Given that the dominant political story at the moment is the EU referendum it has been rather surprising that so little attention has been paid to UKIP – the party which very wisely concentrated its resources on the PR-based list seats in Wales rather than first past the post elections in the English locals.
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His treatment of Douglas Carswell has been a disgrace. Carswell must regret defecting to UKIP and helping to contribute to Mark Reckless losing his seat at Westminster.
Teresa May is a well know porn star, that's a Google search disaster waiting to happen for those of us who use work laptops and iPad on a daily basis.
How to interpret it though? Is it a straw in the wind for the referendum or is it just that UKIP itself is increasingly hapless and disorganised?
We should have had a referendum not on "in" or "out" but on a treaty renegotiation, which would have meant a "no" would not have been to leave the EU but to say "too far, Europe - now give us a good deal to stay in". Blair denied us that on Lisbon and until the next opportunity came along, Cameron should have stuck to his guns.
What we're dealing with now is an utter farce, and I think goes to the crux of why I still can't reconcile in my mind the impossible decision this particular "pro Europe but anti the current set-up" individual has to make on 23rd June. I'm sure millions of others are like me, probably forced to vote Remain reluctantly and with great reservations.
Not sure it's that simple. When my mum was chatting with her friends a few weeks ago, two were undecided and the only one with a strong view was a Leaver (she was also formerly a strong Lib Dem voter).
I still think Remain will win handily, but parties are different animals to sides in a referendum.
Also, it's the last day of the cut-price offer on The Haunting of Lake Manor Hotel, which includes a short story by me:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Haunting-Lake-Manor-Hotel-ebook/dp/B01DQEDAEE
That does appeal to my thinking too.
But is that on offer? How do we know the Government or whichever Government replaces it will go down that path? Would it be achievable anyway?
All reasons why the safe route really feels like it has to be to stay IN the EU for the time being until a better deal or a clear exit path emerges.
It's like being trapped in a remote cottage out in the wilds in a blizzard. You want to get out of there, of course, but it's a big and possibly tragic step to make a break for it whilst the storm continues and no clear path is visible, you'd tend to want to stay there in the hope a clearer option emerges....
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But is that on offer? How do we know the Government or whichever Government replaces it will go down that path? Would it be achievable anyway?
Yes, yes and yes - but only if we vote for it. Starting on June 23. Otherwise it won't happen.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election
Though choice.
If we get a Remain result, then we might see a substantial uplift in their fortunes, however.
Hardly earth shattering but better than losing them, while a repeat of the 2015 vote share implies that 12-13% of the national electorate is locked in to UK independence.
Overall, Leave need something like 70% of the right wing vote (Con/UKIP) plus 30% of the left on an assumption of uniform turnout comparable to 2015.
A referendum on a 'new deal, EU has gone too far' would see 'new deal' win overwhelmingly and the government would then have to negotiate - seriously - a deal which would reduce our 'membership' to a vestigial one or end up being an EFTA-style arrangement.
That isn't the outcome they want - hence framing things as a binary choice to try to force wobblers into their tent.
We vote LEAVE on June 23 and then we do a new deal. Which our EU neighbours will also want.
It really is that simple.
Although they aren't perfect, Whittle was ahead of Berry in every single poll !
Expensive
Also the EU encourages Scottish nationalism apparently. Govey a bawhair away from saying Brexit will kill nationalism stone dead.
'Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr show yesterday, the Edinburgh-born Tory MP said: "When we vote to leave I think a majority of people in Scotland will also vote to leave as well. It will be clear that having voted to leave one union the last thing the people of Scotland will want to do is to break up another. If we vote to leave then I think the Union will be stronger. Scottish nationalism has grown since we entered the European Union."'
http://tinyurl.com/zj7jpar
By contrast, the Tories now offer a serious and credible exit route out of the EU, and UK independence, in a way UKIP never could.
The difference now seems to be social conservatism, and tightness on immigration.
For example, I think the 35-36% that standard opinion polls give the Conservatives is closer to their actual level of support than the 32% they got in local council elections.
Tough Choice.
(Maybe we should take the "real votes" at the real election in Welsh Assembly South Wales East district and generalise that to the UK ?)
