of opportunism.

    Just thinking about David Cameron, and looking at a mirror image of EM, I have to agree.
    Oh, Cameron is no intellectual either. But, unlike Ed, he doesn't claim to be. Thank God. Spare us intellectual politicians. Cameron claims to be a pragmatic One Nation Conservative, with a fairly shrewd Chancellor.

    He is also a much better politician, and smarter election campaigner, than Ed Miliband, as it turns out.
    Ah! Nope, luckier I will agree. Even with a First from Brasenose College iI would not say that he was an intellectual, or even street smart.
    Cameron got fairly average O levels at Eton, Ed Miliband AABB at A Level and a 2.1, David Miliband BBBD, none are exactly intellectual titans
    I'll go with Vernon Bogdanor's judgement, if you don't mind.

    He rated Cameron as among the smartest students he had taught. That means that Cameron is brighter than me so he must be damn good ;)
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    JEO said:

    Why would Germany and Finland say no now? Hasn't Greece just agreed to the terms they previously offered?

    No one trusts them
    So why bother offering the original terms in the first place?
    I think what broke the trust was Tsirpas telling them he would need to have a referendum but he would recommend the people vote 'yes'.

    Then walking out the door and doing the opposite.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003

    Mr. kle4, it's almost as if the eurozone is an unworkable mess.

    Mr. Simon, if Labour do elect someone who is a bit rubbish (excepting Corbyn, not sure anyone could quite rival Miliband's rubbishness) there's an opportunity for a rapid revival for the Lib Dems. But if they don't do it in 2020, then it'll become a lot more difficult. Memories of them having serious clout and being a major party will fade.

    Still, a bad Labour leader would help, as would a receding SNP tide (likely but even so, Scotland's tricky for them), and UKIP buggering up campaigning (a near certainty).

    A good Labour leader is not necessarily a disaster for the LDs, they doubled their seat total in 1997 when Blair led Labour
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    edited July 2015
    From what I hear the Greek government is now asking for 100 billion euros from the ESM.
    That's 1/7th of the entire capital that the ESM has, or more that 60% of Greek GDP.
    That would push the greek debt to GDP ratio to above 230%, a world record.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,003

    Now that Mike has spiked my peak Kipper piece, what do you want the morning thread on
    1) AV
    or
    2) The greatest political strategist in the country?

    Game theory
    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.
    New LD leader this Thursday. I sent off my ballot paper on Thursday. Lamb first choice but would not be sorry if it was Farron, he had a great outing on BBC Any Questions earlier.
    Farron will keep the LDs in their sandal-wearing comfort zone. He is not a leader for the future.
    He can win back some tactical voters in Tory-LD marginals which is what they really need
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    What we're seeing is classic example of northern vs southern European mindsets. South is all about honour and "not humiliating a country", north is about paying your bills on time.
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865


    The Greek Analyst
    @GreekAnalyst
    Schaeuble seemingly going ultra-hardcore tonight. Whether justifiably or not, this will be painful for #Greece. Let's hope for a miracle.
    Jul. 11, 2015ReplyRetweetFavorite
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,984
    stodge said:


    what do you want the morning thread on?
    The future for the LDs at GE2020.

    Having this site's foremost Liberal Democrat-hater venting his spleen at the party once again is going to drove traffic away in droves - rather like the usual coterie of Conservatives wittering on about how terrible all the Labour leadership contenders are and how any of them becoming leader is going to ensure another Conservative victory in 2020.

    As a non-Conservative, my view on the Labour leadership election, apart from its length which seems excessive, is that the Labour Party isn't short of strong contenders. I do think the focus needs to be on establishing how to speak to England beyond the cities - in my part of the world, Labour got a 5% swing from the Conservatives.

    Parties coming off long periods of power tend to struggle initially in opposition - it took the Conservatives eight years and three defeats to begin to understand the problem. Labour need to urgently move on from the anachronistic Blair-Brown years and those redundant arguments and start setting the agenda for the 2020s.

    The Government can talk to the present but it's up to the Opposition to talk to the future and envisage the kind of State and society the 2020s will demand. That's not easy but in Opposition you have time to do it but it means a blank sheet of paper and the willingness to re-define and rethink key ideas, ideals and philosophies and that means listening to people outside the tent because they are often the most interesting and relevant.


    Are you saying I'm a Lib Dem hater?
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    AndyJS said:

    What we're seeing is classic example of northern vs southern European mindsets. South is all about honour and "not humiliating a country", north is about paying your bills on time.

