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  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281

    malcolmg said:

    malcolmg said:

    Dair said:

    kle4 said:


    It's their reason for existence, they cannot accept it if it goes against.

    Agreed, but since the SNP has conceded that they can't call a legitimate referendum and that only HMG can do that, why would HMG permit a second referendum when the SNP has proven that it can't accept Scots' democratic decision?
    The problem for Loyalists is that the decision was not clear and the actual argument was fundamentally lost (perhaps forever) by the Loyalists.
    Assuming by "Loyalists" you mean "Unionists", this is risible. The No camp won by 10 percentage points: a decisive margin.

    You lost. Accept the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland and move on.

    Dear Dear you are not very good at the trolling
    Indeed not. Trolls tend not to use facts.
    You really are trying to be seen as dimmer than Scott
    Who is that?

    You seem to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that 11 months ago, you lost. Why is that?
    Popcorn and Fat Free Blackpudding time
    Fat free black pudding?
    Arrow Farm Worksop make it.

    Only ingredients are Pigs Blood Salt Pepper and

    Instead of Pigs fat they use potato and onion.

    So the man on the butchers counter said when i asked if it was a joke.

    I did check Worksop hadnt designated 23rd August as April Fools day
    Very innovative and I hope it tastes nice but imho there's nothing wrong with pigs fat! People weren't dropping dead of heart attacks every five minutes when lard was a national staple.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3194376/No-link-eating-fatty-food-early-death-Findings-raise-doubts-advice-avoid-butter-fat-milk-meat-dairy-products.html
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106

    malcolmg said:

    malcolmg said:

    Dair said:

    kle4 said:


    It's their reason for existence, they cannot accept it if it goes against.

    Agreed, but since the SNP has conceded that they can't call a legitimate referendum and that only HMG can do that, why would HMG permit a second referendum when the SNP has proven that it can't accept Scots' democratic decision?
    The problem for Loyalists is that the decision was not clear and the actual argument was fundamentally lost (perhaps forever) by the Loyalists.
    Assuming by "Loyalists" you mean "Unionists", this is risible. The No camp won by 10 percentage points: a decisive margin.

    You lost. Accept the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland and move on.

    Dear Dear you are not very good at the trolling
    Indeed not. Trolls tend not to use facts.
    You really are trying to be seen as dimmer than Scott
    Who is that?

    You seem to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that 11 months ago, you lost. Why is that?
    Popcorn and Fat Free Blackpudding time
    Fat free black pudding?
    Arrow Farm Worksop make it.

    Only ingredients are Pigs Blood Salt Pepper and

    Instead of Pigs fat they use potato and onion.

    So the man on the butchers counter said when i asked if it was a joke.

    I did check Worksop hadnt designated 23rd August as April Fools day
    You eat some strange stuff up north.
    Now in London we eat real grub - Pie & Mash . . . with liquor.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    You do seem to be fixated on this factoid, repeating it even when it is irrelevant.
    Surely the public's views should be the most relevant factor of all, but anyway that is up to Labour
    Let's look at the inferred "make no difference/don't know" numbers, shall we?

    Corbyn 48
    Burnham 67
    Cooper 67
    Kendall 72

    Given the scale of Labour's defeat in May, "make no difference" really isn't any better than "making things worse".
    'Make things no different' would not include anyone who would potentially switch their vote for or away from a candidate so is really not relevant in terms of the net impact of a candidate on Labour's voteshare
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
    Yes, but 'none of the above' is not a candidate is it. As I said Alan Johnson or David Miliband poll better than all of them but neither of them are running so Labour has to go with what it has
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Well before today started I would have offered you 1million/1 on me buying fat free Blackpudding in the ensuing 24hrs, but I have.

    A bit dry I would think. The fat melts while cooking to both give flavour and lubrication to the black pudding. Missing out the fat is the problem with vege-burgers for a similar reason.
  • HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098
    Disraeli said:

    malcolmg said:

    malcolmg said:

    Dair said:

    kle4 said:


    It's their reason for existence, they cannot accept it if it goes against.

    Agreed, but since the SNP has conceded that they can't call a legitimate referendum and that only HMG can do that, why would HMG permit a second referendum when the SNP has proven that it can't accept Scots' democratic decision?
    The problem for Loyalists is that the decision was not clear and the actual argument was fundamentally lost (perhaps forever) by the Loyalists.
    Assuming by "Loyalists" you mean "Unionists", this is risible. The No camp won by 10 percentage points: a decisive margin.

    You lost. Accept the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland and move on.

    Dear Dear you are not very good at the trolling
    Indeed not. Trolls tend not to use facts.
    You really are trying to be seen as dimmer than Scott
    Who is that?

    You seem to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that 11 months ago, you lost. Why is that?
    Popcorn and Fat Free Blackpudding time
    Fat free black pudding?
    Arrow Farm Worksop make it.

    Only ingredients are Pigs Blood Salt Pepper and

    Instead of Pigs fat they use potato and onion.

    So the man on the butchers counter said when i asked if it was a joke.

    I did check Worksop hadnt designated 23rd August as April Fools day
    You eat some strange stuff up north.
    Now in London we eat real grub - Pie & Mash . . . with liquor.
    And eels, Mr. Disraeli, don't forget the stewed eels. Also the pie has to be served upside down and with vinegar.
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106

    Good evening, comrades.

    Don't forget to read my post-race wittering here:
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/belgium-post-race-analysis.html

    Thank You Mr Dancer. You showed admirable restraint when you wrote:
    "Bottas’ race was compromised by the spectacle of his team managing to fit three soft and one medium tyres to his car (sets must be uniform) and earning him a drive-through penalty."
    I would have let fly with rather more colourful language!
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
    Yes, but 'none of the above' is not a candidate is it. As I said Alan Johnson or David Miliband poll better than all of them but neither of them are running so Labour has to go with what it has
    The point is that the differences between the candidates are too small to be a reliable test of what will happen in 5 years time and thus certainly too small to be worth using as a reason to vote for one candidate over another.

    I've got lots of things I will consider before I vote in a couple of weeks. Polling ain't going to be one of them.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,773
    Disraeli said:

    malcolmg said:

    malcolmg said:

    Dair said:

    kle4 said:


    It's their reason for existence, they cannot accept it if it goes against.

    Agreed, but since the SNP has conceded that they can't call a legitimate referendum and that only HMG can do that, why would HMG permit a second referendum when the SNP has proven that it can't accept Scots' democratic decision?
    The problem for Loyalists is that the decision was not clear and the actual argument was fundamentally lost (perhaps forever) by the Loyalists.
    Assuming by "Loyalists" you mean "Unionists", this is risible. The No camp won by 10 percentage points: a decisive margin.

