Its not been a good day for Theresa May. The decision on Article 50, if upheld by the Supreme Court next month, completely undermines her strategy for dealing with EU extraction. She’s going to find it much harder to follow her Home Office practice of keeping things very much to her close advisors without involving other people.
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Democrats at 33-1 and 39-1 for you on Betfair (I think its a horrible bet personally)
REMAIN 48%
Britain Elects @britainelects Oct 30
% of UK voters who'd consider voting for (X):
CON: 39%
LAB: 31%
LDEM: 21%
GRN: 18%
UKIP: 18%
SNP: 6%
PC: 3%
[Unsure]: 11%
(via YouGov)
Good for LibDem and Green.
And I went for Arkansas on the basis of the GOP voters not turning out, and the fact the Clintons were popular in the State.
AA population too.
Last Dem to carry Arkansas was a Clinton
Kevin for one would completely romp home.
https://www.headoflegal.com/2016/03/07/what-boris-told-us-about-the-sovereignty-plan/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/37860557
Now, if only I was any good with Photoshop ...
Make it a three line whip and a motion of confidence, if it fails someone else has 7 days to form a new government, which they won't be able to do and there is a second vote, if that fails there is a General Election probably in April 2017.
Labour under Corbyn will lose 40 seats, the SNP will also lose some, UKIP will only stand against remaindermen.
There might be a small number of gains for the Lib/Dems but there will be a large Tory majority with some remaindermen gone.
Brexit will be in the manifesto and as a bill in the first Queens speech, the government will ask again for authority to trigger article 50 and then it's bye bye EU.
The ones on which a specific referendum has been held.
I'd try Alaska as a long shot. Trump will very likely win, but his popularity lags way behind the incumbent Senator.
And that is dangerous for some major parties, methinks.
A fairly shocking dip in the spreads for Hillary over the past hour with her price now at 285 - 295, down 7 ECVs. Trump's spread has risen correspondingly to 241 - 251.
Therefore at their respective mid-spread points they are now just 44 ECVs apart (290 vs 246). At this rate, with 5 days to go before the election next Tuesday, it appears possible that the Donald will be America's next President. Something which was unthinkable just one week ago.
https://twitter.com/NateSilver538/status/794220355132989441
Arkansas - Uni of Arkansas - Sample 585 - 18-27 Oct
Clinton 31 .. Trump 51
https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/political-science/partners/arkpoll/2016/2016-Arkansas-Poll-summary-report.pdf
Now she's as low as 11/2
The stop/loss is 200, so maximal loss of £100. It is pretty highly geared.
That will give the Labour MPs the ability to go to their constituents and say ... "We wanted to vote Yes, but look at subsection (b) - it would be terrible for this constituency. That's the only reason I voted No."
It's playtime politics ... "Those awful Tories made me do it."
@BBCPhilipSim: So the headline is, council tax bands E-H are going up. The sub-plot is that govt had to vote for order noting "regret" at their strategy...
After the defeat yesterday too
Clinton 44 .. Trump 39
https://luc.id/2016-presidential-tracker/
When it looked as though the leave cause was lost in the early summer, I thought well I'll just have to vote UKIP in future if Brexit's what I really want.
Looking at today, I'm starting to think the same again.
I'm amazed that Sporting took your bet for 50p per ECV!
All the "known" states called within a minute or so (Including New Hampshire)
Some minor excitement as Iowa, North Carolina and Ohio all swap sides. But otherwise nothing but Hillary celebrating and Trump crying into his beer.
Clinton 31 .. Trump 37 .. McMullin 24
https://www.monmouth.edu/polling-institute/reports/MonmouthPoll_UT_110316/
Here's hoping for a Hillary landslide!
RCS is out of surgery and looking very sorry for himself. I don't think he will be doing any typing for a week or so judging by the bandages.
@AndrewDuffEU: @JenniferMerode Supreme Court will have no option. Article 267 says it "shall bring the matter before the Court (of Justice)".
popcorn!
I think we can reasonably assume that many Leavers will not be lending their vote to Remain MPs, especially in clear Leave voting constituencies.
Its sounding more as if the remainer assurance that we always had sovereignty, that we simply had to invoke article 50 to leave, is another complete fabrication.
"(a) the interpretation of the Treaties;
(b) the validity and interpretation of acts of the institutions, bodies, offices or agencies of the Union"
Then the Court must refer.
If the interpretation of Article 50 is at stake, it must be referred. But I'm far from clear it is.