    Neither are practical in this situation.
  • Life_ina_market_townLife_ina_market_town Posts: 2,319
    edited July 2015
    SeanT said:

    Legalistically there might be an escape clause but politically? Would the eurozone overrule a sovereign member and basically FORCE them to lend billions to Greece?

    That is a recipe for the break up of the entire single currency, not just the departure of one enfeebled member.

    But who knows. Extraordinary times &c

    It seems that unanimity can be suspended under article 4(4) of the European Stability Mechanism Treaty, which provides:
    [A]n emergency voting procedure shall be used where the Commission and the ECB both conclude that a failure to urgently adopt a decision to grant or implement financial assistance ... would threaten the economic and financial sustainability of the euro area. The adoption of a decision by mutual agreement by the Board of Governors referred to in points (f) and (g) of Article 5(6) and the Board of Directors under that emergency procedure requires a qualified majority of 85% of the votes cast.
    It is likely in any event that whatever "humanitarian assistance" is granted to Greece, whether or not it leaves the Euro, will be adopted by the Council of Ministers on the basis on qualified majority voting, and that every EU member state will be liable on a pro rata basis.
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,320
    Blair was not a member of a previous Labour Government, and we now now live in a 24 hour digital age where politicians have never had more exposure as a result. And that really does have a huge impact, along with the electorates growing cynicism and contempt towards our political class.
    HYUFD said:

    fitalass said:

    Neither Burnham or Cooper were the answer to Labour's 2010 GE defeat, and they are definitely not the answer to Labour's current woes following another GE defeat five years later. Especially when they have both been an integral part of that Shadow Cabinet and Labour opposition led by Ed Milliband, and they carry very similar baggage from the previous Labour Government to boot. It took the Conservative party three GE defeats to recognise this problem following their own catastrophic defeat in 1997. Is the Labour party planning on burying its head in the sand and making the same mistakes until it gets tired of being an ineffective Opposition who keeps losing GE's and finally wants to be a responsible party of Government again?

    kle4 said:

    I actually feel a bit sorry for Kendall. Even if she didn't think she could actually win, if she put in a really good showing that would do good things for her career and future chances perhaps, but if she occupies the last slot behind Corbyn, it looks like a gamble that really did not pay off.

    On a similar note, in the US with the more than a dozen declared Republican candidates, most of whom have to know they have no chance, and not even a chance to get much publicity either particularly if they don't get through to the debates (though I'm unclear how they are narrowed down), so what are they actually hoping to achieve personally?

    Kendall is giving labour an opportunity. To take that opportunity she does not need to win, but come second. If she is clearly rejected then its Labour you should feel sorry for. For her, if she believes in a direction for Labour she needs to put down a calling card
    Kendall is the only one of the four capable of being leader on May 9th 2020 two days after the next election. Burnham is like EdM but with a Liverpool accent and without the intellect.

    SNIP
    Being part of a previous government did not stop Attlee, Churchill or Heath or Thatcher winning from opposition, nor did being part a part of Kinnock's Shadow Cabinet stop Blair or being a prominent part of Gaitskill's Shadow Cabinet stop Wilson
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    SeanT said:

    God what a miserable disastrous grotesque deformed misconceived Picnic of Shit the EU is.

    I remember when I first came on PB I was a ferocious sceptic. My younger, angrier self was quite correct. The EU is awful in so many ways, one loses count. Corrupt, malign, inert, ugly, undemocratic, silly, clumsy, impoverishing, and pernicious.

    Yes, it's better than WAR, but that's just about all you can say for it. Every europhile in history should be flogged at the triangle until the ants steal away bloody gobbets of their flesh.

    Different countries are reflecting the democratic wishes of their peoples, and trying to find an agreement. It is democracy in action. To describe it as civil war is gross hyperbole.

  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    SeanT said:

    Speedy said:

    From what I hear the Greek government is now asking for 100 billion euros from the ESM.
    That's 1/7th of the entire capital that the ESM has, or more that 60% of Greek GDP.

    Greece reminds me of me, when I was a junkie.

    Except that instead of asking for a tenner, and saying "I'll pay you back on Monday, promise Mum", Greece is asking for.... one hundred billion euros, and saying they'll repay Germany from their housing benefit, probly like.

    Who in the admittedly shrinking world of human sanity would give Greece and Syriza ONE HUNDRED BILLION EUROS?
    The same who gave Greece 300 billion euros in the past 5 years.
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