    You lost. Accept the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland and move on.

    Dear Dear you are not very good at the trolling
    Indeed not. Trolls tend not to use facts.
    You really are trying to be seen as dimmer than Scott
    Who is that?

    You seem to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that 11 months ago, you lost. Why is that?
    Popcorn and Fat Free Blackpudding time
    Fat free black pudding?
    Arrow Farm Worksop make it.

    Only ingredients are Pigs Blood Salt Pepper and

    Instead of Pigs fat they use potato and onion.

    So the man on the butchers counter said when i asked if it was a joke.

    I did check Worksop hadnt designated 23rd August as April Fools day
    You eat some strange stuff up north.
    Now in London we eat real grub - Pie & Mash . . . with liquor.
    GRAVY!!!
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Disraeli, np.

    I'm a model of self-restraint. [I also try to be neutral when it comes to F1 so I don't bet based on my own preferences].

    It was a very odd mistake to make. One suspects someone's getting a demotion.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,874
    JEO said:

    JEO said:

    isam said:
    This sounds like a classic case of the last post. What are the chances the BBC would cover such a revelation? 0.1%?
    What revelation?
    That the Sunday Times is reporting Downing Street feels they can't run a referendum campaign on what is 'actually' being renegotiated, and they will have to heavily spin it.

    I have high hopes for a substantial renegotiation, but if we get nothing and the party leadership tries to lie to the public to get a vote won, I will be furious.
    There's no serious renegotiation. It's a decision between the EU as it is now, plus ever-closer union, or against it.

    If you like the EU, you vote Yes. If you don't, you vote No.
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    Disraeli said:

    Good evening, comrades.

    Don't forget to read my post-race wittering here:
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/belgium-post-race-analysis.html

    Thank You Mr Dancer. You showed admirable restraint when you wrote:
    "Bottas’ race was compromised by the spectacle of his team managing to fit three soft and one medium tyres to his car (sets must be uniform) and earning him a drive-through penalty."
    I would have let fly with rather more colourful language!
    They didn't make him change to a uniform set?
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Ministers back use of force to get migrant fingerprints: Home Office agrees 'coercion' can be used by border officials

    Growing numbers of migrants have been refusing in Greece and Italy
    It means migrants could be sent back to home countries if they refuse
    Coercion should not be used against pregnant women or children


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3207490/Ministers-use-force-migrant-fingerprints-Home-Office-agrees-coercion-used-border-officials.html#ixzz3jfQuPQ00
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,773

    Disraeli said:

    Good evening, comrades.

    Don't forget to read my post-race wittering here:
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/belgium-post-race-analysis.html

    Thank You Mr Dancer. You showed admirable restraint when you wrote:
    "Bottas’ race was compromised by the spectacle of his team managing to fit three soft and one medium tyres to his car (sets must be uniform) and earning him a drive-through penalty."
    I would have let fly with rather more colourful language!
    They didn't make him change to a uniform set?
    They would have under Max Moseley!!!
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    edited 2015 23
    Mr. Quidder, oddly, no. He did later, but that was voluntary.

    Strange mistake, it seems like one you'd have to go to a lot of effort to make (not unlike brutally stabbing yourself in the stomach whilst shaving).

    Edited extra bit: sehr gut, Herr Eulen :)
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,236
    Plato said:

    I can't recall who used the One Direction analogy, but it was very good. If you were asked to name the band member you liked the most, you'd probably name the only one who's most well known - Kayne? Zayne?

    I've no idea - but that's about the level of this polling.

    We should give @HYUFD a break - it's a bromance :love:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    Yes, so you keep saying ... But I don't really think when it comes to it that there will be a groundswell of enthusiasm for a flip-flopping continuity Ed Miliband with a Northern accent in 2020.
    I fear that might have been me. Sorry ... :)
  • MattWMattW Posts: 24,761
    edited 2015 23

    MattW said:

    It's only a fortnight since he published an email and defended himself on the basis that it was like a blog comment so he had a right to publish it under copyright law.

    http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2015/08/05/putting-the-record-straight-on-peoples-qe/comment-page-1/#comment-730870

    LOL, that's a hilarious sequence of retreats which he (unsuccessfully) tries to cover up by bluster!
    Murphy is a goop. For the last 8 years I have had a right to publish correspondence about my blog on the about page as a condition "unless privacy agreed first" as a trap should any lawyers send me nasty letters. It works, even though it might not ultimately stand up. What he wants is easy, but he didn't bother.

    ISTM that not having a mental map of your own areas of ignorance is quite dangerous to credibility.

    Earlier I compared RM to a Punch and Judy show, but perhaps this is better. Had forgotten Roobarb and Custard and the mad inventions in the shed. Skip to 2:29.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3BnN8zjK90&t=2m29s


  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
    Yes, but 'none of the above' is not a candidate is it. As I said Alan Johnson or David Miliband poll better than all of them but neither of them are running so Labour has to go with what it has
    The point is that the differences between the candidates are too small to be a reliable test of what will happen in 5 years time and thus certainly too small to be worth using as a reason to vote for one candidate over another.

    I've got lots of things I will consider before I vote in a couple of weeks. Polling ain't going to be one of them.
    The 'differences between the candidates are too small'?? There is a Pacific Ocean sized difference between Kendall on one side and Corbyn on the other. If Labour refuse to listen to polling of the public as they did in 2010 when they ignored the polling showing David Miliband preferred to Ed then do not be surprised if the voters refuse to listen back!
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,372

    Well before today started I would have offered you 1million/1 on me buying fat free Blackpudding in the ensuing 24hrs, but I have.

    A bit dry I would think. The fat melts while cooking to both give flavour and lubrication to the black pudding. Missing out the fat is the problem with vege-burgers for a similar reason.
    I like the sort of black pudding that has cubes of pork fat in it

  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
  • notmenotme Posts: 3,293

    malcolmg said:

    malcolmg said:

    Dair said:

    kle4 said:


    It's their reason for existence, they cannot accept it if it goes against.

    Agreed, but since the SNP has conceded that they can't call a legitimate referendum and that only HMG can do that, why would HMG permit a second referendum when the SNP has proven that it can't accept Scots' democratic decision?
    The problem for Loyalists is that the decision was not clear and the actual argument was fundamentally lost (perhaps forever) by the Loyalists.
    Assuming by "Loyalists" you mean "Unionists", this is risible. The No camp won by 10 percentage points: a decisive margin.

