politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » New analysis finds current LAB voters reluctant to give Corbyn their full backing
Looking back over GE2015 polls what should have raised questions about the voting intention findings was that in all the leader ratings of different forms Ed Miliband was always a long way behind Cameron. I made that mistake.
2016 should be fun: Sadly I doubt it will. Labour will struggle on; NSP will whinge from Edinborough; and our children and grandchildren will be scared by stories about the politicking of the "Lib-Dhimmies" (of which they will dismiss as a Crayola pastiche of 'Sarf Park).
Outwith England's exit from the EU - unlikely as 2017 is my bet - not much will happen....
Who else is there for Labour? Would-be successors need to establish their reputations (and achievements) between now and the next leadership election. Conservatives too, perhaps.
Good Morning .The stench of hypocrisy is overwhelming. The very idea that Burnham would have been anything but a disaster as Labour leader is confirmed..
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
You expressed what I was thinking much more eloquently
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
The funny thing is that if you took online "below the line" comments to be representative of Tories then Cameron was hated by his own side (especially on sites like the Telegraph). While the polls were bad this year, online commentators join the Twitterati as being completely unrepresentative.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
Perhaps a rock-paper-scissors election? SNP beat Lab; Lab (just about) beat Con; Con beat LD (which is where it breaks down).
2016 should be fun: Sadly I doubt it will. Labour will struggle on; NSP will whinge from Edinborough; and our children and grandchildren will be scared by stories about the politicking of the "Lib-Dhimmies" (of which they will dismiss as a Crayola pastiche of 'Sarf Park).
Outwith England's exit from the EU - unlikely as 2017 is my bet - not much will happen....
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
It seems to strike a particular nerve if the person is Australian.
The funny thing is that if you took online "below the line" comments to be representative of Tories then Cameron was hated by his own side (especially on sites like the Telegraph). While the polls were bad this year, online commentators join the Twitterati as being completely unrepresentative.
Yes, I saw Cameron condemned as a secret lib dem on the telegraph comments a few times. Amusing.
2016 should be fun: Sadly I doubt it will. Labour will struggle on; NSP will whinge from Edinborough; and our children and grandchildren will be scared by stories about the politicking of the "Lib-Dhimmies" (of which they will dismiss as a Crayola pastiche of 'Sarf Park).
Outwith England's exit from the EU - unlikely as 2017 is my bet - not much will happen....
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
Yes yes, David. We get it.
"A year ago today I received an unsolicited e-mail from an extremely senior Conservative election strategist, asking if I ever came to London as he’d be interested in picking my brains."
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Wasn't it a Sir Humphreyism? In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Yes but it was effective because Miliband wasn't respected already - if he had been it would have gone down like a lead balloon. With Miliband being not respected then if it wasn't the Salmond's pocket meme then there is ever chance another meme would have caught the imagination.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
But it had other indirect effects, like shoring up the Tory vote in England.
Off topic I can't get to the BBC News webpage. It is giving an "Error 500" error code with an image of a clown against a black chalkboard with 500 written on it and fire behind it. But I've been having problems with my internet so don't know if its my side or the BBC's - is anyone else having problem connecting currently?
Meanwhile, the Conservative Party was all sweetness and light towards Brown and Miliband, with no personal abuse whatsoever. Though not necessarily in this universe.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Why so? It's quite usual to give honours to such people - Tim Bell, Philip Gould.
Also Jimmy Savile OBE takes some beating, no?
Savile raised a huge amount of money for charity - something we now know he used as a kind of cover against investigation. For him not to have been honoured for that would have raised questions but on the principle of innocent until proven guilty I don't think it was inherently a bad award. The gross failure was the lack of effort towards 'proven guilty' given the evidence available.
Off topic I can't get to the BBC News webpage. It is giving an "Error 500" error code with an image of a clown against a black chalkboard with 500 written on it and fire behind it. But I've been having problems with my internet so don't know if its my side or the BBC's - is anyone else having problem connecting currently?
The BBC news page does seem to be having problems.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Don't forget Coulson! Someone else who, for all his faults, was very perceptive about how the 'man in the street' was thinking and how messaging can make for popular policy. Cameron tried very hard to keep him, although fair play to Tom Watson for the politics of somehow making this particular tabloid editor appear more of a scumbag than any other tabliod editor!
