On this week’s episode of the PB/Polling Matters show Keiran Rob and Leo look back at 2016 and discuss the results from the recent survey of PB/Polling Matters listeners where more than 600 people took part. We discuss what our biggest shock of 2016 was, who the biggest winners and losers were and our defining moments of 2016. We also take some time to read out some comments from listeners and mull over what 2017 might bring.
Comments
With hindsight, we should have left in 1991 or 92 when it first became clear we and the EU were heading in different directions, and before the EU had its tentacles in quite so many parts of our national life. But we didn't, and it is now more intrusive and difficult to leave because of that.
An almost equally big shock has been our failure to fall into a recession, although of course there's always time for that down the line. The exchange rate has taken the strain, vindicating our decision to stay outside the Euro once again.
Islamic State fighters 're-enter ancient Palmyra' in Syria
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-38275905
Bu**er.
Edited extra bit: that said, Labour would be in a far better state if he'd stayed on.
Just listening to the podcast, about 17-18 minutes in, and must disagree with the chap implying it was ludicrous that Farage 'has changed the destiny of Europe' or words to that effect.
Like him or loathe him, it's because of Farage, in large part, we got a referendum, and are (probably) leaving the EU.
http://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/politics/sunderland-echo-poll-shows-u-turn-on-brexit-1-8282851
May +9
BoJo -6
Ed Balls -11
Con Party -12
P Hammond -12
Lab Party -17
@Andrew_ComRes: ComRes for Indie / S Mirror NET favourability ranking (2/2)
McDonnell -19
Farage -26
Corbyn -26
P Nuttall -32
G Osborne -39
Trump -52
Mr. B, you silly man. Go and get me a shrubbery.
I can see lots of numbers and analysis and comments but no mention of the actual percentage in their poll.
I want to read the sentence "today, only x% want brexit" but it doesn't seem to have been included in the article.
All we know is that it's under half. Which is only mildly interesting.
Brussels unveils €321m 'Space Egg' HQ
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/video_and_audio/headlines/38268659
' It is the same snobbery that caused an eminent art critic to recently opine on Radio 4 that he hadn’t seen a few Caravaggios being shown off in a London exhibition – because they had been “hidden away in places like Hull and Preston”. They might as well have been on the moon, though he would no doubt have seen them had they been hung in Florence or Paris. '
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/dec/09/northerners-voting-brexit-north-south
Just as school trips are used to show foreign countries to British kids or in an domestic equivalent to show London to non-London kids or farms to urban kids perhaps its time that some of the 'metropolitan elite' took an opportunity to see Blueland.
58% remain
But it's a clickr poll so ignore.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kUrsvegCkEc
2011: Merry Christmas.
2012: Merry Christmas.
2013: Merry Christmas.
2014: Merry Christmas.
2015: Merry Christmas.
2016: 'We're going to start saying "Merry Christmas" again!'
Oh.
Merry Christmas.
Sorry, these are eggxcruciatingly bad puns.
It would be nice to see the return of @nigelforengland.
Continuing my exploration of the UK rail network - yesterday, I did the Manchester Airport and East Didsbury lines of the Metrolink tram, just Rochdale line left!
I changed trams at Chorlton, so I've have this ditty in my head all day:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_NUXnl49RI
(I'd be surprised if there are any Caravaggios in either place, but the essential point that the Arts World is absurdly over-concentrated in London is surely true).
See also the common and puzzling Metropolitan belief that London is easy for everyone else in the country to get to, but that the rest of the country is somehow very difficult for Londoners to get to. This isn't quite the same as snobbery - indeed, I've known people from the rest of the country who have moved to England adopt this view - just an intense everyone-should-come-to-us mentality. I don't think there's a word for it, but there should be.
I wonder if there's another country where it can be considered normal, even sophisticated, to literally have no experience of life outside the big city.
To an extent the USA has the split of 'coastal elites' and 'flyover states' but I don't think its as extreme and at least the USA has size as an excuse.
I'd say the largest English city I haven't visited is Norwich. Which is very nice, I'm led to understand, and well worth a visit, but is an awful long way east - you're very seldom just passing through.
The point is that they still have viable units that are able to cause trouble and terrorise innocents. It Is is sadly too early to proclaim the death of IS.
You'll have passed within half a mile of me today - I live close to Sale Water Park tram stop.
We spent an entertaining night in Preston, where we taught some local girls that Australians swear ...
* The next one opens at the end of January - Sussex Modernism: Retreat and Rebellion
Although a radio interviewer who I was talking to a couple of days before was rather alarmed at my route into the city: "I wouldn't go that way, it's too dangerous."
Really selling his city...
I wouldn't go as far as to say I'd go to either place on my holidays, but visiting somewhere new is always interesting.
(Shudders)
Farage and his (as referred to earlier) Trumpites, and Blair with his somewhat cadaverous New Labour. In both cases they need some credible people to convert, but who knows.
I imagine there are other possibilities too.
Bettingwise I think you have to lay everyone in Labour as next Labour leader, but that's broadly the case anyway.
Edit: Frinton.
https://www.natureflip.com/sites/default/files/photo//walton-beach-rows-of-beach-huts-above-the-beach-at-walton-on-the-naze-essex.jpg
Before I went there, all I knew of it was from a Dudley Moore and Peter Cooke sketch
http://www.epicure.demon.co.uk/fatherandson.html
I decided to go on an expedition to Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Beccles and Southwold. That whole East Anglia place is a different world.
Good evening, everybody.
Oh, and it used to be served by a narrow-gauge railway.
What more could a red-blooded Englishman ask for?
I also love to walk at Dunwich heath, it's a peaceful place.
Only fly in the ointment is you can see Sizewell powerstation
"Southwold is my idea of heaven. A small town, with a superb beach and an exquisite pier. But most of all: it has its own brewery!"
Snap.
On another tack and whistling into the wind I'm thinking that when The Almighty made the universe, One could not experience it. So One broke the mould and made imperfect mankind, and maybe other sentient creatures, to get down and dirty to experience it. Especially tantalizing is the mystery of which parts of pure mathematics bear on reality, and why.
On a different day I was on a bus stopped at traffic lights outside same pub. hear a commotion and see 2 people "discussing" why another guy shouldn't have told the police they were dealing. When they saw me looking just shut gate and continued.
Gillingham was a little bit rough and ready :-)
Some places I did make an effort. I gave myself enough time to "sea" the waterfront at both West Kirby and New Brighton on Merseyside, for example. Weymouth seafront is easy, as the station is literally 60 seconds walking distance
I would say of my friends from home in the South they would be the same except a few with northern family; and the odd football match (stereotypical southern man utd fans going to old Trafford). Apart from lake district which I'm definitely unusual in not having been to.
It might be a generational thing? In my 20s...
I'm just hoping 2017 has a lower mortality rate.
Another time driving to Provence from Holland stopped in a Belgium town / city whose name I can't recall.
Drove in and parked and it turns out I was in a really seedy part of town. Asked policemen for directions to town centre and again got told to get my family out of there.
I'm increasingly in awe of Manchester, some seriously good architecture, old and new, loads of trains and trams, canals, and Media City(!). I've been to Manchester around 8 times this year (prior to January, I hadn't even visited the place!).