So who then? Other than Boris, and I happen to think he's a bit of a chump all told, there is absolutely no-one suitably high profile enough within Tory ranks to take on the mantle of PM and win in 2020, against whoever Labour replaces Corbyn with in the end. Stephen Crabb or Priti Patel might be sufficiently "new broom" but neither is ready for the top job yet in 2016. So assuming Boris doesn't have sufficient backbench support, the members will have probably Osborne and Gove foisted on them - what a poisoned chalice of a choice that is! Neither could win an election - both would be IDS mark 2's, the Tory Party talking only to itself.
And you might well say "ffs Bob, this is about the EU, to hell with the Tory Party problems", but I am a Tory voter and it does matter what happens to Cameron and the Tory Party in the foreseeable future. When you're wavering over a finely-balanced decision of such import, it does matter. And so it's not "really that simple"!
Ned Donovan
This is a much higher figure than I expected. Proud to be in the 2 percent with no degree. https://t.co/zPyJzVCsXF https://t.co/KyRKLrDDDt
https://twitter.com/Ned_Donovan/status/729659493227827200
https://twitter.com/Ned_Donovan/status/729660707906670592
Lib Dems behind UKIP and 5th in Wales and 5th in London
Lib Dems 3rd and ahead of UKIP in the English council elections mainly metropolitan centres and some district councils. Lib Dems 5th in Scotland but ahead of UKIP.
Andy Murray ends coaching relationship with Amelie Mauresmo
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/36247592
Whatever the situation, I'm not sure I'd read too much into Ukip's performance with respect to the EU referendum.
Stay - and die. LEAVE and Live.
London elections claim another scalp:
Barnet chief leaves after vote blunder
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-36249926
Surely the PCC elections are a better sign of how the UKIP vote is holding up.
The local elections really weren't UKIP's natural arena and, conversely, were that of the lib Dems. The flip side would be to look at the Euro-election, where UKIP finished first nationally and the Lib Dems were reduced to 1 MEP. Both are by definition representative, the question is, 'of what?'.
In other news the BBC employs more than 2,000 journalists.
PlatoSays @PlatoSays
@Mike_Fabricant @JamesWillby Absolutely. I'm a retired PR director and it's plain as day what they wanted as headlines. It backfired
Must be galling for you that England repeatedly elects governments that have encouraged excessive immigration.
In the PCC's they contested 34 out of 40, winning 14% of the overall vote, about 1.2m votes.
http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/tv-radio/2016/05/there-guardian-bias-radio-4s-broadcasting-house-programme
As for breaking away from EEA altogether, I don't think it will happen in a hurry, and the nature of it will depend on how much British re -entry into EFTA helps to drive that as the forum for hosting and developing sectoral agreement. I'm quite optimistic about that.
Remember that its the USA that tends to sit outside the sectoral agreements, jealously protective of its own manufacturing and agricultural base. TTIP was an attempt by the USA to grab a huge chunk of regulatory power by making agreements that they felt other would then have to climb on the back of, Obama actually said this is a speech himself - that he didn't want the rest of the world to be making the rules for trade, they should follow American rules.
I rather disagree with him. Eventually they will have to co-operate in each sector and get more involved with the individual agreements that will conform to WTO NTB.
'Former Facebook Workers: We Routinely Suppressed Conservative News' https://t.co/jPBVP4EEvy
https://t.co/vGEgBQ168m
What's more, it's only here on PB that anyone argues otherwise. It's really odd.
I'm very happy to take money of anyone who is both trustworthy and deluded enough to think I'm wrong (see previous thread) - please form an orderly queue.
15/40 PCC's were LAB (37.5%)
5/40 PCC's were others (12.5%)
363 CON 208 LAB, government majority of about 76
Ukip is skint and rudderless, anybody connected with the party has little interest in anything but the referendum, I'm amazed polls still have them in the teens, surprised they even feature in the electorate's minds.
Anybody saying Carswell regrets defecting is deluded, take a look at his twitter feed, he's burned every tory bridge.
They fell for one of the oldest scams in the book.
http://tinyurl.com/gsr8rlu
Didn't Wikileaks expose Bildt as CIA asset? Pretty obvious when one looks at his positions on the pertinent issues and the posts he has held anyway.