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
I'm useless at political predictions but the only one I think I may have got right was the Ed in Wee Eck's pocket would have an effect. A double whammy. It encouraged a few Labour voters to sit on their hands and a few Kippers to believe that it wasn't safe to vote Farage and let Salmond in via Ed.
I sensed this from a few people in the week before the election, and from people who don't normally wobble.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Oh, indeed.
The SNP destruction of Labour in Scotland led to Miliband's immediate demise
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Yes but it was effective because Miliband wasn't respected already - if he had been it would have gone down like a lead balloon. With Miliband being not respected then if it wasn't the Salmond's pocket meme then there is ever chance another meme would have caught the imagination.
I think that's right. At least, if Miliband had been seen as a stronger character people might have trusted him to work with the SNP and fight his corner. As it was, people imagined him taking dictation. Possibly unfair, but there it was.
Off topic I can't get to the BBC News webpage. It is giving an "Error 500" error code with an image of a clown against a black chalkboard with 500 written on it and fire behind it. But I've been having problems with my internet so don't know if its my side or the BBC's - is anyone else having problem connecting currently?
The BBC news page does seem to be having problems.
Yep, it's down. Whoops, at least one IT guy is going to have a long day...
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Why so? It's quite usual to give honours to such people - Tim Bell, Philip Gould.
Also Jimmy Savile OBE takes some beating, no?
Savile raised a huge amount of money for charity - something we now know he used as a kind of cover against investigation. For him not to have been honoured for that would have raised questions but on the principle of innocent until proven guilty I don't think it was inherently a bad award. The gross failure was the lack of effort towards 'proven guilty' given the evidence available.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Wasn't it a Sir Humphreyism? In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
'It is necessary to get behind someone before you can stab them in the back.' 'A Conflict of Interest', Yes Prime Minister Series 2.
I have some sympathy with Burnham though, as this award to Crosby is inherently unfair. If Crosby is to be knighted for his services to the Conservative Party, Cooper and Kendall should be made Viscounts, Burnham an Earl and Corbyn at least a Marquis.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Don't forget Coulson! Someone else who, for all his faults, was very perceptive about how the 'man in the street' was thinking and how messaging can make for popular policy. Cameron tried very hard to keep him, although fair play to Tom Watson for the politics of somehow making this particular tabloid editor appear more of a scumbag than any other tabliod editor!
2016 should be fun: Sadly I doubt it will. Labour will struggle on; NSP will whinge from Edinborough; and our children and grandchildren will be scared by stories about the politicking of the "Lib-Dhimmies" (of which they will dismiss as a Crayola pastiche of 'Sarf Park).
Outwith England's exit from the EU - unlikely as 2017 is my bet - not much will happen....
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Wasn't it a Sir Humphreyism? In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
'It is necessary to get behind someone before you can stab them in the back.' 'A Conflict of Interest', Yes Prime Minister Series 2.
I have some sympathy with Burnham though, as this award to Crosby is inherently unfair. If Crosby is to be knighted for his services to the Conservative Party, Cooper and Kendall should be made Viscounts, Burnham an Earl and Corbyn at least a Marquis.
Hmm. I wonder if Burnham would have accepted. He appears to be quite the opportunist. There are worse gigs than being a Tory peer.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Oh, indeed.
Easily taken in down there, any old snake oil salesman can fool them
Off topic I can't get to the BBC News webpage. It is giving an "Error 500" error code with an image of a clown against a black chalkboard with 500 written on it and fire behind it. But I've been having problems with my internet so don't know if its my side or the BBC's - is anyone else having problem connecting currently?
The BBC news page does seem to be having problems.
Yep, it's down. Whoops, at least one IT guy is going to have a long day...
500 is bad gateway, I think.
That means their load balancer has probably fallen over. I'd guess they're using nginx.
And in about 2 minutes it will have been restarted...
No, I was on our list of attendees but thankfully I managed to weasel my way out of it. Had enough conventions both as an exhibitor and in attendance. I'm surprised you're going though? They are long and hateful events.
