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  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
  • isam said:

    Mr. JEO, Turkey under Erdogan is going in a disturbing direction.

    https://twitter.com/nigel_farage/status/656125770016903168
    Why the Conservative Party still sticks to this baffles me.
    Because a wide and shallow Europe has been our objective for decades. If it wasn't for accession the EU might be a single nation by now. It never will be with Turkey as a member. I thought that was one of our goals?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,755
    JEO said:

    taffys said:

    http://blogs.new.spectator.co.uk/2015/10/david-camerons-renegotiation-appears-to-be-underwhelming-his-own-mps/

    Tax credit cuts???? Nah....this is the real time bomb under the tories. And its ticking

    I can only think David Cameron is deliberately softballing our expectations here, to use an American term. The four mentioned so far are either very weak or deliberately vague.:

    - An opt-out from ever closer union. No practical effect at all.
    - A more competitive EU. This sounds like the same gradualist fiddling that we've always had, unless there is something major here, like liberalisation of agriculture.
    - Single market protections. This could mean anything. I suppose this one could be code for the red card system or a double QMV system. That would be big if we get it done properly.
    - An end to abuses of free movement. Again, this is so vague it could mean anything. Previously it has been leaked as a four year ban on benefits, so he probably means that. But the abuse we really need to end is liberal giving out of passports, which is what could really put us in trouble from the current migrant crisis.

    Cameron must surely have something big up his sleeve, because only the total uninformed or the incredibly biased could describe that as a successful negotiation.
    He doesn't have anything up his sleeve IMHO. No.10 is starting to panic.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,980
    Mr. Isam, unsurprising. And bloody stupid.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    I think he means because of Dr Kelly nobody should trust Britain. Or maybe just Labour..
  • richardDoddrichardDodd Posts: 5,472
    75 million Turks..the majority of which are Muslim...just what Europe needs...
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,980
    Mr. Chestnut, Lib Dems in danger of slipping to 5th.

    Well. Assuming the SNP isn't ahead of them already.
  • RobD said:
    Ex-BBC journalist Jacky Sutton, 50, is understood to have been found dead in a toilet at the city's Ataturk airport. The circumstances are unclear.

    She was the acting Iraq director for the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) and had been travelling to Irbil, northern Iraq.


    Irbil is capital of Iraqi Kurdistan.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34567210
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    edited October 2015
    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    How well did Opinium fare in GE voting intention in their last poll before GE2015. Is their methodology the same.. and if not how has it been altered.. Anyone know? cause I can't find the Opinion poll history page before GE 2015,
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
  • 75 million Turks..the majority of which are Muslim...just what Europe needs...

    Turkey has been a rather secular nation since the days of Ataturk nearly a century ago. There are problems with Turkey that are getting worse under Erdogan that make it incompatible with immediate accession but religion is not it.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    On Electoral Calculus's model, on current boundaries that would produce:

    Con 325
    Lab 242
    SNP 57
    Plaid Cymru 4
    Lib Dem 2
    UKIP 1
    Green 1

    Just for fun, of course.

    At what point do we have to start reporting polling numbers with words, like the old teleprinter, eg

    Lib Dem 5% (FIVE PERCENT)
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,980
    Mr. Freggles, we haven't had additional FPTP since that vote, have we?
  • Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    Well that's one way to put it "We’re not your concentration camp, Turkey tells Merkel " http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/europe/article4590250.ece
  • RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    How well did Opinium fare in GE voting intention in their last poll before GE2015. Is their methodology the same.. and if not how has it been altered.. Anyone know? cause I can't find the Opinion poll history page before GE 2015,
    Opinium had the Tories leading in most polls from February onwards, though not on the scale of the final outcome. They are comfortably midtable, perhaps a little higher, in the Pollster Premier League.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,172
    edited October 2015

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    How well did Opinium fare in GE voting intention in their last poll before GE2015. Is their methodology the same.. and if not how has it been altered.. Anyone know? cause I can't find the Opinion poll history page before GE 2015,
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_2015_United_Kingdom_general_election

    Opinium, 5th May 2015:

    Con 35%
    Lab 34%
    LD 8%
    UKIP 12%
    Green 6%
    others 5%
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    I think the majority of polls since 7th May have put UKIP on a higher share than they achieved at the election. So much for them fading into obscurity.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533
    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    Not sure difference of London to Scotland versus Bath, bit closer than Stockholm though.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited October 2015
    AndyJS said:

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    I think the majority of polls since 7th May have put UKIP on a higher share than they achieved at the election. So much for them fading into obscurity.
    If I was to hazard a guess, I'd say they are picking up the section of the Labour vote who disapprovingly think Corbyn is Ed Miliband on steroids, and some who went back to the Tories to keep Labour/SNP out in May.
  • LucyJonesLucyJones Posts: 651

    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    The AV referendum was not so much an endorsement of FPTP as a rejection of AV. Nothing else was on offer.

    Whilst I agree that a victory for "Remain" would be an endorsement of the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes, I don't believe Cameron has it in his power to offer the "status quo".
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,980
    Miss Plato, I wonder how much of a resurgence Pegida will have now.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,225

    Mr. Freggles, we haven't had additional FPTP since that vote, have we?

    Yeah, but it now favours the Tories!
  • malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    But the bath, or more accurately baths, I saw were Roman!
  • taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    http://uk.businessinsider.com/the-far-right-is-quietly-making-massive-gains-in-europe-2015-10

    More warning noises about what is going on in Europe. If this explodes next year, IN could be in trouble.
  • AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-34568497

    Updated an hour ago, apparently.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533
    edited October 2015

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    But the bath, or more accurately baths, I saw were Roman!
    OK, I give in show off

    PS: did you get a cold beer though
  • LucyJones said:


    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    The AV referendum was not so much an endorsement of FPTP as a rejection of AV. Nothing else was on offer.

    Whilst I agree that a victory for "Remain" would be an endorsement of the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes, I don't believe Cameron has it in his power to offer the "status quo".
    I would have voted against FPTP if STV was on offer.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    You can only beat what you're up against - the only endorsement of FPTP was that it was preferred over AV.
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    How well did Opinium fare in GE voting intention in their last poll before GE2015. Is their methodology the same.. and if not how has it been altered.. Anyone know? cause I can't find the Opinion poll history page before GE 2015,
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_2015_United_Kingdom_general_election

    Opinium, 5th May 2015:

    Con 35%
    Lab 34%
    LD 8%
    UKIP 12%
    Green 6%
    others 5%
    Ty Mr Sunil, it is as I thought. there is absolutely no reason to trust any pollster about anything, they all made such a pigs bladder of things at the GE, why would anyone trust them.?? Until we have had some elections that the pollsters can be measured against, its all a load of mumbo jumbo.


  • richardDoddrichardDodd Posts: 5,472
    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    AndyJS said:

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    I think the majority of polls since 7th May have put UKIP on a higher share than they achieved at the election. So much for them fading into obscurity.
    What's curious is the disconnect between polls and local byelections right now. UKIP have done poorly in byelections since May despite, as you say, holding up well in the polls. OTOH, the Lib Dems have been performing strongly in byelections despite falling even further in the polls.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    taffys said:

    http://uk.businessinsider.com/the-far-right-is-quietly-making-massive-gains-in-europe-2015-10

    More warning noises about what is going on in Europe. If this explodes next year, IN could be in trouble.

    The big gains have all come with the refugee crisis. In the Netherlands, the PVV has gone from 20% to 30% in the last month (and from third to first). In Germany, the AfD has gone from 4% to 7.5% (and I suspect would actually get 9 or 10% if there was an election today). In Switzerland, the impact is much more modest (the SVP has been on around 30% for a year or so).
  • watford30watford30 Posts: 3,474
    edited October 2015
    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    Something different for your annual wash.
  • LucyJones said:


    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    The AV referendum was not so much an endorsement of FPTP as a rejection of AV. Nothing else was on offer.

    Whilst I agree that a victory for "Remain" would be an endorsement of the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes, I don't believe Cameron has it in his power to offer the "status quo".
    It was as much if not more an endorsement of FPTP which was named in the question and the country is used to as it was a rejection of AV. Not only was FPTP named on the ballot paper but arguments on both sides were made for and against it. To deny it was an endorsement of the Status Quo when the named on the ballot paper status quo wins a vote by two to one is a desperate ploy by those who still want change to obscure the issue.