    You lost. Accept the democratic verdict of the people of Scotland and move on.

    Dear Dear you are not very good at the trolling
    Indeed not. Trolls tend not to use facts.
    You really are trying to be seen as dimmer than Scott
    Who is that?

    You seem to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that 11 months ago, you lost. Why is that?
    Popcorn and Fat Free Blackpudding time
    Fat free black pudding?
    Arrow Farm Worksop make it.

    Only ingredients are Pigs Blood Salt Pepper and

    Instead of Pigs fat they use potato and onion.

    So the man on the butchers counter said when i asked if it was a joke.

    I did check Worksop hadnt designated 23rd August as April Fools day
    Bury's gluten free black pudding is fat free and excellent.
    http://www.buryblackpuddings.co.uk/catalogue.php?cat=8
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,047
    I must say I like this piece about a Corbyn rally from the other day - even though I'm the sort of person who enjoys politics, I think it's right to say 'Ordinary voters don’t want to hear angry songs about ‘bastards’ and magic tricks about QE'. What a strange bunch.

    Though I did like the gag about the SW and Tories being like rats as you are never more than 10ft from one.

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2015/08/evening-cult-corbyn-islington/
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,598
    edited 2015 23
    Sean_F said:

    JEO said:

    JEO said:

    isam said:
    This sounds like a classic case of the last post. What are the chances the BBC would cover such a revelation? 0.1%?
    What revelation?
    That the Sunday Times is reporting Downing Street feels they can't run a referendum campaign on what is 'actually' being renegotiated, and they will have to heavily spin it.

    I have high hopes for a substantial renegotiation, but if we get nothing and the party leadership tries to lie to the public to get a vote won, I will be furious.
    There's no serious renegotiation. It's a decision between the EU as it is now, plus ever-closer union, or against it.

    If you like the EU, you vote Yes. If you don't, you vote No.
    We agree. It's an odd report, though. Who in Downing Street has a conceivable interest in saying that their renegotiation is hopeless and they are going to have to deploy lots of spin? I'm no fan of Cameron's, but it does sound like an enemy in the camp.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,693
    Sean_F said:

    JEO said:

    JEO said:

    isam said:
    This sounds like a classic case of the last post. What are the chances the BBC would cover such a revelation? 0.1%?
    What revelation?
    That the Sunday Times is reporting Downing Street feels they can't run a referendum campaign on what is 'actually' being renegotiated, and they will have to heavily spin it.

    I have high hopes for a substantial renegotiation, but if we get nothing and the party leadership tries to lie to the public to get a vote won, I will be furious.
    There's no serious renegotiation. It's a decision between the EU as it is now, plus ever-closer union, or against it.

    If you like the EU, you vote Yes. If you don't, you vote No.
    Pretty much agree with this. Germany/France/almost anyone else in the EU do not want to dismantle integration that has already been done, to make life easier for the awkwardest member of the bunch.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
    Yes, but 'none of the above' is not a candidate is it. As I said Alan Johnson or David Miliband poll better than all of them but neither of them are running so Labour has to go with what it has
    The point is that the differences between the candidates are too small to be a reliable test of what will happen in 5 years time and thus certainly too small to be worth using as a reason to vote for one candidate over another.

    I've got lots of things I will consider before I vote in a couple of weeks. Polling ain't going to be one of them.
    The 'differences between the candidates are too small'?? There is a Pacific Ocean sized difference between Kendall on one side and Corbyn on the other. If Labour refuse to listen to polling of the public as they did in 2010 when they ignored the polling showing David Miliband preferred to Ed then do not be surprised if the voters refuse to listen back!
    Is there polling evidence that Liz Kendall is preferred by the public ? Do they know her ?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    I actually said earlier that Kinnock was a better leader than Miliband having increased Labour's share of the vote from 27% in 1983 to 34% in his final election in 1992.

    It was Brown who ultimately left Labour in its dire state in terms of both seat losses and loss of voteshare, Miliband simply failed to make much improvement on it.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,236
    I wonder what Karen Danczuk'll come out with next?

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3206844/Karen-Danczuk-reveals-bisexual.html

    Karen Danczuk: I'm Margaret Thatcher's secret love-child with Shergar and Uncle Bulgaria
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    Sean_F said:

    JEO said:

    JEO said:

    isam said:
    This sounds like a classic case of the last post. What are the chances the BBC would cover such a revelation? 0.1%?
    What revelation?
    That the Sunday Times is reporting Downing Street feels they can't run a referendum campaign on what is 'actually' being renegotiated, and they will have to heavily spin it.

    I have high hopes for a substantial renegotiation, but if we get nothing and the party leadership tries to lie to the public to get a vote won, I will be furious.
    There's no serious renegotiation. It's a decision between the EU as it is now, plus ever-closer union, or against it.

    If you like the EU, you vote Yes. If you don't, you vote No.
    What renegotiation ? OK, we can still call a pint, a pint !

    No one is leaving the EU.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    The next act was Ian Salville, the so-called ‘socialist magician’. His act consisted of two main tricks/jokes, one about quantitative easing and money disappearing (it was not particularly amusing). The other was about press smears: he ripped up a copy of the Guardian and reassembled it to read ‘vote Corbyn’ — probably the high point of his set.
    kle4 said:

    I must say I like this piece about a Corbyn rally from the other day - even though I'm the sort of person who enjoys politics, I think it's right to say 'Ordinary voters don’t want to hear angry songs about ‘bastards’ and magic tricks about QE'. What a strange bunch.

    Though I did like the gag about the SW and Tories being like rats as you are never more than 10ft from one.

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2015/08/evening-cult-corbyn-islington/

  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106

    GRAVY!!!

    Has to be liquor. Mr Owls. :wink:

    A generation ago I'd visit good pie & mash shop round the corner from the Old Vic.
    Bright green liquor and served on a plate with so many cracks that it looked like a road atlas of Great Britain.
  • notmenotme Posts: 3,293
    Plato said:

    Ministers back use of force to get migrant fingerprints: Home Office agrees 'coercion' can be used by border officials

    Growing numbers of migrants have been refusing in Greece and Italy
    It means migrants could be sent back to home countries if they refuse
    Coercion should not be used against pregnant women or children


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3207490/Ministers-use-force-migrant-fingerprints-Home-Office-agrees-coercion-used-border-officials.html#ixzz3jfQuPQ00
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
    If they refuse the finger print, and they automatically a 'chancer'?
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,958
    calum said:

    Having just effectively deselected their only female MSP, Alison McIness, by LibDem members in her region placing her 2nd on the list, Willie Rennie has announced a review of how to ensure a better gender balance.

    http://www.libdemvoice.org/willie-rennie-backs-all-women-shortlists-47231.html#utm_source=tweet&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=twitter

    The Scottish LibDems along with Scottish Labour seem to have determined that banging on about a better gender balance in Holyrood etc, is somehow going to transform their fortunes in Scotland. This says it all about the state of these parties as Scotland has many problems, but with a female FM + 3 out of 5 female party leaders + gender balanced cabinets and opposition front bench - gender balance seems one area where these parties are wasting their time.