No, I was on our list of attendees but thankfully I managed to weasel my way out of it. Had enough conventions both as an exhibitor and in attendance. I'm surprised you're going though? They are long and hateful events.
TBH, it's easier than trekking around China visiting all the up and coming mobile phone companies on a "one per city per day" basis. This way I see them all in the course of 48 hours. I also get to meet some quite exciting new start-ups. And I'm seeing a bunch of VR guys while I'm there (HTC, etc.)
I'm also going on from their to a telecoms conference in Utah. (Where I might manage an afternoon skiing...)
They should do that anyway just for the laugh, particularly now that a loophole in the law means that a newly created hereditary peer can still sit in the Commons.
p.s. @ydoethur - Corbyn's English, so he'd be a Marquess unless you were proposing giving him a Scottish title?
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
They should do that anyway just for the laugh, particularly now that a loophole in the law means that a newly created hereditary peer can still sit in the Commons.
p.s. @ydoethur - Corbyn's English, so he'd be a Marquess unless you were proposing giving him a Scottish title?
Why not? That would be multiple trolling - hereditary peer, services to the Conservatives and services to the SNP as well!
EDIT - What title could Benn take? His brother is Viscount Stansgate, of course, so maybe he could be Viscount Sitsfence?
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Wasn't it a Sir Humphreyism? In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Osborne?
Yes, he passes the Two Minutes Hate test. But first Labour need to stop being so unfraternal to each other.
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Don't forget Coulson! Someone else who, for all his faults, was very perceptive about how the 'man in the street' was thinking and how messaging can make for popular policy. Cameron tried very hard to keep him, although fair play to Tom Watson for the politics of somehow making this particular tabloid editor appear more of a scumbag than any other tabliod editor!
Re Lynton. This is just yet another example of the Two Minute Hate that Labour use against any perceived enemy. The use of someone's name as a byword for some evil. Thatcher Milk Snatcher, Ashcroft's Millions, Murdoch Press et al. Now it's Crosby as a catch all for dark arts.
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
Wasn't it a Sir Humphreyism? In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
A Sir Lyntonism
Frame the choice and set the parameters or your opponent will
A campaign is a choice. You need to be deliberate in the way you define yourself and what you believe in, as well as how you define your competitor or opponent (and have the evidence to back it up).
You need a simple story that explains what you’re trying to achieve in terms that are relevant to people.
Your story needs to be positive and differentiating.
No, I was on our list of attendees but thankfully I managed to weasel my way out of it. Had enough conventions both as an exhibitor and in attendance. I'm surprised you're going though? They are long and hateful events.
TBH, it's easier than trekking around China visiting all the up and coming mobile phone companies on a "one per city per day" basis. This way I see them all in the course of 48 hours. I also get to meet some quite exciting new start-ups. And I'm seeing a bunch of VR guys while I'm there (HTC, etc.)
I'm also going on from their to a telecoms conference in Utah. (Where I might manage an afternoon skiing...)
Fair enough. Though I'm not convinced of the value in knowing all of the Chinese brands given they all clone each other's devices and most will never leave China. Those that do will end up in shanzai shops in Malaysia and Indonesia.
Vive is really good, Oculus needs a lot of work and PS VR is probably the best so far and also releasing soonest. I've used VR extensively (well PS VR) and I'm still not convinced on mass market appeal, media is a shared experience for the majority of people, I don't know how VR fits into that, a few million gamers and forever alone basement dwellers is not something I would be confident building a billion dollar industry on. Its also a shame that the porn expo isn't there until next month, I'm sure there are a lot of, err, interesting uses for VR and porn...
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Oh, indeed.
Easily taken in down there, any old snake oil salesman can fool them
Please. I pride myself in only purchasing from the very finest of snake oil salesmen. No hucksters here, and my snake has never gleamed more.
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Osborne seems a likely candidate, he is generally disliked anyway after all
When I was a child/teenager I fairly quickly realised that New Year's resolutions were a load of rubbish. If something is worth doing, one is already doing it; if one is not already doing it, there is probably a good reason for not doing it.
So in 2015 it was the first time in decades that I made a New Year's Resolution: to do all I could to get Gavin Barwell re-elected as MP for Croydon Central.