    Next will be a case of we should switch to the AMS voting system and then if that was rejected then it still wouldn't be an endorsement of FPTP and so we should have another go with d'hondt etc etc

    The public has had parties proposing voting reform for decades and not elected them. Given a referendum on reform it was overwhelmingly rejected. Stop clutching straws.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687

    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    Well, I think technically that the AV referendum was a rejection of AV in favour of FPTP. I, for one, would have voted in favour of multimember STV, but voted against AV.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    Excellent way to spend a Sunday. Would prefer wine myself though ;)
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 52,172
    edited October 2015

    chestnut said:

    Britain Elects ‏@britainelects 1 hr1 hour ago
    Westminster voting intention:
    CON: 37% (-)
    LAB: 32% (-)
    UKIP: 15% (+1)
    LDEM: 5% (-1)
    GRN: 4% (-)
    (via Opinium / 13 - 16 Oct)

    How well did Opinium fare in GE voting intention in their last poll before GE2015. Is their methodology the same.. and if not how has it been altered.. Anyone know? cause I can't find the Opinion poll history page before GE 2015,
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_2015_United_Kingdom_general_election

    Opinium, 5th May 2015:

    Con 35%
    Lab 34%
    LD 8%
    UKIP 12%
    Green 6%
    others 5%
    Ty Mr Sunil, it is as I thought. there is absolutely no reason to trust any pollster about anything, they all made such a pigs bladder of things at the GE, why would anyone trust them.?? Until we have had some elections that the pollsters can be measured against, its all a load of mumbo jumbo.


    It's Dr. Evil Sunil. I didn't spend six ten years in Evil Medical School Imperial College to be called "mister," thank you very much. :lol:
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    Well, I think technically that the AV referendum was a rejection of AV in favour of FPTP. I, for one, would have voted in favour of multimember STV, but voted against AV.
    Exactly it was a specific endorsement of FPTP over AV. Doesn't mean FPTP is perfect but given an alternative it was overwhelmingly endorsed.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533
    edited October 2015
    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    Excellent way to spend a Sunday. Would prefer wine myself though ;)
    Saved that for having with dinner Rob, started with bottle of bubbly. With superb weather it was an extremely pleasant weekend all round.

    PS : Back to work today with a bump mind you
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    I thought it had been argued on here that a free trade deal with the EU meant free movement was a necessary part of that. Is that not the case with Switzerland?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    LucyJones said:


    Freggles said:

    Mr. Flashman (deceased), I fear your optimism is displaced.

    Cameron's negotiation depends on 27 other leaders, including a socialist Frenchman and a German Chancellor who seems determined to make the whole EU obey her will.

    He won't get anything substantial, but will present it as a great deal.

    My concern is that he'll still win the referendum, which will be taking by the foreigners and EU-philes here to mean we want increasing integration.

    Mmmm, a bit like how the AV referendum result is spun as an endorsement for FPTP?
    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    A victory for remain would be an endorsement for the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes. It would not be an endorsement of further integration just as the AV referendum was not an endorsement of further change.
    The AV referendum was not so much an endorsement of FPTP as a rejection of AV. Nothing else was on offer.

    Whilst I agree that a victory for "Remain" would be an endorsement of the status quo of the EU plus any negotiated changes, I don't believe Cameron has it in his power to offer the "status quo".
    Don't forget that any further integration - beyond that covered by QMV - requires treaty change.

    So, for there to be further integration post a referendum requires that the British government - as they have done in the past - continues to sign away our rights.
  • rcs1000 said:

    taffys said:

    http://uk.businessinsider.com/the-far-right-is-quietly-making-massive-gains-in-europe-2015-10

    More warning noises about what is going on in Europe. If this explodes next year, IN could be in trouble.

    The big gains have all come with the refugee crisis. In the Netherlands, the PVV has gone from 20% to 30% in the last month (and from third to first). In Germany, the AfD has gone from 4% to 7.5% (and I suspect would actually get 9 or 10% if there was an election today). In Switzerland, the impact is much more modest (the SVP has been on around 30% for a year or so).
    Though the PVV have frequently underperformed their polling haven't they?