    There are currently 5 LibDem MSPs, what are the odds that they will lose 4?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Jeremy Corbyn has been interviewed by the FT:

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a7aecc40-4976-11e5-9b5d-89a026fda5c9.html#axzz3jf3yQKMH

    It's a great interview:

    "He says “my doors are always open” to big businesses but adds: “They’ve none of them been in touch yet.” "

    "As for the migrant crisis in Calais and the rest of Europe, Mr Corbyn downplays the idea that Britain is struggling with uncontrollable immigration. “An awful lot of British people also go and live elsewhere and there is huge migration out of as well as into this country. It is time we recognised the huge contribution that migration has made to the economic growth of this country.”

    Migration, he adds, is a “global phenomenon”, while non-EU immigration into the UK “is mainly family reunion issues”, he claims. He calls the rules on minimum salaries for people who want to come into the country “arbitrary” and “extremely unfair”."

    "Mr Corbyn said he had been holding discussions about whether Britain should quit Nato. “I think Nato is a cold war product; it historically should have shut up shop in 1990 along with the Warsaw Pact,” he says. “It seems to have given itself in 2006 a global role and now is very busy expanding eastward.”

    He calls for the UK to improve its relationship with the Russian government of Vladimir Putin, so that the countries can work together to try to demilitarise both sides of the border with Ukraine. “The onus is on both sides to make that happen,” he says. “I do feel nervous about this [Nato] expansion eastward and the consequent militarisation of Russia.” "

    There's lots more.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Surbiton, the EU is like the Macedonian Empire of Perdiccas.

    Well, it's doomed to disintegrate. It's not crammed full of heroic, ingenious Diadochi, obviously.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,704

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    I actually said earlier that Kinnock was a better leader than Miliband having increased Labour's share of the vote from 27% in 1983 to 34% in his final election in 1992.

    It was Brown who ultimately left Labour in its dire state in terms of both seat losses and loss of voteshare, Miliband simply failed to make much improvement on it.
    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Please tell me Keely is employed by the BBC not the Met Office

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9h0a_zzl9Yc

    She gorgeous ;-) makes you wait until the end of look north for the weather.
    A hopeless presenter though. She just constantly looks at the camera in that clip, and shows no interest in what she's presenting.

    As an aside, my mother's mentioned to both Mrs J and an ex that she saw Carol Kirkwood as the 'perfect' daughter-in-law material. I'm not quite sure what they were meant to make of that admission, or the delightful's lady's husband, for that matter.
    She is separated/divorced and has a new boyfriend.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135
    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    I don't think anyone was suggesting Ed take a class of rowdy 14 year olds in a typical comp, but I believe he has previously lectured at Harvard and his father was an academic at the LSE not quite the same context
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135
    surbiton said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Freggles said:

    Have just used my £3 affiliate membership to cast my votes thus

    Leader: 1) Kendall; 2) Cooper

    Deputy: 1) Creasy; 2) Bradshaw; 3) Flint; 4) Eagle

    Mayoral candidate: 1) Jowell; 2) Lammy; 3) Wolmer; 4) Thomas; 5) Khan

    Nice one.
    What happens if the final round is Burnham v Corbyn, which still just about looks most likely if Corbyn does not win in round 1? You have not used your final 2 votes so will have no say
    Up until last week I was going to put Burnham as 3. But frankly, I've come to the conclusion that he wouldn't be any better than Corbyn (who will of course be an utter disaster).
    Well you may not think so, but polls have Burnham the highest rated amongst the public of the 4, anyway that is up to you
    He may well have once upon a time but do we have any such survey from after Burnham started jumping on that day's bandwagon....
    Yes, Comres last week had Burnham on +5%, Cooper on -3%, Kendall on -6% and Corbyn on -10%
    http://www.itv.com/news/2015-08-16/poll-finds-corbyn-is-labours-best-and-worst-election-hope/
    Hmm, this isn't even asking "what would you do" but "what do you think other people will do".
    Burnham also led with yougov, Mori and ORB, it has been consistent
    "Led" by a tiny amount, perhaps. "None of the above" beats all of them.
    Yes, but 'none of the above' is not a candidate is it. As I said Alan Johnson or David Miliband poll better than all of them but neither of them are running so Labour has to go with what it has
    The point is that the differences between the candidates are too small to be a reliable test of what will happen in 5 years time and thus certainly too small to be worth using as a reason to vote for one candidate over another.

    I've got lots of things I will consider before I vote in a couple of weeks. Polling ain't going to be one of them.
    The 'differences between the candidates are too small'??
    Is there polling evidence that Liz Kendall is preferred by the public ? Do they know her ?
    There is no polling evidence Kendall is especially popular, certainly compared to Alan Johnson, I was looking more at the philosophical differences
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Whilst Burnham, Kendall and Cooper-Balls have been absolutely useless at challenging Corbyn, then the MSM have hardly covered themselves in glory. I can well believe they want Corbyn to win because of all the endless headlines.

    Personally, I'm beyond bored with the whole Labour leadership contest. It's a complete and utter shambles.

    On another note, whoever raised the Union Jack at the Iranian embassy, should have practised more, as it was a pretty tawdry effort!

    And in the BirdsNest it was raised upside down for Mo Farahs gold medal ceremony,
    I hope the person who was raising the flag had been properly tested !
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,236
    surbiton said:

    Please tell me Keely is employed by the BBC not the Met Office

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9h0a_zzl9Yc

    She gorgeous ;-) makes you wait until the end of look north for the weather.
    A hopeless presenter though. She just constantly looks at the camera in that clip, and shows no interest in what she's presenting.