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
One could ask, how do the various Tory leadership hopefuls compare as Labour hate-figures.
Osborne 9/10 (because nobody's perfect) May 8/10 (emphasis on her conference speech this year) Boris 3/10 (imo, whatever his faults, Boris is hard to really dislike. David Cameron seems to manage though) Hammond ?? Hunt 7/10 (baby-eating NHS privatiser) Javid 6/10 (wrong kind of Muslim bus-driver's son, friend of Osborne, bald)
Do you think this will be like BetaMax/VHS and Blu-Ray/HD-DVD, where multiple competitors will have one victor and the rest will crumble, or will multiple VR approaches be able to succeed?
When I was a child/teenager I fairly quickly realised that New Year's resolutions were a load of rubbish. If something is worth doing, one is already doing it; if one is not already doing it, there is probably a good reason for not doing it.
So in 2015 it was the first time in decades that I made a New Year's Resolution: to do all I could to get Gavin Barwell re-elected as MP for Croydon Central.
Mission Accomplished.
In 2000, I made a New Year's Resolution that I have kept, with no trouble at all, for 16 years.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Oh, indeed.
Easily taken in down there, any old snake oil salesman can fool them
Please. I pride myself in only purchasing from the very finest of snake oil salesmen. No hucksters here, and my snake has never gleamed more.
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Osborne seems a likely candidate, he is generally disliked anyway after all
One disadvantage of making it all about George Osborne is that it doesn't fit in with Jeremy Corbyn's schtick about not personalising attacks. And it would lead to open season on him too.
I think Labour are going to need something more abstract like the Bedroom Tax. Maybe "the Cuts" is enough. Tricky.
When I was a child/teenager I fairly quickly realised that New Year's resolutions were a load of rubbish. If something is worth doing, one is already doing it; if one is not already doing it, there is probably a good reason for not doing it.
So in 2015 it was the first time in decades that I made a New Year's Resolution: to do all I could to get Gavin Barwell re-elected as MP for Croydon Central.
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
Mr Herdson you one of my favourite article writers on here but that is utter tosh, knighting somebody for masterminding an election victory is disgraceful, if Blair had knighted Alistair Campbell you would have been apoplectic. I'm afraid even the more rational Tories are embarrassing themselves here.
On topic, we need to be careful about not over-reacting. We also need to be careful about trusting the pollsters on one metric while ignoring them on another. Why should they be any more reliable on leader ratings than voting intention? Arguably, you could answer that by saying that one is a current view and the other is to an extent predictive, even if the question is "how would you in an election today", but it's a fine distinction.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so mucpicture.
Quite , IMHO it was the SNP wot won it for Dave... both in destroying Labour in Scotland , plus frightening voters into voting for Dave (Salmond writing Labour budget )
SNP gains from Labour had no direct effect on the election result.
The Salmond's-pocket meme was effective in England though.
Oh, indeed.
Easily taken in down there, any old snake oil salesman can fool them
Please. I pride myself in only purchasing from the very finest of snake oil salesmen. No hucksters here, and my snake has never gleamed more.
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Osborne seems a likely candidate, he is generally disliked anyway after all
One disadvantage of making it all about George Osborne is that it doesn't fit in with Jeremy Corbyn's schtick about not personalising attacks. And it would lead to open season on him too.
I think Labour are going to need something more abstract like the Bedroom Tax. Maybe "the Cuts" is enough. Tricky.
I thought general opposition to cuts would be enough for Labour after 5 years and was wrong, but perhaps after 10 it would, I Corbyn can rebuild his ratings somewhat and Cameron's successor is crap - particularly if Osborne has, as seems probable, failed in his own targets to eliminate the deficit again by then.
If Labour aren't going to rally around Jeremy Corbyn they need to find something to rally against. In the first part of the last Parliament, Nick Clegg served that function. Who or what might serve the purpose this time round?
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
Mr Herdson you one of my favourite article writers on here but that is utter tosh, knighting somebody for masterminding an election victory is disgraceful, if Blair had knighted Alistair Campbell you would have been apoplectic. I'm afraid even the more rational Tories are embarrassing themselves here.