    GWICWNBPMOTNL
  • If there were a multiple-choice referendum on voting systems, and the choices on offer were:

    FPTP
    AV
    STV
    d'Hondt
    AMS
    Drawing lots

    Should the referendum result be decided by FPTP, AV, STV, d'Hondt, AMS or by drawing lots?

    :lol::lol:
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    Excellent way to spend a Sunday. Would prefer wine myself though ;)
    Saved that for having with dinner Rob, started with bottle of bubbly. With superb weather it was an extremely pleasant weekend all round.

    PS : Back to work today with a bump mind you
    Beer, bubbly, and wine? Bet you were a happy camper this morning!
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,533
    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    RobD said:

    malcolmg said:

    King Cole, it's rather far afield from Scotland (or Caledonia, indeed), so I'm not sure Mr. W could be of help (besides, as there are a number of ladies involved I wouldn't want past assignations to get him in trouble with his lady wife).

    MD as Jack is far away from Caledonia you never know.
    Further than Bath? Or how about Stockholm? ;)
    I was in Bath exactly a week ago :)
    I had a bath yesterday, change having a soak from normal shower. Cold beer and a good book.
    Excellent way to spend a Sunday. Would prefer wine myself though ;)
    Saved that for having with dinner Rob, started with bottle of bubbly. With superb weather it was an extremely pleasant weekend all round.

    PS : Back to work today with a bump mind you
    Beer, bubbly, and wine? Bet you were a happy camper this morning!
    A very mellow day and worth paying for it today.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,980
    Mr. 1000, except, as you say, for that decided by QMV, for which the eurozone has a critical mass.
  • PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    In order to meet the EU's acquis communitaire Turkey would have to address a lot of its problems.

    Again most of them being secular Muslims which is the tradition in Turkey.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,538

    75 million Turks..the majority of which are Muslim...just what Europe needs...

    Turkey has been a rather secular nation since the days of Ataturk nearly a century ago. There are problems with Turkey that are getting worse under Erdogan that make it incompatible with immediate accession but religion is not it.
    They are miles away from joining the EU:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accession_of_Turkey_to_the_European_Union#Negotiation_progress

    AIUI, all these need to be completed before there can even be a vote. And there is no way Greece will vote for them to join, especially whilst the Cypriot problem remains unresolved.
  • If there were a multiple-choice referendum on voting systems, and the choices on offer were:

    FPTP
    AV
    STV
    d'Hondt
    AMS
    Drawing lots

    Should the referendum result be decided by FPTP, AV, STV, d'Hondt, AMS or by drawing lots?

    :lol::lol:

    AV and STV for a single winner is the same thing.
  • 75 million Turks..the majority of which are Muslim...just what Europe needs...

    Turkey has been a rather secular nation since the days of Ataturk nearly a century ago. There are problems with Turkey that are getting worse under Erdogan that make it incompatible with immediate accession but religion is not it.
    They are miles away from joining the EU:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accession_of_Turkey_to_the_European_Union#Negotiation_progress

    AIUI, all these need to be completed before there can even be a vote. And there is no way Greece will vote for them to join, especially whilst the Cypriot problem remains unresolved.
    Totally agreed. So it would be idiotic for our government to say No, Never to Turkey when it could offer the potential of membership without actually guaranteeing it (and while 27 other members have and are willing to use a veto).
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    edited October 2015

    If there were a multiple-choice referendum on voting systems, and the choices on offer were:

    FPTP
    AV
    STV
    d'Hondt
    AMS
    Drawing lots

    Should the referendum result be decided by FPTP, AV, STV, d'Hondt, AMS or by drawing lots?

    :lol::lol:

    AV and STV for a single winner is the same thing.
    We should rank the systems, and then the elections would follow much in the same way as the holder of the Lord Great Chamberlain - half of elections will be held with the most popular system, one quarter the second most, one eighth the third most, etc.!

    e.g. FPTP, AV, FPTP, STV, FPTP, AV, FPTP, d'Hondt...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    JEO said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    I thought it had been argued on here that a free trade deal with the EU meant free movement was a necessary part of that. Is that not the case with Switzerland?
    The Swiss signed a deal with the EU including free movement of labour. However, that deal has not been ratified by the Swiss government, as the government split the agreement into two separate referendum, one of which covered free movement, and one of which covered the rest of the agreement. The latter passed easily, the former lost by a percent or two. It is therefore in limbo, as treaties need to agreed by both sides in totality. It is likely therefore that another treaty will be proposed and voted on in the future. However, the Swiss, currently, do not have access to the free market in services, and are subject to tariffs.