    As an aside, my mother's mentioned to both Mrs J and an ex that she saw Carol Kirkwood as the 'perfect' daughter-in-law material. I'm not quite sure what they were meant to make of that admission, or the delightful's lady's husband, for that matter.
    She is separated/divorced and has a new boyfriend.
    I know, but she wasn't when the conversations took place. Not even my mum's crass enough to say something like that to my wife. Before we were married: yes. After: no. :)
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,773
    Keely is married but her wedding ring has now disappeared

    https://www.facebook.com/KeeleyDonovanishot

    Doesnt this facebook account amount to stalking though?
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    Well I am a university student, tbf.

    I think Miliband is useless at politics - that doesn't mean he's useless at everything!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    I actually said earlier that Kinnock was a better leader than Miliband having increased Labour's share of the vote from 27% in 1983 to 34% in his final election in 1992.

    It was Brown who ultimately left Labour in its dire state in terms of both seat losses and loss of voteshare, Miliband simply failed to make much improvement on it.
    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.
    Not bad? Brown lost 91 seats and over 6% of the vote since 2005, he took Labour from its most electorally successful period in its history to its second lowest share of the vote since 1918. Post indyref even Brown would probably have lost Scotland, he was lucky he left office before it occurred
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    I actually said earlier that Kinnock was a better leader than Miliband having increased Labour's share of the vote from 27% in 1983 to 34% in his final election in 1992.

    It was Brown who ultimately left Labour in its dire state in terms of both seat losses and loss of voteshare, Miliband simply failed to make much improvement on it.
    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.
    Miliband did not lose Scotland. Events did. As for the Lib Dem losing 27 seats to the Tories, you would have to go back many years when a Clegg joined the Liberal party. There could have been no better Tory destroying a great party from within.
  • philiphphiliph Posts: 4,704
    HYUFD said:

    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    I don't think anyone was suggesting Ed take a class of rowdy 14 year olds in a typical comp, but I believe he has previously lectured at Harvard and his father was an academic at the LSE not quite the same context
    I see no evidence that he is suited to that role either.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Ms. Apocalypse, I think he'd make a killing as a dungeon master [or player] for celebrity/charity Dungeons & Dragons matches. [Other tabletop RPGs are available].
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,640
    edited 2015 23

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135
    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    I don't think anyone was suggesting Ed take a class of rowdy 14 year olds in a typical comp, but I believe he has previously lectured at Harvard and his father was an academic at the LSE not quite the same context
    I see no evidence that he is suited to that role either.
    Well I suppose his best role would be Wallace in a live action show of 'Wallace and Gromit' but he may need to wait for that to arrive on the West End!
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,874

    I wonder what Karen Danczuk'll come out with next?

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3206844/Karen-Danczuk-reveals-bisexual.html

    Karen Danczuk: I'm Margaret Thatcher's secret love-child with Shergar and Uncle Bulgaria

    I think there must be a statutory requirement for minor female celebrities to be bisexual
  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 758

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!

    But he lost the votes:seats ratio advantage.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,640
    Monkeys said:

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!

    But he lost the votes:seats ratio advantage.
    Bourgeois Hearsay from Monkeys!
  • MonkeysMonkeys Posts: 758
    edited 2015 23

    Monkeys said:

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!

    But he lost the votes:seats ratio advantage.
    Bourgeois Hearsay from Monkeys!
    Comrade Sunil, Labours failure to have a credible leader in the last election meant that they were unable to provide sensible Labour policies that the glorious proletariat need, such as:

    A Banker's bonus tax
    Controls on Immigration
    and a tax on sugar to tackle obesity.

    You must accept realpolitik so that Labour can lead us towards this glorious future in 2020.
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903
    surbiton said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    ...
    I actually said earlier that Kinnock was a better leader than Miliband having increased Labour's share of the vote from 27% in 1983 to 34% in his final election in 1992.

    It was Brown who ultimately left Labour in its dire state in terms of both seat losses and loss of voteshare, Miliband simply failed to make much improvement on it.
    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.
    Miliband did not lose Scotland. Events did. As for the Lib Dem losing 27 seats to the Tories, you would have to go back many years when a Clegg joined the Liberal party. There could have been no better Tory destroying a great party from within.
    Everything bad thats happened to the UK and Labour is down to Brown. Its the no1 rule of post 1983 politics.
    Under Brown labour lost 97 seats. When did they last lose more at a single election. In particular Scotland is entirely Browns fault - even allowing for the inevitable rise of the SNP following botched devolution. Brown did nothing about Scottish Labour.
    Since 1997 Labour have lost seats consistently. 186 of them.
  • calumcalum Posts: 3,046
    edited 2015 23

    calum said:

    Having just effectively deselected their only female MSP, Alison McIness, by LibDem members in her region placing her 2nd on the list, Willie Rennie has announced a review of how to ensure a better gender balance.

    http://www.libdemvoice.org/willie-rennie-backs-all-women-shortlists-47231.html#utm_source=tweet&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=twitter

    The Scottish LibDems along with Scottish Labour seem to have determined that banging on about a better gender balance in Holyrood etc, is somehow going to transform their fortunes in Scotland. This says it all about the state of these parties as Scotland has many problems, but with a female FM + 3 out of 5 female party leaders + gender balanced cabinets and opposition front bench - gender balance seems one area where these parties are wasting their time.

    There are currently 5 LibDem MSPs, what are the odds that they will lose 4?
    Based on current polling the LibDems would hold 2 out of 5 seats, that said their support levels are nearing potential extinction and they'll be scrabbling for list seats with the Greens and possibly Solidarity. The top article on LibDem Voice this week was on how to beat the SNP:

    http://www.libdemvoice.org/how-to-beat-the-snp-47177.html

    By referring to the SNP and it's 60% support base as the "Borg" isn't going to get them very far. The Scottish LibDems are now officially "Klingons on the Starboard Bow" .
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    F1: just watching Ted's Notebook on the Sky F1 site, and Nasr had brake problems from lap 3 onwards. Good to get 11th, given that.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Just been watching an episode of Portillo's State Secrets and he's got a copy of the draft Queen's speech should WW3 break out - dated 1983.

    That really puts into perspective how hot the subject was back then!
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    I'd read elsewhere that Pirelli gave a 40 lap wear guide for the medium to Ferrari, Ted Kravitz appears to confirm that.

    Given it failed after about 29 laps, annoyance/anger is understandable.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,640
    Plato said:

    Just been watching an episode of Portillo's State Secrets and he's got a copy of the draft Queen's speech should WW3 break out - dated 1983.

    That really puts into perspective how hot the subject was back then!

    I'm watching Portillo do the railway lines between Snowdon and Holyhead :)
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    @ Sunil and other pb railway enthusiasts

    2100 tommorow on bbc2 "the worlds busiest railway" exploring the commuters of Mumbai.