I joke about New Year's resolutions, but without terming it as such I did start a diet and exercise regime from around January 4th last year, and lost 2 stone in 2 months (only a quarter of which has been put back on), so it does work out sometimes.
I doubt my 'walk ten miles a day, have one chicken breast in one slice of bread with a small piece of cheese for dinner' regime was very healthy though.
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
Crosby's understanding of the public has been shown by events to be massively in excess of anything the pollsters managed. For that insight alone, from which others can learn, the honour is deserved. He is a market leader in his field by a mile: in any other industry there'd have been no criticism.
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
Mr Herdson you one of my favourite article writers on here but that is utter tosh, knighting somebody for masterminding an election victory is disgraceful, if Blair had knighted Alistair Campbell you would have been apoplectic. I'm afraid even the more rational Tories are embarrassing themselves here.
There are abundant examples of party strategists getting honours, Spencer Livermore being the most recent but also Philip Gould and Tim Bell. I'm not a fan of the honours system but I struggle to see how this knighthood breaks new ground.
Yesterday I mentioned in passing that I have the Daily Telegraph obituary of Omar Bongo on my bedroom wall. For the sake of being complete, I should list the various other things on my bedroom wall:
Obituaries of: Omar Bongo Gwyneth Dunwoody MP Nicholas Fairbairn MP Baroness (Nancy) Seear Geoffrey Dickens MP David "Screaming Lord" Sutch Marjorie Stoneman Douglas
Newspaper articles about: A train crash in North Dakota Prince Harry's first day at Eton A Wispa advert projected onto the dome of St Paul's Cathedral A noisy parrot Prince William attending the christening of his godson A TV debate between Vladimir Zhirinovsky and Boris Nemtsov The birth of Brooklyn Beckham The 82nd birthday of Kim Il Sung The 120th birthday of Jeanne Calment
And various pictures of a few hunks, mostly Tim Henman and Leonardo DiCaprio.
On the opposite wall are lots of posters of various other gorgeous hunks, but no newpaper articles.
Mr. 63, Campbell did more than that. He poisoned politics, and his approach towards Dr David Kelly was not exemplary. And then there's the dodgy dossier. It's hard to think of a more malign influence on modern politics (although the cabal of cronies who conspired with McBride et al. are worthy of comparison).
Comments
Saddo....
2016 should be fun: Sadly I doubt it will. Labour will struggle on; NSP will whinge from Edinborough; and our children and grandchildren will be scared by stories about the politicking of the "Lib-Dhimmies" (of which they will dismiss as a Crayola pastiche of 'Sarf Park).
Outwith England's exit from the EU - unlikely as 2017 is my bet - not much will happen....
For Surbiton....
Yes, being crap.
Must be a contender for the most dishonourable honour ever.
Quite high risk, too.
The turned down honours list - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/honours-list/9039608/Official-JB-Priestley-Roald-Dahl-Lucian-Freud-and-LS-Lowry-among-277-others-turned-down-honours-from-the-Queen.html
Besides, far better for the state to reward political service with cheap gongs than with real power or money.
The 1979 example has been trotted out enough times but remains valid. Had we gone with the leader ratings then we'd have predicted a Labour win, or at least, another hung parliament.
There were a lot of straws in the wind that suggested that the online polling was wrong. There were few straws in the wind that suggested the entire industry was as wrong as it was. In particular, the scale of the key Con-Lab battleground swing was missed.
I'd suggest that the biggest error in predicting the 2015 result was not so much a failure of overall figures - though that was bad - but a failure to understand the extent to which regional or sectional factors would magnify the national picture.
Corbyn is daft as a drunken koala.
Also Jimmy Savile OBE takes some beating, no?
Listen to almost any Labour politician and you'll hear a variation of this. Ed Balls did it all the time. Framing a name as an insult or accusation.
"A year ago today I received an unsolicited e-mail from an extremely senior Conservative election strategist, asking if I ever came to London as he’d be interested in picking my brains."
http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2015/10/31/david-herdson-writes-ed-miliband-my-part-in-his-downfall/
In order to rubbish someone first you need to label them. (Or something like that)
Though I'd hesitate to call the Jockanese 'third-raters'. Second-tier perhaps....