    It is important to realise, as Richard Tyndall has pointed out in the past, that free movement is talked about as being an "all or nothing" thing. Norway has "free movement". But it also requires that foreign workers register at the local police station, and take Norwegian lessons. Furthermore, although any EU citizen can work in Norway (including Richard Tyndall on many occasions!), one is required to be able to support oneself. You can't simply turn up and live there without a means of support. The Norwegian system, therefore, allows a lot of flexibility, while having a powerful disincentive for those people who don't wish to integrate.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687

    75 million Turks..the majority of which are Muslim...just what Europe needs...

    Turkey has been a rather secular nation since the days of Ataturk nearly a century ago. There are problems with Turkey that are getting worse under Erdogan that make it incompatible with immediate accession but religion is not it.
    They are miles away from joining the EU:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accession_of_Turkey_to_the_European_Union#Negotiation_progress

    AIUI, all these need to be completed before there can even be a vote. And there is no way Greece will vote for them to join, especially whilst the Cypriot problem remains unresolved.
    Forget Greece. Cyprus has a veto. And half of that island is still occupied by the Turks.

    Chances of Cyprus vetoing Turkish membership of the EU = 100%.
  • RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737

    1897 case law trumps that of 1875 Rod. Though the 14th Amendment as cited in 1897 merely extended to slaves the existing case law that dates back to the then English Common Law that dates back to 1608 that anyone even of alien parents born in England is an English subject. For America it adopted that exact same legal principle for everyone except slaves but calling them citizens rather than subjects.

    It's hard to see how the 1875 ruling was "trumped", when it was quoted approvingly in the 1898 case! as well as in In Re Lockwood (1894) and Luria v United States (1913).

    The English Common Law is far more complex than you imagine, btw. Not "anyone even of alien parents born in England" was a subject. Some were deemed "denizens", under statute, and a distinction was still retained between true natural born subjects in fact, and naturalized natural born subjects in law. There is also the question whether English Common Law was adopted at the Federal level in the US (as distinct from the State-level, where is certainly was, initially)
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-34568497

    Updated an hour ago, apparently.
    Thanks. Exit poll at midnight our time.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    I wouldn't say zero. Small, but non-zero.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,755
    rcs1000 said:

    taffys said:

    http://uk.businessinsider.com/the-far-right-is-quietly-making-massive-gains-in-europe-2015-10

    More warning noises about what is going on in Europe. If this explodes next year, IN could be in trouble.

    The big gains have all come with the refugee crisis. In the Netherlands, the PVV has gone from 20% to 30% in the last month (and from third to first). In Germany, the AfD has gone from 4% to 7.5% (and I suspect would actually get 9 or 10% if there was an election today). In Switzerland, the impact is much more modest (the SVP has been on around 30% for a year or so).
    There's a lesson there for the mainstream European centre-right, but they have a tin ear for it.

    Our government has half-heard it, and the other half is fighting it.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    I wouldn't say zero. Small, but non-zero.
    I would say the chance of the EU collapsing in the next 20 years is - what - 15%? Maybe 20%?

    The chance of Turkey joining the EU in that period is at least an order of magnitude less.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,422
    Offtopic - http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2015/10/19/israeli-guard-kills-eritrean-man-brutally-attacked-by-mob-over-mistaken-identity.html

    Hopefully the security guard and bystanders will face the appropriate justice.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    I wouldn't say zero. Small, but non-zero.
    I would say the chance of the EU collapsing in the next 20 years is - what - 15%? Maybe 20%?