    Sounds good!
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Plato said:

    Just been watching an episode of Portillo's State Secrets and he's got a copy of the draft Queen's speech should WW3 break out - dated 1983.

    That really puts into perspective how hot the subject was back then!

    The threat of a nutter on a train with an AK47 is nothing compared to nuclear oblivion at the flick of a swich. It was a great achievement bringing down the iron curtain and joining the former sattelite states into the EU and NATO.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited 2015 23
    Really enjoying Agatha Christie's Partners In Crime on BBC1 starring David Walliams and Jessica Raine, even though Jessica Raine isn't quite believable as a 1950s woman.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    HYUFD said:

    Not bad? Brown lost 91 seats and over 6% of the vote since 2005, he took Labour from its most electorally successful period in its history to its second lowest share of the vote since 1918. Post indyref even Brown would probably have lost Scotland, he was lucky he left office before it occurred

    I said 'not bad' for a losing party!

    On vote-share - as I said before vote share doesn't really matter; it's seat share which matters in FPTP.
    On losing Scotland - would Brown have been dumb enough to share a 'Better Together Platform' with the Tories? I think not.

    @surbiton So Ed Miliband was a completely powerless leader? The fact is, is that the loss of Scotland happened under his leadership, and therefore he has to assume some responsibility for it.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,640
    Now I'm watching Portillo's travels in Newcastle

    (The "Yesterday" channel)
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,640

    @ Sunil and other pb railway enthusiasts

    2100 tommorow on bbc2 "the worlds busiest railway" exploring the commuters of Mumbai.

    Sounds good!


    "Super Maximum Crush Density!" :open_mouth:
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    antifrank said:

    Jeremy Corbyn has been interviewed by the FT:

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a7aecc40-4976-11e5-9b5d-89a026fda5c9.html#axzz3jf3yQKMH

    It's a great interview:

    "He says “my doors are always open” to big businesses but adds: “They’ve none of them been in touch yet.” "

    "As for the migrant crisis in Calais and the rest of Europe, Mr Corbyn downplays the idea that Britain is struggling with uncontrollable immigration. “An awful lot of British people also go and live elsewhere and there is huge migration out of as well as into this country. It is time we recognised the huge contribution that migration has made to the economic growth of this country.”

    Migration, he adds, is a “global phenomenon”, while non-EU immigration into the UK “is mainly family reunion issues”, he claims. He calls the rules on minimum salaries for people who want to come into the country “arbitrary” and “extremely unfair”."

    "Mr Corbyn said he had been holding discussions about whether Britain should quit Nato. “I think Nato is a cold war product; it historically should have shut up shop in 1990 along with the Warsaw Pact,” he says. “It seems to have given itself in 2006 a global role and now is very busy expanding eastward.”

    He calls for the UK to improve its relationship with the Russian government of Vladimir Putin, so that the countries can work together to try to demilitarise both sides of the border with Ukraine. “The onus is on both sides to make that happen,” he says. “I do feel nervous about this [Nato] expansion eastward and the consequent militarisation of Russia.” "

    There's lots more.

    My god, reading some of that may cause a few people to revise their view on how low the Labour vote could fall! He might be lucky to get 15%! UKIP will have a field day!

    More generally, the whole thing just sounds like a set of random musings based on about 5 minutes thought. He'll fall apart under any basic questioning of detail, and i doubt that many Labour MPs will be prepared to go around TV studios defending any of it!
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903
    AndyJS said:

    Really enjoying Agatha Christie's Partners In Crime on BBC1 starring David Walliams and Jessica Raine, even though Jessica Raine isn't quite believable as a 1950s woman.

    None of it is believable, but that does not stop it being enjoyable.
    I suppose apart from having fun (or making judgements?) with the social manners and mores of the time, the 50's avoids the problems of interweb and mobile phones and other impediments to crime solving.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,548
    calum said:

    calum said:

    Having just effectively deselected their only female MSP, Alison McIness, by LibDem members in her region placing her 2nd on the list, Willie Rennie has announced a review of how to ensure a better gender balance.

    http://www.libdemvoice.org/willie-rennie-backs-all-women-shortlists-47231.html#utm_source=tweet&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=twitter

    The Scottish LibDems along with Scottish Labour seem to have determined that banging on about a better gender balance in Holyrood etc, is somehow going to transform their fortunes in Scotland. This says it all about the state of these parties as Scotland has many problems, but with a female FM + 3 out of 5 female party leaders + gender balanced cabinets and opposition front bench - gender balance seems one area where these parties are wasting their time.

    There are currently 5 LibDem MSPs, what are the odds that they will lose 4?
    Based on current polling the LibDems would hold 2 out of 5 seats, that said their support levels are nearing potential extinction and they'll be scrabbling for list seats with the Greens and possibly Solidarity. The top article on LibDem Voice this week was on how to beat the SNP:

    http://www.libdemvoice.org/how-to-beat-the-snp-47177.html

    By referring to the SNP and it's 60% support base as the "Borg" isn't going to get them very far. The Scottish LibDems are now officially "Klingons on the Starboard Bow" .
    I'd always assumed that the one golden rule of democratic politics is that regardless of one's opinion of the opposition parties, always wind your neck in when it comes to the people that vote for them; they might have voted for you in the past and they might again one day. The Unionist parties, egged on by their media buddies, seem to prefer to indulge in slagging off voters as mad, out of their senses, cultists or the Borg.

    Long may it continue..
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    Noooooo!!

    One Direction are going on hiatus.
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903
    AndyJS said:

    Really enjoying Agatha Christie's Partners In Crime on BBC1 starring David Walliams and Jessica Raine, even though Jessica Raine isn't quite believable as a 1950s woman.

    PS - I wonder where the tunnels were filmed?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,135

    HYUFD said:

    Not bad? Brown lost 91 seats and over 6% of the vote since 2005, he took Labour from its most electorally successful period in its history to its second lowest share of the vote since 1918. Post indyref even Brown would probably have lost Scotland, he was lucky he left office before it occurred

    I said 'not bad' for a losing party!

    On vote-share - as I said before vote share doesn't really matter; it's seat share which matters in FPTP.
    On losing Scotland - would Brown have been dumb enough to share a 'Better Together Platform' with the Tories? I think not.

    @surbiton So Ed Miliband was a completely powerless leader? The fact is, is that the loss of Scotland happened under his leadership, and therefore he has to assume some responsibility for it.
    Even on seat share Brown lost 91 seats, Miliband lost only 26 and actually gained seats in England.