I sensed this from a few people in the week before the election, and from people who don't normally wobble.
I have some sympathy with Burnham though, as this award to Crosby is inherently unfair. If Crosby is to be knighted for his services to the Conservative Party, Cooper and Kendall should be made Viscounts, Burnham an Earl and Corbyn at least a Marquis.
Danish "power right now"
Windpower hurrah !
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/dec/31/are-you-metropolitan-elite-labour-quiz?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Rosie Winterton the Chief Whip who Corbyn might reshuffle out has been made a dame?
They are using the honours system to troll Corbyn! XD
That means their load balancer has probably fallen over. I'd guess they're using nginx.
And in about 2 minutes it will have been restarted...
I'm also going on from their to a telecoms conference in Utah. (Where I might manage an afternoon skiing...)
p.s. @ydoethur - Corbyn's English, so he'd be a Marquess unless you were proposing giving him a Scottish title?
EDIT - What title could Benn take? His brother is Viscount Stansgate, of course, so maybe he could be Viscount Sitsfence?
"Are you part of the dreaded metropolitan elite? Do this quiz and find out."
If they're worried about being called the "metropolitan elite", how would they like "bed wetters"?
“It is the weak nerve centre of a flabby semi-state, with almost defenceless frontiers, where humanitarian rhetoric masks spinelessness.”
Absolutely spot on.
Frame the choice and set the parameters or your opponent will
A campaign is a choice. You need to be deliberate in the way you define yourself and what you believe in, as well as how you define your competitor or opponent (and have the evidence to back it up).
You need a simple story that explains what you’re trying to achieve in terms that are relevant to people.
Your story needs to be positive and differentiating.
http://m.huffpost.com/uk/entry/7265214
Vive is really good, Oculus needs a lot of work and PS VR is probably the best so far and also releasing soonest. I've used VR extensively (well PS VR) and I'm still not convinced on mass market appeal, media is a shared experience for the majority of people, I don't know how VR fits into that, a few million gamers and forever alone basement dwellers is not something I would be confident building a billion dollar industry on. Its also a shame that the porn expo isn't there until next month, I'm sure there are a lot of, err, interesting uses for VR and porn...
I think we need to come up with a new adjective for his crapness.
Corbyn is Hannibalesque?
So in 2015 it was the first time in decades that I made a New Year's Resolution: to do all I could to get Gavin Barwell re-elected as MP for Croydon Central.
Mission Accomplished.
Osborne 9/10 (because nobody's perfect)
May 8/10 (emphasis on her conference speech this year)
Boris 3/10 (imo, whatever his faults, Boris is hard to really dislike. David Cameron seems to manage though)
Hammond ??
Hunt 7/10 (baby-eating NHS privatiser)
Javid 6/10 (wrong kind of Muslim bus-driver's son, friend of Osborne, bald)
Do you think this will be like BetaMax/VHS and Blu-Ray/HD-DVD, where multiple competitors will have one victor and the rest will crumble, or will multiple VR approaches be able to succeed?
It was to stop making New Year's Resolutions.
I think Labour are going to need something more abstract like the Bedroom Tax. Maybe "the Cuts" is enough. Tricky.
I doubt my 'walk ten miles a day, have one chicken breast in one slice of bread with a small piece of cheese for dinner' regime was very healthy though.
Obituaries of:
Omar Bongo
Gwyneth Dunwoody MP
Nicholas Fairbairn MP
Baroness (Nancy) Seear
Geoffrey Dickens MP
David "Screaming Lord" Sutch
Marjorie Stoneman Douglas
Newspaper articles about:
A train crash in North Dakota
Prince Harry's first day at Eton
A Wispa advert projected onto the dome of St Paul's Cathedral
A noisy parrot
Prince William attending the christening of his godson
A TV debate between Vladimir Zhirinovsky and Boris Nemtsov
The birth of Brooklyn Beckham
The 82nd birthday of Kim Il Sung
The 120th birthday of Jeanne Calment
And various pictures of a few hunks, mostly Tim Henman and Leonardo DiCaprio.
On the opposite wall are lots of posters of various other gorgeous hunks, but no newpaper articles.