    The chance of Turkey joining the EU in that period is at least an order of magnitude less.
    Yeah, I was just saying it is non-zero. I'm used to dealing with log likelihoods which go down below -100, which I would say was smaller than the chance of Turkey joining ;)
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/eureferendum/11941342/Bad-news-Corbynistas...-Jeremy-Corbyn-thinks-shouting-from-the-sidelines-is-a-waste-of-time.html
    Mr Corbyn rose to ask his list of questions. The list proved somewhat lengthy. “Finally, Mr Speaker—,” said Mr Corbyn after about eight minutes. “Hooray!” cheered Tory MPs.

    As it turned out, Mr Corbyn’s questions were almost twice as long (nine minutes) as Mr Cameron’s subsequent answers (five minutes). Perhaps that in itself says something about how those renegotiations are going.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited October 2015
    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687

    rcs1000 said:

    taffys said:

    http://uk.businessinsider.com/the-far-right-is-quietly-making-massive-gains-in-europe-2015-10

    More warning noises about what is going on in Europe. If this explodes next year, IN could be in trouble.

    The big gains have all come with the refugee crisis. In the Netherlands, the PVV has gone from 20% to 30% in the last month (and from third to first). In Germany, the AfD has gone from 4% to 7.5% (and I suspect would actually get 9 or 10% if there was an election today). In Switzerland, the impact is much more modest (the SVP has been on around 30% for a year or so).
    There's a lesson there for the mainstream European centre-right, but they have a tin ear for it.

    Our government has half-heard it, and the other half is fighting it.
    As an aside, I would assume that the FN in France has benefited too, but it's hard to know because the French simply don't have many opinion polls.
  • DairDair Posts: 6,108
    edited October 2015

    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    Genuine change was not on the agenda. It was an offer to Choose between a broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot and a more complicated broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot designed to boost the number of seats the Liberals got.

    The public was asked if they wanted more Liberals in Westminster and, just as in 2015, the public said no.

    No other endorsement can be implied.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    edited October 2015
    AndyJS said:

    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0

    Excellent work. Do you have a feel for what's going to happen?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,746
    AndyJS said:

    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0

    When are .ikely to get some idea of the results?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    @Casino_Royale, interestingly, Lega Nord and its sister party Us with Salvini don't seem to be benefiting in Italy. I had hoped that the LN/NcS would replace Forza Italia as the main right of centre party (on the basis that Berlusconi is not just a joke, but is a bad joke).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,095
    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    Dair said:

    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    Change was not on the agenda. It was an offer to change from a broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot to a more complicated broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot designed to boost the number of seats the Liberals got.

    The public was asked if they wanted more Liberals in Westminster and, just as in 2015, the public said no.

    No other endorsement can be implied.
    I suspect the LibDems would have done even worse under AV than they actually did under FPTP.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
    All this talk about elections is making me nostalgic. Where's scrapheap? Time to stick on the 2015 election again, and watch the glorious exit poll. :D
  • John_MJohn_M Posts: 7,503
    edited October 2015
    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    The Greeks and Cypriots will do as their told by Merkel. If the Germans want them in, they'll be in. As you say, the only thing that's stopping me freaking out at the prospect is that the Turks probably don't really fancy it.
  • DairDair Posts: 6,108
    edited October 2015
    rcs1000 said:

    Dair said:

    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    Change was not on the agenda. It was an offer to change from a broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot to a more complicated broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot designed to boost the number of seats the Liberals got.

    The public was asked if they wanted more Liberals in Westminster and, just as in 2015, the public said no.

    No other endorsement can be implied.
    I suspect the LibDems would have done even worse under AV than they actually did under FPTP.
    That;s certainly true as things turned out because the Liberals lost their place as the third party. But it's still all that AV offers, a seat boost to the third party which is unrelated to proportionality.

    At the time of the vote, however, the Liberals were the established, long term third party and there was little doubt what the AV proposal was designed to do and would have delivered historically.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,095
    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
    All this talk about elections is making me nostalgic. Where's scrapheap? Time to stick on the 2015 election again, and watch the glorious exit poll. :D
    I am sure that will keep you busy until polls close on the Atlantic coast. I have got to be up in the morning so cannot be too late but will have a look at early trend
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    edited October 2015
    John_M said:

    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    The Greeks and Cypriots will do as their told by Merkel. If the Germans want them in, they'll be in.
    No Greek or Cypriot government would be able to be re-elected if it let the Turks in.