    Brown made major speeches for 'Better Together' and I never once saw Ed Miliband share a platform with the Tories either
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    AndyJS said:

    Really enjoying Agatha Christie's Partners In Crime on BBC1 starring David Walliams and Jessica Raine, even though Jessica Raine isn't quite believable as a 1950s woman.

    PS - I wonder where the tunnels were filmed?
    On a general note - it's great how we have preserved so much that we CAN still film programmes set in the 1950s or earlier and use recognisable landmarks, authentic looking houses, etc.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903

    Plato said:

    Just been watching an episode of Portillo's State Secrets and he's got a copy of the draft Queen's speech should WW3 break out - dated 1983.

    That really puts into perspective how hot the subject was back then!

    The threat of a nutter on a train with an AK47 is nothing compared to nuclear oblivion at the flick of a swich. It was a great achievement bringing down the iron curtain and joining the former sattelite states into the EU and NATO.
    NATO?
    We do not need nato it is an expansive imperialist prosthetic on the corpulent body america. We need to make peace (surrender to) with arch democrat Putin.

    (admittedly I may not have thought like this before falling asleep after finding that funny pod thing in the basement)


  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
    Incidentally, not that i know anything about it, but isn't there a chance that they might start facing challenges about cross-subsidisation across their various platforms? Ultimately what BT sport shows should be paid for by BT sport viewers. There will be plenty of BT phone/broadband users who couldn't give a monkeys what is shown on the sports channel but are paying for it anyway.
  • MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    Noooooo!!

    One Direction are going on hiatus.


    "I hate us"? Finally they get it.

  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    edited 2015 23
    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
    Incidentally, not that i know anything about it, but isn't there a chance that they might start facing challenges about cross-subsidisation across their various platforms? Ultimately what BT sport shows should be paid for by BT sport viewers. There will be plenty of BT phone/broadband users who couldn't give a monkeys what is shown on the sports channel but are paying for it anyway.
    Knowing the telecommunications industry quite well, I know all of BT's rivals want Openreach spun off from BT entirely.

    Quadplay is what is the ultimate aim, their £12 billion purchase of EE is another concern in the industry.
  • PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    edited 2015 23
    Ofcom's rules on cross-sub for BT are very very tight. There's none going on with this. It's about investing to change your business model into content delivery rather than just lines and others making the money from the delivered items

    I used to work with Regulatory Affairs for BT. If it's caught out = it's a 10% fine on its turnover... And I worked for BT's wholesale division that sells services to other network operators and ISPs
    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
    Incidentally, not that i know anything about it, but isn't there a chance that they might start facing challenges about cross-subsidisation across their various platforms? Ultimately what BT sport shows should be paid for by BT sport viewers. There will be plenty of BT phone/broadband users who couldn't give a monkeys what is shown on the sports channel but are paying for it anyway.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    I suppose one other point about BT sport and the Ashes. This is not money going into English cricket. This is money going into Australian cricket. So BT sport are chucking stupid money to bankroll our main cricketing adversary.
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903
    Monkeys said:

    Monkeys said:

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!

    But he lost the votes:seats ratio advantage.
    Bourgeois Hearsay from Monkeys!
    Comrade Sunil, Labours failure to have a credible leader in the last election meant that they were unable to provide sensible Labour policies that the glorious proletariat need, such as:

    A Banker's bonus tax
    Controls on Immigration
    and a tax on sugar to tackle obesity.

    You must accept realpolitik so that Labour can lead us towards this glorious future in 2020.
    The main socialist policy is to burn every copy of Animal Farm.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    edited 2015 23
    antifrank said:

    isam said:

    Is the 1/20 tip in the thread header the shortest ever advised in a PB article?

    The 8/1 on a delay looks quite attractive actually. The Electoral Reform Society wanted the vote to be delayed to allow for the processing of new voters to be carried out:

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/labour-leadership-election-should-delayed-6249001

    The timetable for reviewing new voters looks very tight. I'm not betting on this but if forced at gunpoint that's the way I'd go.
    Seeing as @TheScreamingEagles fancies the 1/20 for a 5% return he might lay you bigger than 8/1? Maybe you and he could meet in the middle...
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    There is much comment on the quality, or lack of it, of all of the candidates for Labour leader. I cannot recall anyone saying voters (even those who have paid for the privilege) are spoilt for choice in terms of quality. There is quality within PLP (not a lot I grant you) but none want to have a go this time and all have convenient non political reasons for their shyness. All politicians will tell you (some with fingers crossed) that they came into politics to change things. To change things you need power i.e. ambition. The ultimate in that game is to be PM and first you need to lead your party, ergo all of those "quality" Labour leadership contenders with any chance of making PM, see this election as a step away from rather than towards power, leaving the field open to the bunch of chancers now on view.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,047

    Noooooo!!

    One Direction are going on hiatus.

    The dream string of events since May finally come to an end?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    Well as suspected the Tory majority has gone up to 36.

    Jeremy Corbyn is still ready to give up Ulster to Ireland if he ever becomes Prime Minister, The Sun can reveal.

    The leftwing MP – odds on to be crowned new Labour boss in 19 days time – confirmed in a recent TV interview that he still believes in a united Ireland.

    Unionists labelled his views as “dangerous” at a time of new instability in Northern Irish politics as it gives Sinn Fein and IRA separatists’ legitimacy

    http://bit.ly/1U8szEH
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    Plato said:

    Ofcom's rules on cross-sub for BT are very very tight. There's none going on with this. It's about investing to change your business model into content delivery rather than just lines and others making the money from the delivered items

    I used to work with Regulatory Affairs for BT. If it's caught out = it's a 10% fine on its turnover... And I worked for BT's wholesale division that sells services to other network operators and ISPs

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
    Incidentally, not that i know anything about it, but isn't there a chance that they might start facing challenges about cross-subsidisation across their various platforms? Ultimately what BT sport shows should be paid for by BT sport viewers. There will be plenty of BT phone/broadband users who couldn't give a monkeys what is shown on the sports channel but are paying for it anyway.
    As a lawyer, I must say I'm intrigued. Why do we stop BT from cross-subsidising? Is it because we give it state support of one description or another in the telecoms field?
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312

    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    Well I am a university student, tbf.

    I think Miliband is useless at politics - that doesn't mean he's useless at everything!
    A mature one if I may say so.
  • flightpath01flightpath01 Posts: 4,903

    Monkeys said:

    Actually, for a losing party 258 seat share isn't that bad. Brown also left Labour with Scotland - which meant, given that Cameron's Tories didn't actually have a majority, Labour were in a far better position to bounce back than the Tories in 1997. That Miliband actually made Labour's position much, much worse - makes him far worse than Brown IMHO.