    Politicians in Greece and Cyprus are like politicians anywhere. They will not do something that leads to certain electoral obliteration. Letting Turkey into the EU - while Northern Cyprus still has Turkish troops - would be more than electoral suicide for any Cypriot politician.

    I know plenty of Cypriots: the people of that country would rather see their parliament go up in flames rather than let Turkey in the EU.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,046
    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
    All this talk about elections is making me nostalgic. Where's scrapheap? Time to stick on the 2015 election again, and watch the glorious exit poll. :D
    I am sure that will keep you busy until polls close on the Atlantic coast. I have got to be up in the morning so cannot be too late but will have a look at early trend
    I'm actually on a reasonable time zone to watch it play out. Although it was nice being 8hrs behind the UK in May!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,755
    rcs1000 said:

    @Casino_Royale, interestingly, Lega Nord and its sister party Us with Salvini don't seem to be benefiting in Italy. I had hoped that the LN/NcS would replace Forza Italia as the main right of centre party (on the basis that Berlusconi is not just a joke, but is a bad joke).

    That is interesting.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,095
    edited October 2015
    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
    All this talk about elections is making me nostalgic. Where's scrapheap? Time to stick on the 2015 election again, and watch the glorious exit poll. :D
    I am sure that will keep you busy until polls close on the Atlantic coast. I have got to be up in the morning so cannot be too late but will have a look at early trend
    I'm actually on a reasonable time zone to watch it play out. Although it was nice being 8hrs behind the UK in May!
    Yes you could watch most of the Marginals come in over dinner
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited October 2015

    AndyJS said:

    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0

    When are .ikely to get some idea of the results?
    Polls close in Newfoundland at 11pm our time. Scrap that, it's actually midnight.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,538
    rcs1000 said:

    John_M said:

    rcs1000 said:

    RobD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    PT The problems in Turkey are Turkeys problems... but if 75 million of them suddenly have access and the right of residence in Europe....most of them being Muslims..then it will very rapidly become Europe's problem...in a very big way..

    Schengen does not grant right of residence, merely right to cross the border without a passport. Switzerland, for example, is part of Schengen, but a Frenchman has no right to reside there.

    Don't forget a Turk with a passport can already cross into the Schengen zone without a visa. The Turks gain no additional right to come to the UK in the event that they did join Schengen.
    But membership of the EU would grant that right, surely?
    There is literally no chance of Turkey joining the EU in my lifetime.

    1. Turks don't want to join.
    2. The Greeks and Cypriots would veto it.
    The Greeks and Cypriots will do as their told by Merkel. If the Germans want them in, they'll be in.
    No Greek or Cypriot government would be able to be re-elected if it let the Turks in.

    Politicians in Greece and Cyprus are like politicians anywhere. They will not do something that leads to certain electoral obliteration. Letting Turkey into the EU - while Northern Cyprus still has Turkish troops - would be more than electoral suicide for any Cypriot politician.

    I know plenty of Cypriots: the people of that country would rather see their parliament go up in flames rather than let Turkey in the EU.
    Even the Turkish Cypriots you know? ;)
  • are there exit poll(s) at midnight?
  • DairDair Posts: 6,108
    AndyJS said:

    AndyJS said:

    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0

    When are .ikely to get some idea of the results?
    Polls close in Newfoundland at 11pm our time. Scrap that, it's actually midnight.
    Surely the count will not begin (nor exit polls be published) until the polling booths close in BC and Yukon?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,755
    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    RobD said:

    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    Good evening. Any news from Canada on how the election is going over there?

    First results will not be in until midnight
    All this talk about elections is making me nostalgic. Where's scrapheap? Time to stick on the 2015 election again, and watch the glorious exit poll. :D
    I am sure that will keep you busy until polls close on the Atlantic coast. I have got to be up in the morning so cannot be too late but will have a look at early trend
    I'm actually on a reasonable time zone to watch it play out. Although it was nice being 8hrs behind the UK in May!
    Yes you could watch most of the Marginals come in over dinner
    I'm going to have to truly gamble and run my position overnight, for the same reasons as you. Early start.

    It's been a while since I've done that.
  • Dair said:

    rcs1000 said:

    Dair said:

    The AV referendum result was an endorsement of FPTP. FPTP was the status quo and change was rejected by two to one.