    Naught but PB Tory Propaganda from Miss Apocalypse!

    Ed's vote share went UP to 30.4% versus only 29.0% for Gordon!

    But he lost the votes:seats ratio advantage.
    Bourgeois Hearsay from Monkeys!
    We will all have to learn how to spell bourgeois soon. But the proletariat will also have to learn about the differences between facts and hearsay.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,266

    There is much comment on the quality, or lack of it, of all of the candidates for Labour leader. I cannot recall anyone saying voters (even those who have paid for the privilege) are spoilt for choice in terms of quality. There is quality within PLP (not a lot I grant you) but none want to have a go this time and all have convenient non political reasons for their shyness. All politicians will tell you (some with fingers crossed) that they came into politics to change things. To change things you need power i.e. ambition. The ultimate in that game is to be PM and first you need to lead your party, ergo all of those "quality" Labour leadership contenders with any chance of making PM, see this election as a step away from rather than towards power, leaving the field open to the bunch of chancers now on view.

    Good post
  • MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    Plato said:

    Ofcom's rules on cross-sub for BT are very very tight. There's none going on with this. It's about investing to change your business model into content delivery rather than just lines and others making the money from the delivered items

    I used to work with Regulatory Affairs for BT. If it's caught out = it's a 10% fine on its turnover... And I worked for BT's wholesale division that sells services to other network operators and ISPs

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    alex. said:

    Blimey and then some

    BT Sport grab 2017-18 Ashes TV rights from rivals Sky Sports in £350m coup

    BT Sport secure rights to Australia home matches for next five years

    Contract is believed to be costing BT Sport around £70m a year

    http://dailym.ai/1EOYjHL

    Absolute madness, on one level Sky must be laughing their socks off. £70m a year for the right to broadcast cricket in the middle of the night? Who is bankrolling this idiocy?

    It is we BT phone and broadband customers who are bankrolling this.
    Prepare for your bills to start going up soon then...
    They already have.

    That said, a few years ago I was paying £45 a month for 1 meg broadband,

    Now for around £65 a month, I'm getting lots of sports channels and 60 meg broadband
    Incidentally, not that i know anything about it, but isn't there a chance that they might start facing challenges about cross-subsidisation across their various platforms? Ultimately what BT sport shows should be paid for by BT sport viewers. There will be plenty of BT phone/broadband users who couldn't give a monkeys what is shown on the sports channel but are paying for it anyway.
    As a lawyer, I must say I'm intrigued. Why do we stop BT from cross-subsidising? Is it because we give it state support of one description or another in the telecoms field?

    Perhaps because BT is a monopoly.

  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    The dark lord has arisen.......

    Peter Mandelson advising EU on stopping British exit
    Exclusive: The former Labour minister is advising Jean-Claude Juncker and his team on their communications strategy

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/eureferendum/11817263/Peter-Mandelson-advising-EU-on-stopping-British-exit.html
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,047

    Well as suspected the Tory majority has gone up to 36.

    Jeremy Corbyn is still ready to give up Ulster to Ireland if he ever becomes Prime Minister, The Sun can reveal.

    The leftwing MP – odds on to be crowned new Labour boss in 19 days time – confirmed in a recent TV interview that he still believes in a united Ireland.

    Unionists labelled his views as “dangerous” at a time of new instability in Northern Irish politics as it gives Sinn Fein and IRA separatists’ legitimacy

    http://bit.ly/1U8szEH

    I see the caption on the photo in that story describes 'former IRA bosses Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness'. Does not Adams still deny ever having been in the IRA and if so, do papers just ignore the denials now (it's not as though it will hurt or help him for such an allegation to be made)?

    My view has always been it makes no real difference either way, given his elevated position (unlike rank and file SF members who can, possibly, conceivably and believably claim not to have been involved in IRA dealings), but some still insist on making the distinction.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,047

    There is much comment on the quality, or lack of it, of all of the candidates for Labour leader. I cannot recall anyone saying voters (even those who have paid for the privilege) are spoilt for choice in terms of quality. There is quality within PLP (not a lot I grant you) but none want to have a go this time and all have convenient non political reasons for their shyness. All politicians will tell you (some with fingers crossed) that they came into politics to change things. To change things you need power i.e. ambition. The ultimate in that game is to be PM and first you need to lead your party, ergo all of those "quality" Labour leadership contenders with any chance of making PM, see this election as a step away from rather than towards power, leaving the field open to the bunch of chancers now on view.

    I assumed Umunna was waiting for next time, as the most likely attack he would have faced would have been youth and inexperience, which would be nullified by a few more year perhaps, although that wouldn't explain why he announced and then pulled out so I guess his reasons for pulling out this time were genuine
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    philiph said:

    HYUFD said:

    Well at the end of the day you can only judge a party leader on their election record, Foot may have been a great orator but he also led Labour to its worst result since 1918 and the defection of prominent figures to the SDP. Brown led the move away from Blairism which led Labour to its present difficulties and did even worse in 2010 than Miliband did in 2015.

    I never said anything about Callaghan, although he was defeated in 1979 he still led Labour to a respectable 36% of the vote

    I don't agree - Kinnock for example never won a GE, but he was a great Labour leader in the sense that he saved the party from the hard left. He also paved the way for New Labour to exist in the first place. Brown despite losing in 2010, lost with 258 seats in a system where seat share matters far more than vote share - it was Miliband who saw make practically no progress on 2010. It doesn't really matter if he improved Labour's vote share by a measley 1% or 2% if it isn't in the right places in order to increase seat share. Brown may have led the move away from Blairism but Labour's biggest issue today is not that they aren't Blairite enough - after all the main Blairite candidate Kendall, is well a bit rubbish tbqf. Brown did also bring back Campbell and Mandelson, and at least knew the importance of having a strong team, and a successful party machine - Miliband brought in Lucy Powell FFS.

    @Omnium Well I agree: Ed Miliband should have an academic rather than a politician.
    Ok, he's useless. Let's give him a job teaching our kids.

    That is unkind to pupils and increases the chances that the perception of the teaching profession sinks.
    Well I am a university student, tbf.

    I think Miliband is useless at politics - that doesn't mean he's useless at everything!
    A mature one if I may say so.
    Nah. Ms Apocalypse is quite young. Anyone old enough to remember Kinnock rather than read about him would not make a case for him as a successful leader. Even me and I voted Labour in 92!
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