    Change was not on the agenda. It was an offer to change from a broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot to a more complicated broken, undemocratic winner takes all ballot designed to boost the number of seats the Liberals got.

    The public was asked if they wanted more Liberals in Westminster and, just as in 2015, the public said no.

    No other endorsement can be implied.
    I suspect the LibDems would have done even worse under AV than they actually did under FPTP.
    That;s certainly true as things turned out because the Liberals lost their place as the third party. But it's still all that AV offers, a seat boost to the third party which is unrelated to proportionality.

    At the time of the vote, however, the Liberals were the established, long term third party and there was little doubt what the AV proposal was designed to do and would have delivered historically.
    Not sure I agree. Australia where AV is actually in place is not particularly kind to third parties in its lower house.

    But to go back to your other post FPTP was endorsed two to one versus what it was put against. That's as much an endorsement as it's possible to get to date. Just as if the SNP wins Holyrood they can have a second bite at an independence referendum if a party in favour of reform gets into office in Westminster then we could get another referendum. But there's no clear appetite for it from the public that only recently rejected overwhelmingly the change that was offered.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11941466/German-MPs-drawing-up-plans-to-close-borders-in-challenge-to-Merkels-refugee-policy.html
    Group of 188 MPs including many from chancellor's own party have reportedly prepared laws to fence off sections of Germany's border
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Dair said:

    AndyJS said:

    AndyJS said:

    Canadian election:

    There doesn't seem to be a website anywhere with all the 2011 Canadian election constituency results using the new boundaries on one page so I've done a spreadsheet with the data:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Nqs8lrKYeN06aXEV3YAguk9fCaMSLDnrvMh7pcn4KV4/edit#gid=0

    When are .ikely to get some idea of the results?
    Polls close in Newfoundland at 11pm our time. Scrap that, it's actually midnight.
    Surely the count will not begin (nor exit polls be published) until the polling booths close in BC and Yukon?
    I don't think they wait to count the votes.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,095

    are there exit poll(s) at midnight?

    CBC starts its coverage at 7pm Canada time midnight ours
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687

    Even the Turkish Cypriots you know? ;)

    I don't actually know any Turkish Cypriots...
    However, I do know quite a number of Greek Cypriots.

    No Cypriot politician that voted to allow Turkey into the EU would survive an hour in Cyprus. He would, literally, be hunted down and torn limb from limb. Fear of the German government is nothing compared with fear of being physically assaulted by your own people.
  • DairDair Posts: 6,108

    Not sure I agree. Australia where AV is actually in place is not particularly kind to third parties in its lower house.

    But to go back to your other post FPTP was endorsed two to one versus what it was put against. That's as much an endorsement as it's possible to get to date. Just as if the SNP wins Holyrood they can have a second bite at an independence referendum if a party in favour of reform gets into office in Westminster then we could get another referendum. But there's no clear appetite for it from the public that only recently rejected overwhelmingly the change that was offered.

    The real shame is how your determined anti-democratic agenda is hidden behind such obvious straw men and constructed lies.

    Just admit the reason you want FPTP, to promote absolute majorites based on tiny vote shares which will generally favour the less divided right.
  • This will calm things down...

    Referee Craig Joubert was wrong to award a last-minute penalty against Scotland in their World Cup quarter-final defeat by Australia at Twickenham, says World Rugby.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/rugby-union/34576756
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,687
    Dair said:

    Not sure I agree. Australia where AV is actually in place is not particularly kind to third parties in its lower house.

    But to go back to your other post FPTP was endorsed two to one versus what it was put against. That's as much an endorsement as it's possible to get to date. Just as if the SNP wins Holyrood they can have a second bite at an independence referendum if a party in favour of reform gets into office in Westminster then we could get another referendum. But there's no clear appetite for it from the public that only recently rejected overwhelmingly the change that was offered.

    The real shame is how your determined anti-democratic agenda is hidden behind such obvious straw men and constructed lies.

    Just admit the reason you want FPTP, to promote absolute majorites based on tiny vote shares which will generally favour the less divided right.
    Is it SNP policy to move to multimember STV in Scotland?
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